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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of A Child's History of England**
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#11 in our series by Charles Dickens
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A Child's History of England
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by Charles Dickens
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October, 1996 [Etext #699]
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**The Project Gutenberg Etext of A Child's History of England**
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A Child's History of England by Charles Dickens
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Scanned and Proofed by David Price, email ccx074@coventry.ac.uk
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A Child's History of England
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||
CHAPTER I - ANCIENT ENGLAND AND THE ROMANS
|
||
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||
IF you look at a Map of the World, you will see, in the left-hand
|
||
upper corner of the Eastern Hemisphere, two Islands lying in the
|
||
sea. They are England and Scotland, and Ireland. England and
|
||
Scotland form the greater part of these Islands. Ireland is the
|
||
next in size. The little neighbouring islands, which are so small
|
||
upon the Map as to be mere dots, are chiefly little bits of
|
||
Scotland, - broken off, I dare say, in the course of a great length
|
||
of time, by the power of the restless water.
|
||
|
||
In the old days, a long, long while ago, before Our Saviour was
|
||
born on earth and lay asleep in a manger, these Islands were in the
|
||
same place, and the stormy sea roared round them, just as it roars
|
||
now. But the sea was not alive, then, with great ships and brave
|
||
sailors, sailing to and from all parts of the world. It was very
|
||
lonely. The Islands lay solitary, in the great expanse of water.
|
||
The foaming waves dashed against their cliffs, and the bleak winds
|
||
blew over their forests; but the winds and waves brought no
|
||
adventurers to land upon the Islands, and the savage Islanders knew
|
||
nothing of the rest of the world, and the rest of the world knew
|
||
nothing of them.
|
||
|
||
It is supposed that the Phoenicians, who were an ancient people,
|
||
famous for carrying on trade, came in ships to these Islands, and
|
||
found that they produced tin and lead; both very useful things, as
|
||
you know, and both produced to this very hour upon the sea-coast.
|
||
The most celebrated tin mines in Cornwall are, still, close to the
|
||
sea. One of them, which I have seen, is so close to it that it is
|
||
hollowed out underneath the ocean; and the miners say, that in
|
||
stormy weather, when they are at work down in that deep place, they
|
||
can hear the noise of the waves thundering above their heads. So,
|
||
the Phoenicians, coasting about the Islands, would come, without
|
||
much difficulty, to where the tin and lead were.
|
||
|
||
The Phoenicians traded with the Islanders for these metals, and
|
||
gave the Islanders some other useful things in exchange. The
|
||
Islanders were, at first, poor savages, going almost naked, or only
|
||
dressed in the rough skins of beasts, and staining their bodies, as
|
||
other savages do, with coloured earths and the juices of plants.
|
||
But the Phoenicians, sailing over to the opposite coasts of France
|
||
and Belgium, and saying to the people there, 'We have been to those
|
||
white cliffs across the water, which you can see in fine weather,
|
||
and from that country, which is called BRITAIN, we bring this tin
|
||
and lead,' tempted some of the French and Belgians to come over
|
||
also. These people settled themselves on the south coast of
|
||
England, which is now called Kent; and, although they were a rough
|
||
people too, they taught the savage Britons some useful arts, and
|
||
improved that part of the Islands. It is probable that other
|
||
people came over from Spain to Ireland, and settled there.
|
||
|
||
Thus, by little and little, strangers became mixed with the
|
||
Islanders, and the savage Britons grew into a wild, bold people;
|
||
almost savage, still, especially in the interior of the country
|
||
away from the sea where the foreign settlers seldom went; but
|
||
hardy, brave, and strong.
|
||
|
||
The whole country was covered with forests, and swamps. The
|
||
greater part of it was very misty and cold. There were no roads,
|
||
no bridges, no streets, no houses that you would think deserving of
|
||
the name. A town was nothing but a collection of straw-covered
|
||
huts, hidden in a thick wood, with a ditch all round, and a low
|
||
wall, made of mud, or the trunks of trees placed one upon another.
|
||
The people planted little or no corn, but lived upon the flesh of
|
||
their flocks and cattle. They made no coins, but used metal rings
|
||
for money. They were clever in basket-work, as savage people often
|
||
are; and they could make a coarse kind of cloth, and some very bad
|
||
earthenware. But in building fortresses they were much more
|
||
clever.
|
||
|
||
They made boats of basket-work, covered with the skins of animals,
|
||
but seldom, if ever, ventured far from the shore. They made
|
||
swords, of copper mixed with tin; but, these swords were of an
|
||
awkward shape, and so soft that a heavy blow would bend one. They
|
||
made light shields, short pointed daggers, and spears - which they
|
||
jerked back after they had thrown them at an enemy, by a long strip
|
||
of leather fastened to the stem. The butt-end was a rattle, to
|
||
frighten an enemy's horse. The ancient Britons, being divided into
|
||
as many as thirty or forty tribes, each commanded by its own little
|
||
king, were constantly fighting with one another, as savage people
|
||
usually do; and they always fought with these weapons.
|
||
|
||
They were very fond of horses. The standard of Kent was the
|
||
picture of a white horse. They could break them in and manage them
|
||
wonderfully well. Indeed, the horses (of which they had an
|
||
abundance, though they were rather small) were so well taught in
|
||
those days, that they can scarcely be said to have improved since;
|
||
though the men are so much wiser. They understood, and obeyed,
|
||
every word of command; and would stand still by themselves, in all
|
||
the din and noise of battle, while their masters went to fight on
|
||
foot. The Britons could not have succeeded in their most
|
||
remarkable art, without the aid of these sensible and trusty
|
||
animals. The art I mean, is the construction and management of
|
||
war-chariots or cars, for which they have ever been celebrated in
|
||
history. Each of the best sort of these chariots, not quite breast
|
||
high in front, and open at the back, contained one man to drive,
|
||
and two or three others to fight - all standing up. The horses who
|
||
drew them were so well trained, that they would tear, at full
|
||
gallop, over the most stony ways, and even through the woods;
|
||
dashing down their masters' enemies beneath their hoofs, and
|
||
cutting them to pieces with the blades of swords, or scythes, which
|
||
were fastened to the wheels, and stretched out beyond the car on
|
||
each side, for that cruel purpose. In a moment, while at full
|
||
speed, the horses would stop, at the driver's command. The men
|
||
within would leap out, deal blows about them with their swords like
|
||
hail, leap on the horses, on the pole, spring back into the
|
||
chariots anyhow; and, as soon as they were safe, the horses tore
|
||
away again.
|
||
|
||
The Britons had a strange and terrible religion, called the
|
||
Religion of the Druids. It seems to have been brought over, in
|
||
very early times indeed, from the opposite country of France,
|
||
anciently called Gaul, and to have mixed up the worship of the
|
||
Serpent, and of the Sun and Moon, with the worship of some of the
|
||
Heathen Gods and Goddesses. Most of its ceremonies were kept
|
||
secret by the priests, the Druids, who pretended to be enchanters,
|
||
and who carried magicians' wands, and wore, each of them, about his
|
||
neck, what he told the ignorant people was a Serpent's egg in a
|
||
golden case. But it is certain that the Druidical ceremonies
|
||
included the sacrifice of human victims, the torture of some
|
||
suspected criminals, and, on particular occasions, even the burning
|
||
alive, in immense wicker cages, of a number of men and animals
|
||
together. The Druid Priests had some kind of veneration for the
|
||
Oak, and for the mistletoe - the same plant that we hang up in
|
||
houses at Christmas Time now - when its white berries grew upon the
|
||
Oak. They met together in dark woods, which they called Sacred
|
||
Groves; and there they instructed, in their mysterious arts, young
|
||
men who came to them as pupils, and who sometimes stayed with them
|
||
as long as twenty years.
|
||
|
||
These Druids built great Temples and altars, open to the sky,
|
||
fragments of some of which are yet remaining. Stonehenge, on
|
||
Salisbury Plain, in Wiltshire, is the most extraordinary of these.
|
||
Three curious stones, called Kits Coty House, on Bluebell Hill,
|
||
near Maidstone, in Kent, form another. We know, from examination
|
||
of the great blocks of which such buildings are made, that they
|
||
could not have been raised without the aid of some ingenious
|
||
machines, which are common now, but which the ancient Britons
|
||
certainly did not use in making their own uncomfortable houses. I
|
||
should not wonder if the Druids, and their pupils who stayed with
|
||
them twenty years, knowing more than the rest of the Britons, kept
|
||
the people out of sight while they made these buildings, and then
|
||
pretended that they built them by magic. Perhaps they had a hand
|
||
in the fortresses too; at all events, as they were very powerful,
|
||
and very much believed in, and as they made and executed the laws,
|
||
and paid no taxes, I don't wonder that they liked their trade.
|
||
And, as they persuaded the people the more Druids there were, the
|
||
better off the people would be, I don't wonder that there were a
|
||
good many of them. But it is pleasant to think that there are no
|
||
Druids, NOW, who go on in that way, and pretend to carry
|
||
Enchanters' Wands and Serpents' Eggs - and of course there is
|
||
nothing of the kind, anywhere.
|
||
|
||
Such was the improved condition of the ancient Britons, fifty-five
|
||
years before the birth of Our Saviour, when the Romans, under their
|
||
great General, Julius Caesar, were masters of all the rest of the
|
||
known world. Julius Caesar had then just conquered Gaul; and
|
||
hearing, in Gaul, a good deal about the opposite Island with the
|
||
white cliffs, and about the bravery of the Britons who inhabited it
|
||
- some of whom had been fetched over to help the Gauls in the war
|
||
against him - he resolved, as he was so near, to come and conquer
|
||
Britain next.
|
||
|
||
So, Julius Caesar came sailing over to this Island of ours, with
|
||
eighty vessels and twelve thousand men. And he came from the
|
||
French coast between Calais and Boulogne, 'because thence was the
|
||
shortest passage into Britain;' just for the same reason as our
|
||
steam-boats now take the same track, every day. He expected to
|
||
conquer Britain easily: but it was not such easy work as he
|
||
supposed - for the bold Britons fought most bravely; and, what with
|
||
not having his horse-soldiers with him (for they had been driven
|
||
back by a storm), and what with having some of his vessels dashed
|
||
to pieces by a high tide after they were drawn ashore, he ran great
|
||
risk of being totally defeated. However, for once that the bold
|
||
Britons beat him, he beat them twice; though not so soundly but
|
||
that he was very glad to accept their proposals of peace, and go
|
||
away.
|
||
|
||
But, in the spring of the next year, he came back; this time, with
|
||
eight hundred vessels and thirty thousand men. The British tribes
|
||
chose, as their general-in-chief, a Briton, whom the Romans in
|
||
their Latin language called CASSIVELLAUNUS, but whose British name
|
||
is supposed to have been CASWALLON. A brave general he was, and
|
||
well he and his soldiers fought the Roman army! So well, that
|
||
whenever in that war the Roman soldiers saw a great cloud of dust,
|
||
and heard the rattle of the rapid British chariots, they trembled
|
||
in their hearts. Besides a number of smaller battles, there was a
|
||
battle fought near Canterbury, in Kent; there was a battle fought
|
||
near Chertsey, in Surrey; there was a battle fought near a marshy
|
||
little town in a wood, the capital of that part of Britain which
|
||
belonged to CASSIVELLAUNUS, and which was probably near what is now
|
||
Saint Albans, in Hertfordshire. However, brave CASSIVELLAUNUS had
|
||
the worst of it, on the whole; though he and his men always fought
|
||
like lions. As the other British chiefs were jealous of him, and
|
||
were always quarrelling with him, and with one another, he gave up,
|
||
and proposed peace. Julius Caesar was very glad to grant peace
|
||
easily, and to go away again with all his remaining ships and men.
|
||
He had expected to find pearls in Britain, and he may have found a
|
||
few for anything I know; but, at all events, he found delicious
|
||
oysters, and I am sure he found tough Britons - of whom, I dare
|
||
say, he made the same complaint as Napoleon Bonaparte the great
|
||
French General did, eighteen hundred years afterwards, when he said
|
||
they were such unreasonable fellows that they never knew when they
|
||
were beaten. They never DID know, I believe, and never will.
|
||
|
||
Nearly a hundred years passed on, and all that time, there was
|
||
peace in Britain. The Britons improved their towns and mode of
|
||
life: became more civilised, travelled, and learnt a great deal
|
||
from the Gauls and Romans. At last, the Roman Emperor, Claudius,
|
||
sent AULUS PLAUTIUS, a skilful general, with a mighty force, to
|
||
subdue the Island, and shortly afterwards arrived himself. They
|
||
did little; and OSTORIUS SCAPULA, another general, came. Some of
|
||
the British Chiefs of Tribes submitted. Others resolved to fight
|
||
to the death. Of these brave men, the bravest was CARACTACUS, or
|
||
CARADOC, who gave battle to the Romans, with his army, among the
|
||
mountains of North Wales. 'This day,' said he to his soldiers,
|
||
'decides the fate of Britain! Your liberty, or your eternal
|
||
slavery, dates from this hour. Remember your brave ancestors, who
|
||
drove the great Caesar himself across the sea!' On hearing these
|
||
words, his men, with a great shout, rushed upon the Romans. But
|
||
the strong Roman swords and armour were too much for the weaker
|
||
British weapons in close conflict. The Britons lost the day. The
|
||
wife and daughter of the brave CARACTACUS were taken prisoners; his
|
||
brothers delivered themselves up; he himself was betrayed into the
|
||
hands of the Romans by his false and base stepmother: and they
|
||
carried him, and all his family, in triumph to Rome.
|
||
|
||
But a great man will be great in misfortune, great in prison, great
|
||
in chains. His noble air, and dignified endurance of distress, so
|
||
touched the Roman people who thronged the streets to see him, that
|
||
he and his family were restored to freedom. No one knows whether
|
||
his great heart broke, and he died in Rome, or whether he ever
|
||
returned to his own dear country. English oaks have grown up from
|
||
acorns, and withered away, when they were hundreds of years old -
|
||
and other oaks have sprung up in their places, and died too, very
|
||
aged - since the rest of the history of the brave CARACTACUS was
|
||
forgotten.
|
||
|
||
Still, the Britons WOULD NOT yield. They rose again and again, and
|
||
died by thousands, sword in hand. They rose, on every possible
|
||
occasion. SUETONIUS, another Roman general, came, and stormed the
|
||
Island of Anglesey (then called MONA), which was supposed to be
|
||
sacred, and he burnt the Druids in their own wicker cages, by their
|
||
own fires. But, even while he was in Britain, with his victorious
|
||
troops, the BRITONS rose. Because BOADICEA, a British queen, the
|
||
widow of the King of the Norfolk and Suffolk people, resisted the
|
||
plundering of her property by the Romans who were settled in
|
||
England, she was scourged, by order of CATUS a Roman officer; and
|
||
her two daughters were shamefully insulted in her presence, and her
|
||
husband's relations were made slaves. To avenge this injury, the
|
||
Britons rose, with all their might and rage. They drove CATUS into
|
||
Gaul; they laid the Roman possessions waste; they forced the Romans
|
||
out of London, then a poor little town, but a trading place; they
|
||
hanged, burnt, crucified, and slew by the sword, seventy thousand
|
||
Romans in a few days. SUETONIUS strengthened his army, and
|
||
advanced to give them battle. They strengthened their army, and
|
||
desperately attacked his, on the field where it was strongly
|
||
posted. Before the first charge of the Britons was made, BOADICEA,
|
||
in a war-chariot, with her fair hair streaming in the wind, and her
|
||
injured daughters lying at her feet, drove among the troops, and
|
||
cried to them for vengeance on their oppressors, the licentious
|
||
Romans. The Britons fought to the last; but they were vanquished
|
||
with great slaughter, and the unhappy queen took poison.
|
||
|
||
Still, the spirit of the Britons was not broken. When SUETONIUS
|
||
left the country, they fell upon his troops, and retook the Island
|
||
of Anglesey. AGRICOLA came, fifteen or twenty years afterwards,
|
||
and retook it once more, and devoted seven years to subduing the
|
||
country, especially that part of it which is now called SCOTLAND;
|
||
but, its people, the Caledonians, resisted him at every inch of
|
||
ground. They fought the bloodiest battles with him; they killed
|
||
their very wives and children, to prevent his making prisoners of
|
||
them; they fell, fighting, in such great numbers that certain hills
|
||
in Scotland are yet supposed to be vast heaps of stones piled up
|
||
above their graves. HADRIAN came, thirty years afterwards, and
|
||
still they resisted him. SEVERUS came, nearly a hundred years
|
||
afterwards, and they worried his great army like dogs, and rejoiced
|
||
to see them die, by thousands, in the bogs and swamps. CARACALLA,
|
||
the son and successor of SEVERUS, did the most to conquer them, for
|
||
a time; but not by force of arms. He knew how little that would
|
||
do. He yielded up a quantity of land to the Caledonians, and gave
|
||
the Britons the same privileges as the Romans possessed. There was
|
||
peace, after this, for seventy years.
|
||
|
||
Then new enemies arose. They were the Saxons, a fierce, sea-faring
|
||
people from the countries to the North of the Rhine, the great
|
||
river of Germany on the banks of which the best grapes grow to make
|
||
the German wine. They began to come, in pirate ships, to the sea-
|
||
coast of Gaul and Britain, and to plunder them. They were repulsed
|
||
by CARAUSIUS, a native either of Belgium or of Britain, who was
|
||
appointed by the Romans to the command, and under whom the Britons
|
||
first began to fight upon the sea. But, after this time, they
|
||
renewed their ravages. A few years more, and the Scots (which was
|
||
then the name for the people of Ireland), and the Picts, a northern
|
||
people, began to make frequent plundering incursions into the South
|
||
of Britain. All these attacks were repeated, at intervals, during
|
||
two hundred years, and through a long succession of Roman Emperors
|
||
and chiefs; during all which length of time, the Britons rose
|
||
against the Romans, over and over again. At last, in the days of
|
||
the Roman HONORIUS, when the Roman power all over the world was
|
||
fast declining, and when Rome wanted all her soldiers at home, the
|
||
Romans abandoned all hope of conquering Britain, and went away.
|
||
And still, at last, as at first, the Britons rose against them, in
|
||
their old brave manner; for, a very little while before, they had
|
||
turned away the Roman magistrates, and declared themselves an
|
||
independent people.
|
||
|
||
Five hundred years had passed, since Julius Caesar's first invasion
|
||
of the Island, when the Romans departed from it for ever. In the
|
||
course of that time, although they had been the cause of terrible
|
||
fighting and bloodshed, they had done much to improve the condition
|
||
of the Britons. They had made great military roads; they had built
|
||
forts; they had taught them how to dress, and arm themselves, much
|
||
better than they had ever known how to do before; they had refined
|
||
the whole British way of living. AGRICOLA had built a great wall
|
||
of earth, more than seventy miles long, extending from Newcastle to
|
||
beyond Carlisle, for the purpose of keeping out the Picts and
|
||
Scots; HADRIAN had strengthened it; SEVERUS, finding it much in
|
||
want of repair, had built it afresh of stone.
|
||
|
||
Above all, it was in the Roman time, and by means of Roman ships,
|
||
that the Christian Religion was first brought into Britain, and its
|
||
people first taught the great lesson that, to be good in the sight
|
||
of GOD, they must love their neighbours as themselves, and do unto
|
||
others as they would be done by. The Druids declared that it was
|
||
very wicked to believe in any such thing, and cursed all the people
|
||
who did believe it, very heartily. But, when the people found that
|
||
they were none the better for the blessings of the Druids, and none
|
||
the worse for the curses of the Druids, but, that the sun shone and
|
||
the rain fell without consulting the Druids at all, they just began
|
||
to think that the Druids were mere men, and that it signified very
|
||
little whether they cursed or blessed. After which, the pupils of
|
||
the Druids fell off greatly in numbers, and the Druids took to
|
||
other trades.
|
||
|
||
Thus I have come to the end of the Roman time in England. It is
|
||
but little that is known of those five hundred years; but some
|
||
remains of them are still found. Often, when labourers are digging
|
||
up the ground, to make foundations for houses or churches, they
|
||
light on rusty money that once belonged to the Romans. Fragments
|
||
of plates from which they ate, of goblets from which they drank,
|
||
and of pavement on which they trod, are discovered among the earth
|
||
that is broken by the plough, or the dust that is crumbled by the
|
||
gardener's spade. Wells that the Romans sunk, still yield water;
|
||
roads that the Romans made, form part of our highways. In some old
|
||
battle-fields, British spear-heads and Roman armour have been
|
||
found, mingled together in decay, as they fell in the thick
|
||
pressure of the fight. Traces of Roman camps overgrown with grass,
|
||
and of mounds that are the burial-places of heaps of Britons, are
|
||
to be seen in almost all parts of the country. Across the bleak
|
||
moors of Northumberland, the wall of SEVERUS, overrun with moss and
|
||
weeds, still stretches, a strong ruin; and the shepherds and their
|
||
dogs lie sleeping on it in the summer weather. On Salisbury Plain,
|
||
Stonehenge yet stands: a monument of the earlier time when the
|
||
Roman name was unknown in Britain, and when the Druids, with their
|
||
best magic wands, could not have written it in the sands of the
|
||
wild sea-shore.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER II - ANCIENT ENGLAND UNDER THE EARLY SAXONS
|
||
|
||
THE Romans had scarcely gone away from Britain, when the Britons
|
||
began to wish they had never left it. For, the Romans being gone,
|
||
and the Britons being much reduced in numbers by their long wars,
|
||
the Picts and Scots came pouring in, over the broken and unguarded
|
||
wall of SEVERUS, in swarms. They plundered the richest towns, and
|
||
killed the people; and came back so often for more booty and more
|
||
slaughter, that the unfortunate Britons lived a life of terror. As
|
||
if the Picts and Scots were not bad enough on land, the Saxons
|
||
attacked the islanders by sea; and, as if something more were still
|
||
wanting to make them miserable, they quarrelled bitterly among
|
||
themselves as to what prayers they ought to say, and how they ought
|
||
to say them. The priests, being very angry with one another on
|
||
these questions, cursed one another in the heartiest manner; and
|
||
(uncommonly like the old Druids) cursed all the people whom they
|
||
could not persuade. So, altogether, the Britons were very badly
|
||
off, you may believe.
|
||
|
||
They were in such distress, in short, that they sent a letter to
|
||
Rome entreating help - which they called the Groans of the Britons;
|
||
and in which they said, 'The barbarians chase us into the sea, the
|
||
sea throws us back upon the barbarians, and we have only the hard
|
||
choice left us of perishing by the sword, or perishing by the
|
||
waves.' But, the Romans could not help them, even if they were so
|
||
inclined; for they had enough to do to defend themselves against
|
||
their own enemies, who were then very fierce and strong. At last,
|
||
the Britons, unable to bear their hard condition any longer,
|
||
resolved to make peace with the Saxons, and to invite the Saxons to
|
||
come into their country, and help them to keep out the Picts and
|
||
Scots.
|
||
|
||
It was a British Prince named VORTIGERN who took this resolution,
|
||
and who made a treaty of friendship with HENGIST and HORSA, two
|
||
Saxon chiefs. Both of these names, in the old Saxon language,
|
||
signify Horse; for the Saxons, like many other nations in a rough
|
||
state, were fond of giving men the names of animals, as Horse,
|
||
Wolf, Bear, Hound. The Indians of North America, - a very inferior
|
||
people to the Saxons, though - do the same to this day.
|
||
|
||
HENGIST and HORSA drove out the Picts and Scots; and VORTIGERN,
|
||
being grateful to them for that service, made no opposition to
|
||
their settling themselves in that part of England which is called
|
||
the Isle of Thanet, or to their inviting over more of their
|
||
countrymen to join them. But HENGIST had a beautiful daughter
|
||
named ROWENA; and when, at a feast, she filled a golden goblet to
|
||
the brim with wine, and gave it to VORTIGERN, saying in a sweet
|
||
voice, 'Dear King, thy health!' the King fell in love with her. My
|
||
opinion is, that the cunning HENGIST meant him to do so, in order
|
||
that the Saxons might have greater influence with him; and that the
|
||
fair ROWENA came to that feast, golden goblet and all, on purpose.
|
||
|
||
At any rate, they were married; and, long afterwards, whenever the
|
||
King was angry with the Saxons, or jealous of their encroachments,
|
||
ROWENA would put her beautiful arms round his neck, and softly say,
|
||
'Dear King, they are my people! Be favourable to them, as you
|
||
loved that Saxon girl who gave you the golden goblet of wine at the
|
||
feast!' And, really, I don't see how the King could help himself.
|
||
|
||
Ah! We must all die! In the course of years, VORTIGERN died - he
|
||
was dethroned, and put in prison, first, I am afraid; and ROWENA
|
||
died; and generations of Saxons and Britons died; and events that
|
||
happened during a long, long time, would have been quite forgotten
|
||
but for the tales and songs of the old Bards, who used to go about
|
||
from feast to feast, with their white beards, recounting the deeds
|
||
of their forefathers. Among the histories of which they sang and
|
||
talked, there was a famous one, concerning the bravery and virtues
|
||
of KING ARTHUR, supposed to have been a British Prince in those old
|
||
times. But, whether such a person really lived, or whether there
|
||
were several persons whose histories came to be confused together
|
||
under that one name, or whether all about him was invention, no one
|
||
knows.
|
||
|
||
I will tell you, shortly, what is most interesting in the early
|
||
Saxon times, as they are described in these songs and stories of
|
||
the Bards.
|
||
|
||
In, and long after, the days of VORTIGERN, fresh bodies of Saxons,
|
||
under various chiefs, came pouring into Britain. One body,
|
||
conquering the Britons in the East, and settling there, called
|
||
their kingdom Essex; another body settled in the West, and called
|
||
their kingdom Wessex; the Northfolk, or Norfolk people, established
|
||
themselves in one place; the Southfolk, or Suffolk people,
|
||
established themselves in another; and gradually seven kingdoms or
|
||
states arose in England, which were called the Saxon Heptarchy.
|
||
The poor Britons, falling back before these crowds of fighting men
|
||
whom they had innocently invited over as friends, retired into
|
||
Wales and the adjacent country; into Devonshire, and into Cornwall.
|
||
Those parts of England long remained unconquered. And in Cornwall
|
||
now - where the sea-coast is very gloomy, steep, and rugged -
|
||
where, in the dark winter-time, ships have often been wrecked close
|
||
to the land, and every soul on board has perished - where the winds
|
||
and waves howl drearily and split the solid rocks into arches and
|
||
caverns - there are very ancient ruins, which the people call the
|
||
ruins of KING ARTHUR'S Castle.
|
||
|
||
Kent is the most famous of the seven Saxon kingdoms, because the
|
||
Christian religion was preached to the Saxons there (who domineered
|
||
over the Britons too much, to care for what THEY said about their
|
||
religion, or anything else) by AUGUSTINE, a monk from Rome. KING
|
||
ETHELBERT, of Kent, was soon converted; and the moment he said he
|
||
was a Christian, his courtiers all said THEY were Christians; after
|
||
which, ten thousand of his subjects said they were Christians too.
|
||
AUGUSTINE built a little church, close to this King's palace, on
|
||
the ground now occupied by the beautiful cathedral of Canterbury.
|
||
SEBERT, the King's nephew, built on a muddy marshy place near
|
||
London, where there had been a temple to Apollo, a church dedicated
|
||
to Saint Peter, which is now Westminster Abbey. And, in London
|
||
itself, on the foundation of a temple to Diana, he built another
|
||
little church which has risen up, since that old time, to be Saint
|
||
Paul's.
|
||
|
||
After the death of ETHELBERT, EDWIN, King of Northumbria, who was
|
||
such a good king that it was said a woman or child might openly
|
||
carry a purse of gold, in his reign, without fear, allowed his
|
||
child to be baptised, and held a great council to consider whether
|
||
he and his people should all be Christians or not. It was decided
|
||
that they should be. COIFI, the chief priest of the old religion,
|
||
made a great speech on the occasion. In this discourse, he told
|
||
the people that he had found out the old gods to be impostors. 'I
|
||
am quite satisfied of it,' he said. 'Look at me! I have been
|
||
serving them all my life, and they have done nothing for me;
|
||
whereas, if they had been really powerful, they could not have
|
||
decently done less, in return for all I have done for them, than
|
||
make my fortune. As they have never made my fortune, I am quite
|
||
convinced they are impostors!' When this singular priest had
|
||
finished speaking, he hastily armed himself with sword and lance,
|
||
mounted a war-horse, rode at a furious gallop in sight of all the
|
||
people to the temple, and flung his lance against it as an insult.
|
||
From that time, the Christian religion spread itself among the
|
||
Saxons, and became their faith.
|
||
|
||
The next very famous prince was EGBERT. He lived about a hundred
|
||
and fifty years afterwards, and claimed to have a better right to
|
||
the throne of Wessex than BEORTRIC, another Saxon prince who was at
|
||
the head of that kingdom, and who married EDBURGA, the daughter of
|
||
OFFA, king of another of the seven kingdoms. This QUEEN EDBURGA
|
||
was a handsome murderess, who poisoned people when they offended
|
||
her. One day, she mixed a cup of poison for a certain noble
|
||
belonging to the court; but her husband drank of it too, by
|
||
mistake, and died. Upon this, the people revolted, in great
|
||
crowds; and running to the palace, and thundering at the gates,
|
||
cried, 'Down with the wicked queen, who poisons men!' They drove
|
||
her out of the country, and abolished the title she had disgraced.
|
||
When years had passed away, some travellers came home from Italy,
|
||
and said that in the town of Pavia they had seen a ragged beggar-
|
||
woman, who had once been handsome, but was then shrivelled, bent,
|
||
and yellow, wandering about the streets, crying for bread; and that
|
||
this beggar-woman was the poisoning English queen. It was, indeed,
|
||
EDBURGA; and so she died, without a shelter for her wretched head.
|
||
|
||
EGBERT, not considering himself safe in England, in consequence of
|
||
his having claimed the crown of Wessex (for he thought his rival
|
||
might take him prisoner and put him to death), sought refuge at the
|
||
court of CHARLEMAGNE, King of France. On the death of BEORTRIC, so
|
||
unhappily poisoned by mistake, EGBERT came back to Britain;
|
||
succeeded to the throne of Wessex; conquered some of the other
|
||
monarchs of the seven kingdoms; added their territories to his own;
|
||
and, for the first time, called the country over which he ruled,
|
||
ENGLAND.
|
||
|
||
And now, new enemies arose, who, for a long time, troubled England
|
||
sorely. These were the Northmen, the people of Denmark and Norway,
|
||
whom the English called the Danes. They were a warlike people,
|
||
quite at home upon the sea; not Christians; very daring and cruel.
|
||
They came over in ships, and plundered and burned wheresoever they
|
||
landed. Once, they beat EGBERT in battle. Once, EGBERT beat them.
|
||
But, they cared no more for being beaten than the English
|
||
themselves. In the four following short reigns, of ETHELWULF, and
|
||
his sons, ETHELBALD, ETHELBERT, and ETHELRED, they came back, over
|
||
and over again, burning and plundering, and laying England waste.
|
||
In the last-mentioned reign, they seized EDMUND, King of East
|
||
England, and bound him to a tree. Then, they proposed to him that
|
||
he should change his religion; but he, being a good Christian,
|
||
steadily refused. Upon that, they beat him, made cowardly jests
|
||
upon him, all defenceless as he was, shot arrows at him, and,
|
||
finally, struck off his head. It is impossible to say whose head
|
||
they might have struck off next, but for the death of KING ETHELRED
|
||
from a wound he had received in fighting against them, and the
|
||
succession to his throne of the best and wisest king that ever
|
||
lived in England.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER III - ENGLAND UNDER THE GOOD SAXON, ALFRED
|
||
|
||
ALFRED THE GREAT was a young man, three-and-twenty years of age,
|
||
when he became king. Twice in his childhood, he had been taken to
|
||
Rome, where the Saxon nobles were in the habit of going on journeys
|
||
which they supposed to be religious; and, once, he had stayed for
|
||
some time in Paris. Learning, however, was so little cared for,
|
||
then, that at twelve years old he had not been taught to read;
|
||
although, of the sons of KING ETHELWULF, he, the youngest, was the
|
||
favourite. But he had - as most men who grow up to be great and
|
||
good are generally found to have had - an excellent mother; and,
|
||
one day, this lady, whose name was OSBURGA, happened, as she was
|
||
sitting among her sons, to read a book of Saxon poetry. The art of
|
||
printing was not known until long and long after that period, and
|
||
the book, which was written, was what is called 'illuminated,' with
|
||
beautiful bright letters, richly painted. The brothers admiring it
|
||
very much, their mother said, 'I will give it to that one of you
|
||
four princes who first learns to read.' ALFRED sought out a tutor
|
||
that very day, applied himself to learn with great diligence, and
|
||
soon won the book. He was proud of it, all his life.
|
||
|
||
This great king, in the first year of his reign, fought nine
|
||
battles with the Danes. He made some treaties with them too, by
|
||
which the false Danes swore they would quit the country. They
|
||
pretended to consider that they had taken a very solemn oath, in
|
||
swearing this upon the holy bracelets that they wore, and which
|
||
were always buried with them when they died; but they cared little
|
||
for it, for they thought nothing of breaking oaths and treaties
|
||
too, as soon as it suited their purpose, and coming back again to
|
||
fight, plunder, and burn, as usual. One fatal winter, in the
|
||
fourth year of KING ALFRED'S reign, they spread themselves in great
|
||
numbers over the whole of England; and so dispersed and routed the
|
||
King's soldiers that the King was left alone, and was obliged to
|
||
disguise himself as a common peasant, and to take refuge in the
|
||
cottage of one of his cowherds who did not know his face.
|
||
|
||
Here, KING ALFRED, while the Danes sought him far and near, was
|
||
left alone one day, by the cowherd's wife, to watch some cakes
|
||
which she put to bake upon the hearth. But, being at work upon his
|
||
bow and arrows, with which he hoped to punish the false Danes when
|
||
a brighter time should come, and thinking deeply of his poor
|
||
unhappy subjects whom the Danes chased through the land, his noble
|
||
mind forgot the cakes, and they were burnt. 'What!' said the
|
||
cowherd's wife, who scolded him well when she came back, and little
|
||
thought she was scolding the King, 'you will be ready enough to eat
|
||
them by-and-by, and yet you cannot watch them, idle dog?'
|
||
|
||
At length, the Devonshire men made head against a new host of Danes
|
||
who landed on their coast; killed their chief, and captured their
|
||
flag; on which was represented the likeness of a Raven - a very fit
|
||
bird for a thievish army like that, I think. The loss of their
|
||
standard troubled the Danes greatly, for they believed it to be
|
||
enchanted - woven by the three daughters of one father in a single
|
||
afternoon - and they had a story among themselves that when they
|
||
were victorious in battle, the Raven stretched his wings and seemed
|
||
to fly; and that when they were defeated, he would droop. He had
|
||
good reason to droop, now, if he could have done anything half so
|
||
sensible; for, KING ALFRED joined the Devonshire men; made a camp
|
||
with them on a piece of firm ground in the midst of a bog in
|
||
Somersetshire; and prepared for a great attempt for vengeance on
|
||
the Danes, and the deliverance of his oppressed people.
|
||
|
||
But, first, as it was important to know how numerous those
|
||
pestilent Danes were, and how they were fortified, KING ALFRED,
|
||
being a good musician, disguised himself as a glee-man or minstrel,
|
||
and went, with his harp, to the Danish camp. He played and sang in
|
||
the very tent of GUTHRUM the Danish leader, and entertained the
|
||
Danes as they caroused. While he seemed to think of nothing but
|
||
his music, he was watchful of their tents, their arms, their
|
||
discipline, everything that he desired to know. And right soon did
|
||
this great king entertain them to a different tune; for, summoning
|
||
all his true followers to meet him at an appointed place, where
|
||
they received him with joyful shouts and tears, as the monarch whom
|
||
many of them had given up for lost or dead, he put himself at their
|
||
head, marched on the Danish camp, defeated the Danes with great
|
||
slaughter, and besieged them for fourteen days to prevent their
|
||
escape. But, being as merciful as he was good and brave, he then,
|
||
instead of killing them, proposed peace: on condition that they
|
||
should altogether depart from that Western part of England, and
|
||
settle in the East; and that GUTHRUM should become a Christian, in
|
||
remembrance of the Divine religion which now taught his conqueror,
|
||
the noble ALFRED, to forgive the enemy who had so often injured
|
||
him. This, GUTHRUM did. At his baptism, KING ALFRED was his
|
||
godfather. And GUTHRUM was an honourable chief who well deserved
|
||
that clemency; for, ever afterwards he was loyal and faithful to
|
||
the king. The Danes under him were faithful too. They plundered
|
||
and burned no more, but worked like honest men. They ploughed, and
|
||
sowed, and reaped, and led good honest English lives. And I hope
|
||
the children of those Danes played, many a time, with Saxon
|
||
children in the sunny fields; and that Danish young men fell in
|
||
love with Saxon girls, and married them; and that English
|
||
travellers, benighted at the doors of Danish cottages, often went
|
||
in for shelter until morning; and that Danes and Saxons sat by the
|
||
red fire, friends, talking of KING ALFRED THE GREAT.
|
||
|
||
All the Danes were not like these under GUTHRUM; for, after some
|
||
years, more of them came over, in the old plundering and burning
|
||
way - among them a fierce pirate of the name of HASTINGS, who had
|
||
the boldness to sail up the Thames to Gravesend, with eighty ships.
|
||
For three years, there was a war with these Danes; and there was a
|
||
famine in the country, too, and a plague, both upon human creatures
|
||
and beasts. But KING ALFRED, whose mighty heart never failed him,
|
||
built large ships nevertheless, with which to pursue the pirates on
|
||
the sea; and he encouraged his soldiers, by his brave example, to
|
||
fight valiantly against them on the shore. At last, he drove them
|
||
all away; and then there was repose in England.
|
||
|
||
As great and good in peace, as he was great and good in war, KING
|
||
ALFRED never rested from his labours to improve his people. He
|
||
loved to talk with clever men, and with travellers from foreign
|
||
countries, and to write down what they told him, for his people to
|
||
read. He had studied Latin after learning to read English, and now
|
||
another of his labours was, to translate Latin books into the
|
||
English-Saxon tongue, that his people might be interested, and
|
||
improved by their contents. He made just laws, that they might
|
||
live more happily and freely; he turned away all partial judges,
|
||
that no wrong might be done them; he was so careful of their
|
||
property, and punished robbers so severely, that it was a common
|
||
thing to say that under the great KING ALFRED, garlands of golden
|
||
chains and jewels might have hung across the streets, and no man
|
||
would have touched one. He founded schools; he patiently heard
|
||
causes himself in his Court of Justice; the great desires of his
|
||
heart were, to do right to all his subjects, and to leave England
|
||
better, wiser, happier in all ways, than he found it. His industry
|
||
in these efforts was quite astonishing. Every day he divided into
|
||
certain portions, and in each portion devoted himself to a certain
|
||
pursuit. That he might divide his time exactly, he had wax torches
|
||
or candles made, which were all of the same size, were notched
|
||
across at regular distances, and were always kept burning. Thus,
|
||
as the candles burnt down, he divided the day into notches, almost
|
||
as accurately as we now divide it into hours upon the clock. But
|
||
when the candles were first invented, it was found that the wind
|
||
and draughts of air, blowing into the palace through the doors and
|
||
windows, and through the chinks in the walls, caused them to gutter
|
||
and burn unequally. To prevent this, the King had them put into
|
||
cases formed of wood and white horn. And these were the first
|
||
lanthorns ever made in England.
|
||
|
||
All this time, he was afflicted with a terrible unknown disease,
|
||
which caused him violent and frequent pain that nothing could
|
||
relieve. He bore it, as he had borne all the troubles of his life,
|
||
like a brave good man, until he was fifty-three years old; and
|
||
then, having reigned thirty years, he died. He died in the year
|
||
nine hundred and one; but, long ago as that is, his fame, and the
|
||
love and gratitude with which his subjects regarded him, are
|
||
freshly remembered to the present hour.
|
||
|
||
In the next reign, which was the reign of EDWARD, surnamed THE
|
||
ELDER, who was chosen in council to succeed, a nephew of KING
|
||
ALFRED troubled the country by trying to obtain the throne. The
|
||
Danes in the East of England took part with this usurper (perhaps
|
||
because they had honoured his uncle so much, and honoured him for
|
||
his uncle's sake), and there was hard fighting; but, the King, with
|
||
the assistance of his sister, gained the day, and reigned in peace
|
||
for four and twenty years. He gradually extended his power over
|
||
the whole of England, and so the Seven Kingdoms were united into
|
||
one.
|
||
|
||
When England thus became one kingdom, ruled over by one Saxon king,
|
||
the Saxons had been settled in the country more than four hundred
|
||
and fifty years. Great changes had taken place in its customs
|
||
during that time. The Saxons were still greedy eaters and great
|
||
drinkers, and their feasts were often of a noisy and drunken kind;
|
||
but many new comforts and even elegances had become known, and were
|
||
fast increasing. Hangings for the walls of rooms, where, in these
|
||
modern days, we paste up paper, are known to have been sometimes
|
||
made of silk, ornamented with birds and flowers in needlework.
|
||
Tables and chairs were curiously carved in different woods; were
|
||
sometimes decorated with gold or silver; sometimes even made of
|
||
those precious metals. Knives and spoons were used at table;
|
||
golden ornaments were worn - with silk and cloth, and golden
|
||
tissues and embroideries; dishes were made of gold and silver,
|
||
brass and bone. There were varieties of drinking-horns, bedsteads,
|
||
musical instruments. A harp was passed round, at a feast, like the
|
||
drinking-bowl, from guest to guest; and each one usually sang or
|
||
played when his turn came. The weapons of the Saxons were stoutly
|
||
made, and among them was a terrible iron hammer that gave deadly
|
||
blows, and was long remembered. The Saxons themselves were a
|
||
handsome people. The men were proud of their long fair hair,
|
||
parted on the forehead; their ample beards, their fresh
|
||
complexions, and clear eyes. The beauty of the Saxon women filled
|
||
all England with a new delight and grace.
|
||
|
||
I have more to tell of the Saxons yet, but I stop to say this now,
|
||
because under the GREAT ALFRED, all the best points of the English-
|
||
Saxon character were first encouraged, and in him first shown. It
|
||
has been the greatest character among the nations of the earth.
|
||
Wherever the descendants of the Saxon race have gone, have sailed,
|
||
or otherwise made their way, even to the remotest regions of the
|
||
world, they have been patient, persevering, never to be broken in
|
||
spirit, never to be turned aside from enterprises on which they
|
||
have resolved. In Europe, Asia, Africa, America, the whole world
|
||
over; in the desert, in the forest, on the sea; scorched by a
|
||
burning sun, or frozen by ice that never melts; the Saxon blood
|
||
remains unchanged. Wheresoever that race goes, there, law, and
|
||
industry, and safety for life and property, and all the great
|
||
results of steady perseverance, are certain to arise.
|
||
|
||
I pause to think with admiration, of the noble king who, in his
|
||
single person, possessed all the Saxon virtues. Whom misfortune
|
||
could not subdue, whom prosperity could not spoil, whose
|
||
perseverance nothing could shake. Who was hopeful in defeat, and
|
||
generous in success. Who loved justice, freedom, truth, and
|
||
knowledge. Who, in his care to instruct his people, probably did
|
||
more to preserve the beautiful old Saxon language, than I can
|
||
imagine. Without whom, the English tongue in which I tell this
|
||
story might have wanted half its meaning. As it is said that his
|
||
spirit still inspires some of our best English laws, so, let you
|
||
and I pray that it may animate our English hearts, at least to this
|
||
- to resolve, when we see any of our fellow-creatures left in
|
||
ignorance, that we will do our best, while life is in us, to have
|
||
them taught; and to tell those rulers whose duty it is to teach
|
||
them, and who neglect their duty, that they have profited very
|
||
little by all the years that have rolled away since the year nine
|
||
hundred and one, and that they are far behind the bright example of
|
||
KING ALFRED THE GREAT.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER IV - ENGLAND UNDER ATHELSTAN AND THE SIX BOY-KINGS
|
||
|
||
ATHELSTAN, the son of Edward the Elder, succeeded that king. He
|
||
reigned only fifteen years; but he remembered the glory of his
|
||
grandfather, the great Alfred, and governed England well. He
|
||
reduced the turbulent people of Wales, and obliged them to pay him
|
||
a tribute in money, and in cattle, and to send him their best hawks
|
||
and hounds. He was victorious over the Cornish men, who were not
|
||
yet quite under the Saxon government. He restored such of the old
|
||
laws as were good, and had fallen into disuse; made some wise new
|
||
laws, and took care of the poor and weak. A strong alliance, made
|
||
against him by ANLAF a Danish prince, CONSTANTINE King of the
|
||
Scots, and the people of North Wales, he broke and defeated in one
|
||
great battle, long famous for the vast numbers slain in it. After
|
||
that, he had a quiet reign; the lords and ladies about him had
|
||
leisure to become polite and agreeable; and foreign princes were
|
||
glad (as they have sometimes been since) to come to England on
|
||
visits to the English court.
|
||
|
||
When Athelstan died, at forty-seven years old, his brother EDMUND,
|
||
who was only eighteen, became king. He was the first of six boy-
|
||
kings, as you will presently know.
|
||
|
||
They called him the Magnificent, because he showed a taste for
|
||
improvement and refinement. But he was beset by the Danes, and had
|
||
a short and troubled reign, which came to a troubled end. One
|
||
night, when he was feasting in his hall, and had eaten much and
|
||
drunk deep, he saw, among the company, a noted robber named LEOF,
|
||
who had been banished from England. Made very angry by the
|
||
boldness of this man, the King turned to his cup-bearer, and said,
|
||
'There is a robber sitting at the table yonder, who, for his
|
||
crimes, is an outlaw in the land - a hunted wolf, whose life any
|
||
man may take, at any time. Command that robber to depart!' 'I
|
||
will not depart!' said Leof. 'No?' cried the King. 'No, by the
|
||
Lord!' said Leof. Upon that the King rose from his seat, and,
|
||
making passionately at the robber, and seizing him by his long
|
||
hair, tried to throw him down. But the robber had a dagger
|
||
underneath his cloak, and, in the scuffle, stabbed the King to
|
||
death. That done, he set his back against the wall, and fought so
|
||
desperately, that although he was soon cut to pieces by the King's
|
||
armed men, and the wall and pavement were splashed with his blood,
|
||
yet it was not before he had killed and wounded many of them. You
|
||
may imagine what rough lives the kings of those times led, when one
|
||
of them could struggle, half drunk, with a public robber in his own
|
||
dining-hall, and be stabbed in presence of the company who ate and
|
||
drank with him.
|
||
|
||
Then succeeded the boy-king EDRED, who was weak and sickly in body,
|
||
but of a strong mind. And his armies fought the Northmen, the
|
||
Danes, and Norwegians, or the Sea-Kings, as they were called, and
|
||
beat them for the time. And, in nine years, Edred died, and passed
|
||
away.
|
||
|
||
Then came the boy-king EDWY, fifteen years of age; but the real
|
||
king, who had the real power, was a monk named DUNSTAN - a clever
|
||
priest, a little mad, and not a little proud and cruel.
|
||
|
||
Dunstan was then Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, whither the body of
|
||
King Edmund the Magnificent was carried, to be buried. While yet a
|
||
boy, he had got out of his bed one night (being then in a fever),
|
||
and walked about Glastonbury Church when it was under repair; and,
|
||
because he did not tumble off some scaffolds that were there, and
|
||
break his neck, it was reported that he had been shown over the
|
||
building by an angel. He had also made a harp that was said to
|
||
play of itself - which it very likely did, as AEolian Harps, which
|
||
are played by the wind, and are understood now, always do. For
|
||
these wonders he had been once denounced by his enemies, who were
|
||
jealous of his favour with the late King Athelstan, as a magician;
|
||
and he had been waylaid, bound hand and foot, and thrown into a
|
||
marsh. But he got out again, somehow, to cause a great deal of
|
||
trouble yet.
|
||
|
||
The priests of those days were, generally, the only scholars. They
|
||
were learned in many things. Having to make their own convents and
|
||
monasteries on uncultivated grounds that were granted to them by
|
||
the Crown, it was necessary that they should be good farmers and
|
||
good gardeners, or their lands would have been too poor to support
|
||
them. For the decoration of the chapels where they prayed, and for
|
||
the comfort of the refectories where they ate and drank, it was
|
||
necessary that there should be good carpenters, good smiths, good
|
||
painters, among them. For their greater safety in sickness and
|
||
accident, living alone by themselves in solitary places, it was
|
||
necessary that they should study the virtues of plants and herbs,
|
||
and should know how to dress cuts, burns, scalds, and bruises, and
|
||
how to set broken limbs. Accordingly, they taught themselves, and
|
||
one another, a great variety of useful arts; and became skilful in
|
||
agriculture, medicine, surgery, and handicraft. And when they
|
||
wanted the aid of any little piece of machinery, which would be
|
||
simple enough now, but was marvellous then, to impose a trick upon
|
||
the poor peasants, they knew very well how to make it; and DID make
|
||
it many a time and often, I have no doubt.
|
||
|
||
Dunstan, Abbot of Glastonbury Abbey, was one of the most sagacious
|
||
of these monks. He was an ingenious smith, and worked at a forge
|
||
in a little cell. This cell was made too short to admit of his
|
||
lying at full length when he went to sleep - as if THAT did any
|
||
good to anybody! - and he used to tell the most extraordinary lies
|
||
about demons and spirits, who, he said, came there to persecute
|
||
him. For instance, he related that one day when he was at work,
|
||
the devil looked in at the little window, and tried to tempt him to
|
||
lead a life of idle pleasure; whereupon, having his pincers in the
|
||
fire, red hot, he seized the devil by the nose, and put him to such
|
||
pain, that his bellowings were heard for miles and miles. Some
|
||
people are inclined to think this nonsense a part of Dunstan's
|
||
madness (for his head never quite recovered the fever), but I think
|
||
not. I observe that it induced the ignorant people to consider him
|
||
a holy man, and that it made him very powerful. Which was exactly
|
||
what he always wanted.
|
||
|
||
On the day of the coronation of the handsome boy-king Edwy, it was
|
||
remarked by ODO, Archbishop of Canterbury (who was a Dane by
|
||
birth), that the King quietly left the coronation feast, while all
|
||
the company were there. Odo, much displeased, sent his friend
|
||
Dunstan to seek him. Dunstan finding him in the company of his
|
||
beautiful young wife ELGIVA, and her mother ETHELGIVA, a good and
|
||
virtuous lady, not only grossly abused them, but dragged the young
|
||
King back into the feasting-hall by force. Some, again, think
|
||
Dunstan did this because the young King's fair wife was his own
|
||
cousin, and the monks objected to people marrying their own
|
||
cousins; but I believe he did it, because he was an imperious,
|
||
audacious, ill-conditioned priest, who, having loved a young lady
|
||
himself before he became a sour monk, hated all love now, and
|
||
everything belonging to it.
|
||
|
||
The young King was quite old enough to feel this insult. Dunstan
|
||
had been Treasurer in the last reign, and he soon charged Dunstan
|
||
with having taken some of the last king's money. The Glastonbury
|
||
Abbot fled to Belgium (very narrowly escaping some pursuers who
|
||
were sent to put out his eyes, as you will wish they had, when you
|
||
read what follows), and his abbey was given to priests who were
|
||
married; whom he always, both before and afterwards, opposed. But
|
||
he quickly conspired with his friend, Odo the Dane, to set up the
|
||
King's young brother, EDGAR, as his rival for the throne; and, not
|
||
content with this revenge, he caused the beautiful queen Elgiva,
|
||
though a lovely girl of only seventeen or eighteen, to be stolen
|
||
from one of the Royal Palaces, branded in the cheek with a red-hot
|
||
iron, and sold into slavery in Ireland. But the Irish people
|
||
pitied and befriended her; and they said, 'Let us restore the girl-
|
||
queen to the boy-king, and make the young lovers happy!' and they
|
||
cured her of her cruel wound, and sent her home as beautiful as
|
||
before. But the villain Dunstan, and that other villain, Odo,
|
||
caused her to be waylaid at Gloucester as she was joyfully hurrying
|
||
to join her husband, and to be hacked and hewn with swords, and to
|
||
be barbarously maimed and lamed, and left to die. When Edwy the
|
||
Fair (his people called him so, because he was so young and
|
||
handsome) heard of her dreadful fate, he died of a broken heart;
|
||
and so the pitiful story of the poor young wife and husband ends!
|
||
Ah! Better to be two cottagers in these better times, than king
|
||
and queen of England in those bad days, though never so fair!
|
||
|
||
Then came the boy-king, EDGAR, called the Peaceful, fifteen years
|
||
old. Dunstan, being still the real king, drove all married priests
|
||
out of the monasteries and abbeys, and replaced them by solitary
|
||
monks like himself, of the rigid order called the Benedictines. He
|
||
made himself Archbishop of Canterbury, for his greater glory; and
|
||
exercised such power over the neighbouring British princes, and so
|
||
collected them about the King, that once, when the King held his
|
||
court at Chester, and went on the river Dee to visit the monastery
|
||
of St. John, the eight oars of his boat were pulled (as the people
|
||
used to delight in relating in stories and songs) by eight crowned
|
||
kings, and steered by the King of England. As Edgar was very
|
||
obedient to Dunstan and the monks, they took great pains to
|
||
represent him as the best of kings. But he was really profligate,
|
||
debauched, and vicious. He once forcibly carried off a young lady
|
||
from the convent at Wilton; and Dunstan, pretending to be very much
|
||
shocked, condemned him not to wear his crown upon his head for
|
||
seven years - no great punishment, I dare say, as it can hardly
|
||
have been a more comfortable ornament to wear, than a stewpan
|
||
without a handle. His marriage with his second wife, ELFRIDA, is
|
||
one of the worst events of his reign. Hearing of the beauty of
|
||
this lady, he despatched his favourite courtier, ATHELWOLD, to her
|
||
father's castle in Devonshire, to see if she were really as
|
||
charming as fame reported. Now, she was so exceedingly beautiful
|
||
that Athelwold fell in love with her himself, and married her; but
|
||
he told the King that she was only rich - not handsome. The King,
|
||
suspecting the truth when they came home, resolved to pay the
|
||
newly-married couple a visit; and, suddenly, told Athelwold to
|
||
prepare for his immediate coming. Athelwold, terrified, confessed
|
||
to his young wife what he had said and done, and implored her to
|
||
disguise her beauty by some ugly dress or silly manner, that he
|
||
might be safe from the King's anger. She promised that she would;
|
||
but she was a proud woman, who would far rather have been a queen
|
||
than the wife of a courtier. She dressed herself in her best
|
||
dress, and adorned herself with her richest jewels; and when the
|
||
King came, presently, he discovered the cheat. So, he caused his
|
||
false friend, Athelwold, to be murdered in a wood, and married his
|
||
widow, this bad Elfrida. Six or seven years afterwards, he died;
|
||
and was buried, as if he had been all that the monks said he was,
|
||
in the abbey of Glastonbury, which he - or Dunstan for him - had
|
||
much enriched.
|
||
|
||
England, in one part of this reign, was so troubled by wolves,
|
||
which, driven out of the open country, hid themselves in the
|
||
mountains of Wales when they were not attacking travellers and
|
||
animals, that the tribute payable by the Welsh people was forgiven
|
||
them, on condition of their producing, every year, three hundred
|
||
wolves' heads. And the Welshmen were so sharp upon the wolves, to
|
||
save their money, that in four years there was not a wolf left.
|
||
|
||
Then came the boy-king, EDWARD, called the Martyr, from the manner
|
||
of his death. Elfrida had a son, named ETHELRED, for whom she
|
||
claimed the throne; but Dunstan did not choose to favour him, and
|
||
he made Edward king. The boy was hunting, one day, down in
|
||
Dorsetshire, when he rode near to Corfe Castle, where Elfrida and
|
||
Ethelred lived. Wishing to see them kindly, he rode away from his
|
||
attendants and galloped to the castle gate, where he arrived at
|
||
twilight, and blew his hunting-horn. 'You are welcome, dear King,'
|
||
said Elfrida, coming out, with her brightest smiles. 'Pray you
|
||
dismount and enter.' 'Not so, dear madam,' said the King. 'My
|
||
company will miss me, and fear that I have met with some harm.
|
||
Please you to give me a cup of wine, that I may drink here, in the
|
||
saddle, to you and to my little brother, and so ride away with the
|
||
good speed I have made in riding here.' Elfrida, going in to bring
|
||
the wine, whispered an armed servant, one of her attendants, who
|
||
stole out of the darkening gateway, and crept round behind the
|
||
King's horse. As the King raised the cup to his lips, saying,
|
||
'Health!' to the wicked woman who was smiling on him, and to his
|
||
innocent brother whose hand she held in hers, and who was only ten
|
||
years old, this armed man made a spring and stabbed him in the
|
||
back. He dropped the cup and spurred his horse away; but, soon
|
||
fainting with loss of blood, dropped from the saddle, and, in his
|
||
fall, entangled one of his feet in the stirrup. The frightened
|
||
horse dashed on; trailing his rider's curls upon the ground;
|
||
dragging his smooth young face through ruts, and stones, and
|
||
briers, and fallen leaves, and mud; until the hunters, tracking the
|
||
animal's course by the King's blood, caught his bridle, and
|
||
released the disfigured body.
|
||
|
||
Then came the sixth and last of the boy-kings, ETHELRED, whom
|
||
Elfrida, when he cried out at the sight of his murdered brother
|
||
riding away from the castle gate, unmercifully beat with a torch
|
||
which she snatched from one of the attendants. The people so
|
||
disliked this boy, on account of his cruel mother and the murder
|
||
she had done to promote him, that Dunstan would not have had him
|
||
for king, but would have made EDGITHA, the daughter of the dead
|
||
King Edgar, and of the lady whom he stole out of the convent at
|
||
Wilton, Queen of England, if she would have consented. But she
|
||
knew the stories of the youthful kings too well, and would not be
|
||
persuaded from the convent where she lived in peace; so, Dunstan
|
||
put Ethelred on the throne, having no one else to put there, and
|
||
gave him the nickname of THE UNREADY - knowing that he wanted
|
||
resolution and firmness.
|
||
|
||
At first, Elfrida possessed great influence over the young King,
|
||
but, as he grew older and came of age, her influence declined. The
|
||
infamous woman, not having it in her power to do any more evil,
|
||
then retired from court, and, according, to the fashion of the
|
||
time, built churches and monasteries, to expiate her guilt. As if
|
||
a church, with a steeple reaching to the very stars, would have
|
||
been any sign of true repentance for the blood of the poor boy,
|
||
whose murdered form was trailed at his horse's heels! As if she
|
||
could have buried her wickedness beneath the senseless stones of
|
||
the whole world, piled up one upon another, for the monks to live
|
||
in!
|
||
|
||
About the ninth or tenth year of this reign, Dunstan died. He was
|
||
growing old then, but was as stern and artful as ever. Two
|
||
circumstances that happened in connexion with him, in this reign of
|
||
Ethelred, made a great noise. Once, he was present at a meeting of
|
||
the Church, when the question was discussed whether priests should
|
||
have permission to marry; and, as he sat with his head hung down,
|
||
apparently thinking about it, a voice seemed to come out of a
|
||
crucifix in the room, and warn the meeting to be of his opinion.
|
||
This was some juggling of Dunstan's, and was probably his own voice
|
||
disguised. But he played off a worse juggle than that, soon
|
||
afterwards; for, another meeting being held on the same subject,
|
||
and he and his supporters being seated on one side of a great room,
|
||
and their opponents on the other, he rose and said, 'To Christ
|
||
himself, as judge, do I commit this cause!' Immediately on these
|
||
words being spoken, the floor where the opposite party sat gave
|
||
way, and some were killed and many wounded. You may be pretty sure
|
||
that it had been weakened under Dunstan's direction, and that it
|
||
fell at Dunstan's signal. HIS part of the floor did not go down.
|
||
No, no. He was too good a workman for that.
|
||
|
||
When he died, the monks settled that he was a Saint, and called him
|
||
Saint Dunstan ever afterwards. They might just as well have
|
||
settled that he was a coach-horse, and could just as easily have
|
||
called him one.
|
||
|
||
Ethelred the Unready was glad enough, I dare say, to be rid of this
|
||
holy saint; but, left to himself, he was a poor weak king, and his
|
||
reign was a reign of defeat and shame. The restless Danes, led by
|
||
SWEYN, a son of the King of Denmark who had quarrelled with his
|
||
father and had been banished from home, again came into England,
|
||
and, year after year, attacked and despoiled large towns. To coax
|
||
these sea-kings away, the weak Ethelred paid them money; but, the
|
||
more money he paid, the more money the Danes wanted. At first, he
|
||
gave them ten thousand pounds; on their next invasion, sixteen
|
||
thousand pounds; on their next invasion, four and twenty thousand
|
||
pounds: to pay which large sums, the unfortunate English people
|
||
were heavily taxed. But, as the Danes still came back and wanted
|
||
more, he thought it would be a good plan to marry into some
|
||
powerful foreign family that would help him with soldiers. So, in
|
||
the year one thousand and two, he courted and married Emma, the
|
||
sister of Richard Duke of Normandy; a lady who was called the
|
||
Flower of Normandy.
|
||
|
||
And now, a terrible deed was done in England, the like of which was
|
||
never done on English ground before or since. On the thirteenth of
|
||
November, in pursuance of secret instructions sent by the King over
|
||
the whole country, the inhabitants of every town and city armed,
|
||
and murdered all the Danes who were their neighbours.
|
||
|
||
Young and old, babies and soldiers, men and women, every Dane was
|
||
killed. No doubt there were among them many ferocious men who had
|
||
done the English great wrong, and whose pride and insolence, in
|
||
swaggering in the houses of the English and insulting their wives
|
||
and daughters, had become unbearable; but no doubt there were also
|
||
among them many peaceful Christian Danes who had married English
|
||
women and become like English men. They were all slain, even to
|
||
GUNHILDA, the sister of the King of Denmark, married to an English
|
||
lord; who was first obliged to see the murder of her husband and
|
||
her child, and then was killed herself.
|
||
|
||
When the King of the sea-kings heard of this deed of blood, he
|
||
swore that he would have a great revenge. He raised an army, and a
|
||
mightier fleet of ships than ever yet had sailed to England; and in
|
||
all his army there was not a slave or an old man, but every soldier
|
||
was a free man, and the son of a free man, and in the prime of
|
||
life, and sworn to be revenged upon the English nation, for the
|
||
massacre of that dread thirteenth of November, when his countrymen
|
||
and countrywomen, and the little children whom they loved, were
|
||
killed with fire and sword. And so, the sea-kings came to England
|
||
in many great ships, each bearing the flag of its own commander.
|
||
Golden eagles, ravens, dragons, dolphins, beasts of prey,
|
||
threatened England from the prows of those ships, as they came
|
||
onward through the water; and were reflected in the shining shields
|
||
that hung upon their sides. The ship that bore the standard of the
|
||
King of the sea-kings was carved and painted like a mighty serpent;
|
||
and the King in his anger prayed that the Gods in whom he trusted
|
||
might all desert him, if his serpent did not strike its fangs into
|
||
England's heart.
|
||
|
||
And indeed it did. For, the great army landing from the great
|
||
fleet, near Exeter, went forward, laying England waste, and
|
||
striking their lances in the earth as they advanced, or throwing
|
||
them into rivers, in token of their making all the island theirs.
|
||
In remembrance of the black November night when the Danes were
|
||
murdered, wheresoever the invaders came, they made the Saxons
|
||
prepare and spread for them great feasts; and when they had eaten
|
||
those feasts, and had drunk a curse to England with wild
|
||
rejoicings, they drew their swords, and killed their Saxon
|
||
entertainers, and marched on. For six long years they carried on
|
||
this war: burning the crops, farmhouses, barns, mills, granaries;
|
||
killing the labourers in the fields; preventing the seed from being
|
||
sown in the ground; causing famine and starvation; leaving only
|
||
heaps of ruin and smoking ashes, where they had found rich towns.
|
||
To crown this misery, English officers and men deserted, and even
|
||
the favourites of Ethelred the Unready, becoming traitors, seized
|
||
many of the English ships, turned pirates against their own
|
||
country, and aided by a storm occasioned the loss of nearly the
|
||
whole English navy.
|
||
|
||
There was but one man of note, at this miserable pass, who was true
|
||
to his country and the feeble King. He was a priest, and a brave
|
||
one. For twenty days, the Archbishop of Canterbury defended that
|
||
city against its Danish besiegers; and when a traitor in the town
|
||
threw the gates open and admitted them, he said, in chains, 'I will
|
||
not buy my life with money that must be extorted from the suffering
|
||
people. Do with me what you please!' Again and again, he steadily
|
||
refused to purchase his release with gold wrung from the poor.
|
||
|
||
At last, the Danes being tired of this, and being assembled at a
|
||
drunken merry-making, had him brought into the feasting-hall.
|
||
|
||
'Now, bishop,' they said, 'we want gold!'
|
||
|
||
He looked round on the crowd of angry faces; from the shaggy beards
|
||
close to him, to the shaggy beards against the walls, where men
|
||
were mounted on tables and forms to see him over the heads of
|
||
others: and he knew that his time was come.
|
||
|
||
'I have no gold,' he said.
|
||
|
||
'Get it, bishop!' they all thundered.
|
||
|
||
'That, I have often told you I will not,' said he.
|
||
|
||
They gathered closer round him, threatening, but he stood unmoved.
|
||
Then, one man struck him; then, another; then a cursing soldier
|
||
picked up from a heap in a corner of the hall, where fragments had
|
||
been rudely thrown at dinner, a great ox-bone, and cast it at his
|
||
face, from which the blood came spurting forth; then, others ran to
|
||
the same heap, and knocked him down with other bones, and bruised
|
||
and battered him; until one soldier whom he had baptised (willing,
|
||
as I hope for the sake of that soldier's soul, to shorten the
|
||
sufferings of the good man) struck him dead with his battle-axe.
|
||
|
||
If Ethelred had had the heart to emulate the courage of this noble
|
||
archbishop, he might have done something yet. But he paid the
|
||
Danes forty-eight thousand pounds, instead, and gained so little by
|
||
the cowardly act, that Sweyn soon afterwards came over to subdue
|
||
all England. So broken was the attachment of the English people,
|
||
by this time, to their incapable King and their forlorn country
|
||
which could not protect them, that they welcomed Sweyn on all
|
||
sides, as a deliverer. London faithfully stood out, as long as the
|
||
King was within its walls; but, when he sneaked away, it also
|
||
welcomed the Dane. Then, all was over; and the King took refuge
|
||
abroad with the Duke of Normandy, who had already given shelter to
|
||
the King's wife, once the Flower of that country, and to her
|
||
children.
|
||
|
||
Still, the English people, in spite of their sad sufferings, could
|
||
not quite forget the great King Alfred and the Saxon race. When
|
||
Sweyn died suddenly, in little more than a month after he had been
|
||
proclaimed King of England, they generously sent to Ethelred, to
|
||
say that they would have him for their King again, 'if he would
|
||
only govern them better than he had governed them before.' The
|
||
Unready, instead of coming himself, sent Edward, one of his sons,
|
||
to make promises for him. At last, he followed, and the English
|
||
declared him King. The Danes declared CANUTE, the son of Sweyn,
|
||
King. Thus, direful war began again, and lasted for three years,
|
||
when the Unready died. And I know of nothing better that he did,
|
||
in all his reign of eight and thirty years.
|
||
|
||
Was Canute to be King now? Not over the Saxons, they said; they
|
||
must have EDMUND, one of the sons of the Unready, who was surnamed
|
||
IRONSIDE, because of his strength and stature. Edmund and Canute
|
||
thereupon fell to, and fought five battles - O unhappy England,
|
||
what a fighting-ground it was! - and then Ironside, who was a big
|
||
man, proposed to Canute, who was a little man, that they two should
|
||
fight it out in single combat. If Canute had been the big man, he
|
||
would probably have said yes, but, being the little man, he
|
||
decidedly said no. However, he declared that he was willing to
|
||
divide the kingdom - to take all that lay north of Watling Street,
|
||
as the old Roman military road from Dover to Chester was called,
|
||
and to give Ironside all that lay south of it. Most men being
|
||
weary of so much bloodshed, this was done. But Canute soon became
|
||
sole King of England; for Ironside died suddenly within two months.
|
||
Some think that he was killed, and killed by Canute's orders. No
|
||
one knows.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER V - ENGLAND UNDER CANUTE THE DANE
|
||
|
||
CANUTE reigned eighteen years. He was a merciless King at first.
|
||
After he had clasped the hands of the Saxon chiefs, in token of the
|
||
sincerity with which he swore to be just and good to them in return
|
||
for their acknowledging him, he denounced and slew many of them, as
|
||
well as many relations of the late King. 'He who brings me the
|
||
head of one of my enemies,' he used to say, 'shall be dearer to me
|
||
than a brother.' And he was so severe in hunting down his enemies,
|
||
that he must have got together a pretty large family of these dear
|
||
brothers. He was strongly inclined to kill EDMUND and EDWARD, two
|
||
children, sons of poor Ironside; but, being afraid to do so in
|
||
England, he sent them over to the King of Sweden, with a request
|
||
that the King would be so good as 'dispose of them.' If the King
|
||
of Sweden had been like many, many other men of that day, he would
|
||
have had their innocent throats cut; but he was a kind man, and
|
||
brought them up tenderly.
|
||
|
||
Normandy ran much in Canute's mind. In Normandy were the two
|
||
children of the late king - EDWARD and ALFRED by name; and their
|
||
uncle the Duke might one day claim the crown for them. But the
|
||
Duke showed so little inclination to do so now, that he proposed to
|
||
Canute to marry his sister, the widow of The Unready; who, being
|
||
but a showy flower, and caring for nothing so much as becoming a
|
||
queen again, left her children and was wedded to him.
|
||
|
||
Successful and triumphant, assisted by the valour of the English in
|
||
his foreign wars, and with little strife to trouble him at home,
|
||
Canute had a prosperous reign, and made many improvements. He was
|
||
a poet and a musician. He grew sorry, as he grew older, for the
|
||
blood he had shed at first; and went to Rome in a Pilgrim's dress,
|
||
by way of washing it out. He gave a great deal of money to
|
||
foreigners on his journey; but he took it from the English before
|
||
he started. On the whole, however, he certainly became a far
|
||
better man when he had no opposition to contend with, and was as
|
||
great a King as England had known for some time.
|
||
|
||
The old writers of history relate how that Canute was one day
|
||
disgusted with his courtiers for their flattery, and how he caused
|
||
his chair to be set on the sea-shore, and feigned to command the
|
||
tide as it came up not to wet the edge of his robe, for the land
|
||
was his; how the tide came up, of course, without regarding him;
|
||
and how he then turned to his flatterers, and rebuked them, saying,
|
||
what was the might of any earthly king, to the might of the
|
||
Creator, who could say unto the sea, 'Thus far shalt thou go, and
|
||
no farther!' We may learn from this, I think, that a little sense
|
||
will go a long way in a king; and that courtiers are not easily
|
||
cured of flattery, nor kings of a liking for it. If the courtiers
|
||
of Canute had not known, long before, that the King was fond of
|
||
flattery, they would have known better than to offer it in such
|
||
large doses. And if they had not known that he was vain of this
|
||
speech (anything but a wonderful speech it seems to me, if a good
|
||
child had made it), they would not have been at such great pains to
|
||
repeat it. I fancy I see them all on the sea-shore together; the
|
||
King's chair sinking in the sand; the King in a mighty good humour
|
||
with his own wisdom; and the courtiers pretending to be quite
|
||
stunned by it!
|
||
|
||
It is not the sea alone that is bidden to go 'thus far, and no
|
||
farther.' The great command goes forth to all the kings upon the
|
||
earth, and went to Canute in the year one thousand and thirty-five,
|
||
and stretched him dead upon his bed. Beside it, stood his Norman
|
||
wife. Perhaps, as the King looked his last upon her, he, who had
|
||
so often thought distrustfully of Normandy, long ago, thought once
|
||
more of the two exiled Princes in their uncle's court, and of the
|
||
little favour they could feel for either Danes or Saxons, and of a
|
||
rising cloud in Normandy that slowly moved towards England.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VI - ENGLAND UNDER HAROLD HAREFOOT, HARDICANUTE, AND EDWARD
|
||
THE CONFESSOR
|
||
|
||
CANUTE left three sons, by name SWEYN, HAROLD, and HARDICANUTE; but
|
||
his Queen, Emma, once the Flower of Normandy, was the mother of
|
||
only Hardicanute. Canute had wished his dominions to be divided
|
||
between the three, and had wished Harold to have England; but the
|
||
Saxon people in the South of England, headed by a nobleman with
|
||
great possessions, called the powerful EARL GODWIN (who is said to
|
||
have been originally a poor cow-boy), opposed this, and desired to
|
||
have, instead, either Hardicanute, or one of the two exiled Princes
|
||
who were over in Normandy. It seemed so certain that there would
|
||
be more bloodshed to settle this dispute, that many people left
|
||
their homes, and took refuge in the woods and swamps. Happily,
|
||
however, it was agreed to refer the whole question to a great
|
||
meeting at Oxford, which decided that Harold should have all the
|
||
country north of the Thames, with London for his capital city, and
|
||
that Hardicanute should have all the south. The quarrel was so
|
||
arranged; and, as Hardicanute was in Denmark troubling himself very
|
||
little about anything but eating and getting drunk, his mother and
|
||
Earl Godwin governed the south for him.
|
||
|
||
They had hardly begun to do so, and the trembling people who had
|
||
hidden themselves were scarcely at home again, when Edward, the
|
||
elder of the two exiled Princes, came over from Normandy with a few
|
||
followers, to claim the English Crown. His mother Emma, however,
|
||
who only cared for her last son Hardicanute, instead of assisting
|
||
him, as he expected, opposed him so strongly with all her influence
|
||
that he was very soon glad to get safely back. His brother Alfred
|
||
was not so fortunate. Believing in an affectionate letter, written
|
||
some time afterwards to him and his brother, in his mother's name
|
||
(but whether really with or without his mother's knowledge is now
|
||
uncertain), he allowed himself to be tempted over to England, with
|
||
a good force of soldiers, and landing on the Kentish coast, and
|
||
being met and welcomed by Earl Godwin, proceeded into Surrey, as
|
||
far as the town of Guildford. Here, he and his men halted in the
|
||
evening to rest, having still the Earl in their company; who had
|
||
ordered lodgings and good cheer for them. But, in the dead of the
|
||
night, when they were off their guard, being divided into small
|
||
parties sleeping soundly after a long march and a plentiful supper
|
||
in different houses, they were set upon by the King's troops, and
|
||
taken prisoners. Next morning they were drawn out in a line, to
|
||
the number of six hundred men, and were barbarously tortured and
|
||
killed; with the exception of every tenth man, who was sold into
|
||
slavery. As to the wretched Prince Alfred, he was stripped naked,
|
||
tied to a horse and sent away into the Isle of Ely, where his eyes
|
||
were torn out of his head, and where in a few days he miserably
|
||
died. I am not sure that the Earl had wilfully entrapped him, but
|
||
I suspect it strongly.
|
||
|
||
Harold was now King all over England, though it is doubtful whether
|
||
the Archbishop of Canterbury (the greater part of the priests were
|
||
Saxons, and not friendly to the Danes) ever consented to crown him.
|
||
Crowned or uncrowned, with the Archbishop's leave or without it, he
|
||
was King for four years: after which short reign he died, and was
|
||
buried; having never done much in life but go a hunting. He was
|
||
such a fast runner at this, his favourite sport, that the people
|
||
called him Harold Harefoot.
|
||
|
||
Hardicanute was then at Bruges, in Flanders, plotting, with his
|
||
mother (who had gone over there after the cruel murder of Prince
|
||
Alfred), for the invasion of England. The Danes and Saxons,
|
||
finding themselves without a King, and dreading new disputes, made
|
||
common cause, and joined in inviting him to occupy the Throne. He
|
||
consented, and soon troubled them enough; for he brought over
|
||
numbers of Danes, and taxed the people so insupportably to enrich
|
||
those greedy favourites that there were many insurrections,
|
||
especially one at Worcester, where the citizens rose and killed his
|
||
tax-collectors; in revenge for which he burned their city. He was
|
||
a brutal King, whose first public act was to order the dead body of
|
||
poor Harold Harefoot to be dug up, beheaded, and thrown into the
|
||
river. His end was worthy of such a beginning. He fell down
|
||
drunk, with a goblet of wine in his hand, at a wedding-feast at
|
||
Lambeth, given in honour of the marriage of his standard-bearer, a
|
||
Dane named TOWED THE PROUD. And he never spoke again.
|
||
|
||
EDWARD, afterwards called by the monks THE CONFESSOR, succeeded;
|
||
and his first act was to oblige his mother Emma, who had favoured
|
||
him so little, to retire into the country; where she died some ten
|
||
years afterwards. He was the exiled prince whose brother Alfred
|
||
had been so foully killed. He had been invited over from Normandy
|
||
by Hardicanute, in the course of his short reign of two years, and
|
||
had been handsomely treated at court. His cause was now favoured
|
||
by the powerful Earl Godwin, and he was soon made King. This Earl
|
||
had been suspected by the people, ever since Prince Alfred's cruel
|
||
death; he had even been tried in the last reign for the Prince's
|
||
murder, but had been pronounced not guilty; chiefly, as it was
|
||
supposed, because of a present he had made to the swinish King, of
|
||
a gilded ship with a figure-head of solid gold, and a crew of
|
||
eighty splendidly armed men. It was his interest to help the new
|
||
King with his power, if the new King would help him against the
|
||
popular distrust and hatred. So they made a bargain. Edward the
|
||
Confessor got the Throne. The Earl got more power and more land,
|
||
and his daughter Editha was made queen; for it was a part of their
|
||
compact that the King should take her for his wife.
|
||
|
||
But, although she was a gentle lady, in all things worthy to be
|
||
beloved - good, beautiful, sensible, and kind - the King from the
|
||
first neglected her. Her father and her six proud brothers,
|
||
resenting this cold treatment, harassed the King greatly by
|
||
exerting all their power to make him unpopular. Having lived so
|
||
long in Normandy, he preferred the Normans to the English. He made
|
||
a Norman Archbishop, and Norman Bishops; his great officers and
|
||
favourites were all Normans; he introduced the Norman fashions and
|
||
the Norman language; in imitation of the state custom of Normandy,
|
||
he attached a great seal to his state documents, instead of merely
|
||
marking them, as the Saxon Kings had done, with the sign of the
|
||
cross - just as poor people who have never been taught to write,
|
||
now make the same mark for their names. All this, the powerful
|
||
Earl Godwin and his six proud sons represented to the people as
|
||
disfavour shown towards the English; and thus they daily increased
|
||
their own power, and daily diminished the power of the King.
|
||
|
||
They were greatly helped by an event that occurred when he had
|
||
reigned eight years. Eustace, Earl of Bologne, who had married the
|
||
King's sister, came to England on a visit. After staying at the
|
||
court some time, he set forth, with his numerous train of
|
||
attendants, to return home. They were to embark at Dover.
|
||
Entering that peaceful town in armour, they took possession of the
|
||
best houses, and noisily demanded to be lodged and entertained
|
||
without payment. One of the bold men of Dover, who would not
|
||
endure to have these domineering strangers jingling their heavy
|
||
swords and iron corselets up and down his house, eating his meat
|
||
and drinking his strong liquor, stood in his doorway and refused
|
||
admission to the first armed man who came there. The armed man
|
||
drew, and wounded him. The man of Dover struck the armed man dead.
|
||
Intelligence of what he had done, spreading through the streets to
|
||
where the Count Eustace and his men were standing by their horses,
|
||
bridle in hand, they passionately mounted, galloped to the house,
|
||
surrounded it, forced their way in (the doors and windows being
|
||
closed when they came up), and killed the man of Dover at his own
|
||
fireside. They then clattered through the streets, cutting down
|
||
and riding over men, women, and children. This did not last long,
|
||
you may believe. The men of Dover set upon them with great fury,
|
||
killed nineteen of the foreigners, wounded many more, and,
|
||
blockading the road to the port so that they should not embark,
|
||
beat them out of the town by the way they had come. Hereupon,
|
||
Count Eustace rides as hard as man can ride to Gloucester, where
|
||
Edward is, surrounded by Norman monks and Norman lords. 'Justice!'
|
||
cries the Count, 'upon the men of Dover, who have set upon and
|
||
slain my people!' The King sends immediately for the powerful Earl
|
||
Godwin, who happens to be near; reminds him that Dover is under his
|
||
government; and orders him to repair to Dover and do military
|
||
execution on the inhabitants. 'It does not become you,' says the
|
||
proud Earl in reply, 'to condemn without a hearing those whom you
|
||
have sworn to protect. I will not do it.'
|
||
|
||
The King, therefore, summoned the Earl, on pain of banishment and
|
||
loss of his titles and property, to appear before the court to
|
||
answer this disobedience. The Earl refused to appear. He, his
|
||
eldest son Harold, and his second son Sweyn, hastily raised as many
|
||
fighting men as their utmost power could collect, and demanded to
|
||
have Count Eustace and his followers surrendered to the justice of
|
||
the country. The King, in his turn, refused to give them up, and
|
||
raised a strong force. After some treaty and delay, the troops of
|
||
the great Earl and his sons began to fall off. The Earl, with a
|
||
part of his family and abundance of treasure, sailed to Flanders;
|
||
Harold escaped to Ireland; and the power of the great family was
|
||
for that time gone in England. But, the people did not forget
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
Then, Edward the Confessor, with the true meanness of a mean
|
||
spirit, visited his dislike of the once powerful father and sons
|
||
upon the helpless daughter and sister, his unoffending wife, whom
|
||
all who saw her (her husband and his monks excepted) loved. He
|
||
seized rapaciously upon her fortune and her jewels, and allowing
|
||
her only one attendant, confined her in a gloomy convent, of which
|
||
a sister of his - no doubt an unpleasant lady after his own heart -
|
||
was abbess or jailer.
|
||
|
||
Having got Earl Godwin and his six sons well out of his way, the
|
||
King favoured the Normans more than ever. He invited over WILLIAM,
|
||
DUKE OF NORMANDY, the son of that Duke who had received him and his
|
||
murdered brother long ago, and of a peasant girl, a tanner's
|
||
daughter, with whom that Duke had fallen in love for her beauty as
|
||
he saw her washing clothes in a brook. William, who was a great
|
||
warrior, with a passion for fine horses, dogs, and arms, accepted
|
||
the invitation; and the Normans in England, finding themselves more
|
||
numerous than ever when he arrived with his retinue, and held in
|
||
still greater honour at court than before, became more and more
|
||
haughty towards the people, and were more and more disliked by
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
The old Earl Godwin, though he was abroad, knew well how the people
|
||
felt; for, with part of the treasure he had carried away with him,
|
||
he kept spies and agents in his pay all over England.
|
||
|
||
Accordingly, he thought the time was come for fitting out a great
|
||
expedition against the Norman-loving King. With it, he sailed to
|
||
the Isle of Wight, where he was joined by his son Harold, the most
|
||
gallant and brave of all his family. And so the father and son
|
||
came sailing up the Thames to Southwark; great numbers of the
|
||
people declaring for them, and shouting for the English Earl and
|
||
the English Harold, against the Norman favourites!
|
||
|
||
The King was at first as blind and stubborn as kings usually have
|
||
been whensoever they have been in the hands of monks. But the
|
||
people rallied so thickly round the old Earl and his son, and the
|
||
old Earl was so steady in demanding without bloodshed the
|
||
restoration of himself and his family to their rights, that at last
|
||
the court took the alarm. The Norman Archbishop of Canterbury, and
|
||
the Norman Bishop of London, surrounded by their retainers, fought
|
||
their way out of London, and escaped from Essex to France in a
|
||
fishing-boat. The other Norman favourites dispersed in all
|
||
directions. The old Earl and his sons (except Sweyn, who had
|
||
committed crimes against the law) were restored to their
|
||
possessions and dignities. Editha, the virtuous and lovely Queen
|
||
of the insensible King, was triumphantly released from her prison,
|
||
the convent, and once more sat in her chair of state, arrayed in
|
||
the jewels of which, when she had no champion to support her
|
||
rights, her cold-blooded husband had deprived her.
|
||
|
||
The old Earl Godwin did not long enjoy his restored fortune. He
|
||
fell down in a fit at the King's table, and died upon the third day
|
||
afterwards. Harold succeeded to his power, and to a far higher
|
||
place in the attachment of the people than his father had ever
|
||
held. By his valour he subdued the King's enemies in many bloody
|
||
fights. He was vigorous against rebels in Scotland - this was the
|
||
time when Macbeth slew Duncan, upon which event our English
|
||
Shakespeare, hundreds of years afterwards, wrote his great tragedy;
|
||
and he killed the restless Welsh King GRIFFITH, and brought his
|
||
head to England.
|
||
|
||
What Harold was doing at sea, when he was driven on the French
|
||
coast by a tempest, is not at all certain; nor does it at all
|
||
matter. That his ship was forced by a storm on that shore, and
|
||
that he was taken prisoner, there is no doubt. In those barbarous
|
||
days, all shipwrecked strangers were taken prisoners, and obliged
|
||
to pay ransom. So, a certain Count Guy, who was the Lord of
|
||
Ponthieu where Harold's disaster happened, seized him, instead of
|
||
relieving him like a hospitable and Christian lord as he ought to
|
||
have done, and expected to make a very good thing of it.
|
||
|
||
But Harold sent off immediately to Duke William of Normandy,
|
||
complaining of this treatment; and the Duke no sooner heard of it
|
||
than he ordered Harold to be escorted to the ancient town of Rouen,
|
||
where he then was, and where he received him as an honoured guest.
|
||
Now, some writers tell us that Edward the Confessor, who was by
|
||
this time old and had no children, had made a will, appointing Duke
|
||
William of Normandy his successor, and had informed the Duke of his
|
||
having done so. There is no doubt that he was anxious about his
|
||
successor; because he had even invited over, from abroad, EDWARD
|
||
THE OUTLAW, a son of Ironside, who had come to England with his
|
||
wife and three children, but whom the King had strangely refused to
|
||
see when he did come, and who had died in London suddenly (princes
|
||
were terribly liable to sudden death in those days), and had been
|
||
buried in St. Paul's Cathedral. The King might possibly have made
|
||
such a will; or, having always been fond of the Normans, he might
|
||
have encouraged Norman William to aspire to the English crown, by
|
||
something that he said to him when he was staying at the English
|
||
court. But, certainly William did now aspire to it; and knowing
|
||
that Harold would be a powerful rival, he called together a great
|
||
assembly of his nobles, offered Harold his daughter ADELE in
|
||
marriage, informed him that he meant on King Edward's death to
|
||
claim the English crown as his own inheritance, and required Harold
|
||
then and there to swear to aid him. Harold, being in the Duke's
|
||
power, took this oath upon the Missal, or Prayer-book. It is a
|
||
good example of the superstitions of the monks, that this Missal,
|
||
instead of being placed upon a table, was placed upon a tub; which,
|
||
when Harold had sworn, was uncovered, and shown to be full of dead
|
||
men's bones - bones, as the monks pretended, of saints. This was
|
||
supposed to make Harold's oath a great deal more impressive and
|
||
binding. As if the great name of the Creator of Heaven and earth
|
||
could be made more solemn by a knuckle-bone, or a double-tooth, or
|
||
a finger-nail, of Dunstan!
|
||
|
||
Within a week or two after Harold's return to England, the dreary
|
||
old Confessor was found to be dying. After wandering in his mind
|
||
like a very weak old man, he died. As he had put himself entirely
|
||
in the hands of the monks when he was alive, they praised him
|
||
lustily when he was dead. They had gone so far, already, as to
|
||
persuade him that he could work miracles; and had brought people
|
||
afflicted with a bad disorder of the skin, to him, to be touched
|
||
and cured. This was called 'touching for the King's Evil,' which
|
||
afterwards became a royal custom. You know, however, Who really
|
||
touched the sick, and healed them; and you know His sacred name is
|
||
not among the dusty line of human kings.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VII - ENGLAND UNDER HAROLD THE SECOND, AND CONQUERED BY THE
|
||
NORMANS
|
||
|
||
HAROLD was crowned King of England on the very day of the maudlin
|
||
Confessor's funeral. He had good need to be quick about it. When
|
||
the news reached Norman William, hunting in his park at Rouen, he
|
||
dropped his bow, returned to his palace, called his nobles to
|
||
council, and presently sent ambassadors to Harold, calling on him
|
||
to keep his oath and resign the Crown. Harold would do no such
|
||
thing. The barons of France leagued together round Duke William
|
||
for the invasion of England. Duke William promised freely to
|
||
distribute English wealth and English lands among them. The Pope
|
||
sent to Normandy a consecrated banner, and a ring containing a hair
|
||
which he warranted to have grown on the head of Saint Peter. He
|
||
blessed the enterprise; and cursed Harold; and requested that the
|
||
Normans would pay 'Peter's Pence' - or a tax to himself of a penny
|
||
a year on every house - a little more regularly in future, if they
|
||
could make it convenient.
|
||
|
||
King Harold had a rebel brother in Flanders, who was a vassal of
|
||
HAROLD HARDRADA, King of Norway. This brother, and this Norwegian
|
||
King, joining their forces against England, with Duke William's
|
||
help, won a fight in which the English were commanded by two
|
||
nobles; and then besieged York. Harold, who was waiting for the
|
||
Normans on the coast at Hastings, with his army, marched to
|
||
Stamford Bridge upon the river Derwent to give them instant battle.
|
||
|
||
He found them drawn up in a hollow circle, marked out by their
|
||
shining spears. Riding round this circle at a distance, to survey
|
||
it, he saw a brave figure on horseback, in a blue mantle and a
|
||
bright helmet, whose horse suddenly stumbled and threw him.
|
||
|
||
'Who is that man who has fallen?' Harold asked of one of his
|
||
captains.
|
||
|
||
'The King of Norway,' he replied.
|
||
|
||
'He is a tall and stately king,' said Harold, 'but his end is
|
||
near.'
|
||
|
||
He added, in a little while, 'Go yonder to my brother, and tell
|
||
him, if he withdraw his troops, he shall be Earl of Northumberland,
|
||
and rich and powerful in England.'
|
||
|
||
The captain rode away and gave the message.
|
||
|
||
'What will he give to my friend the King of Norway?' asked the
|
||
brother.
|
||
|
||
'Seven feet of earth for a grave,' replied the captain.
|
||
|
||
'No more?' returned the brother, with a smile.
|
||
|
||
'The King of Norway being a tall man, perhaps a little more,'
|
||
replied the captain.
|
||
|
||
'Ride back!' said the brother, 'and tell King Harold to make ready
|
||
for the fight!'
|
||
|
||
He did so, very soon. And such a fight King Harold led against
|
||
that force, that his brother, and the Norwegian King, and every
|
||
chief of note in all their host, except the Norwegian King's son,
|
||
Olave, to whom he gave honourable dismissal, were left dead upon
|
||
the field. The victorious army marched to York. As King Harold
|
||
sat there at the feast, in the midst of all his company, a stir was
|
||
heard at the doors; and messengers all covered with mire from
|
||
riding far and fast through broken ground came hurrying in, to
|
||
report that the Normans had landed in England.
|
||
|
||
The intelligence was true. They had been tossed about by contrary
|
||
winds, and some of their ships had been wrecked. A part of their
|
||
own shore, to which they had been driven back, was strewn with
|
||
Norman bodies. But they had once more made sail, led by the Duke's
|
||
own galley, a present from his wife, upon the prow whereof the
|
||
figure of a golden boy stood pointing towards England. By day, the
|
||
banner of the three Lions of Normandy, the diverse coloured sails,
|
||
the gilded vans, the many decorations of this gorgeous ship, had
|
||
glittered in the sun and sunny water; by night, a light had
|
||
sparkled like a star at her mast-head. And now, encamped near
|
||
Hastings, with their leader lying in the old Roman castle of
|
||
Pevensey, the English retiring in all directions, the land for
|
||
miles around scorched and smoking, fired and pillaged, was the
|
||
whole Norman power, hopeful and strong on English ground.
|
||
|
||
Harold broke up the feast and hurried to London. Within a week,
|
||
his army was ready. He sent out spies to ascertain the Norman
|
||
strength. William took them, caused them to be led through his
|
||
whole camp, and then dismissed. 'The Normans,' said these spies to
|
||
Harold, 'are not bearded on the upper lip as we English are, but
|
||
are shorn. They are priests.' 'My men,' replied Harold, with a
|
||
laugh, 'will find those priests good soldiers!'
|
||
|
||
'The Saxons,' reported Duke William's outposts of Norman soldiers,
|
||
who were instructed to retire as King Harold's army advanced, 'rush
|
||
on us through their pillaged country with the fury of madmen.'
|
||
|
||
'Let them come, and come soon!' said Duke William.
|
||
|
||
Some proposals for a reconciliation were made, but were soon
|
||
abandoned. In the middle of the month of October, in the year one
|
||
thousand and sixty-six, the Normans and the English came front to
|
||
front. All night the armies lay encamped before each other, in a
|
||
part of the country then called Senlac, now called (in remembrance
|
||
of them) Battle. With the first dawn of day, they arose. There,
|
||
in the faint light, were the English on a hill; a wood behind them;
|
||
in their midst, the Royal banner, representing a fighting warrior,
|
||
woven in gold thread, adorned with precious stones; beneath the
|
||
banner, as it rustled in the wind, stood King Harold on foot, with
|
||
two of his remaining brothers by his side; around them, still and
|
||
silent as the dead, clustered the whole English army - every
|
||
soldier covered by his shield, and bearing in his hand his dreaded
|
||
English battle-axe.
|
||
|
||
On an opposite hill, in three lines, archers, foot-soldiers,
|
||
horsemen, was the Norman force. Of a sudden, a great battle-cry,
|
||
'God help us!' burst from the Norman lines. The English answered
|
||
with their own battle-cry, 'God's Rood! Holy Rood!' The Normans
|
||
then came sweeping down the hill to attack the English.
|
||
|
||
There was one tall Norman Knight who rode before the Norman army on
|
||
a prancing horse, throwing up his heavy sword and catching it, and
|
||
singing of the bravery of his countrymen. An English Knight, who
|
||
rode out from the English force to meet him, fell by this Knight's
|
||
hand. Another English Knight rode out, and he fell too. But then
|
||
a third rode out, and killed the Norman. This was in the first
|
||
beginning of the fight. It soon raged everywhere.
|
||
|
||
The English, keeping side by side in a great mass, cared no more
|
||
for the showers of Norman arrows than if they had been showers of
|
||
Norman rain. When the Norman horsemen rode against them, with
|
||
their battle-axes they cut men and horses down. The Normans gave
|
||
way. The English pressed forward. A cry went forth among the
|
||
Norman troops that Duke William was killed. Duke William took off
|
||
his helmet, in order that his face might be distinctly seen, and
|
||
rode along the line before his men. This gave them courage. As
|
||
they turned again to face the English, some of their Norman horse
|
||
divided the pursuing body of the English from the rest, and thus
|
||
all that foremost portion of the English army fell, fighting
|
||
bravely. The main body still remaining firm, heedless of the
|
||
Norman arrows, and with their battle-axes cutting down the crowds
|
||
of horsemen when they rode up, like forests of young trees, Duke
|
||
William pretended to retreat. The eager English followed. The
|
||
Norman army closed again, and fell upon them with great slaughter.
|
||
|
||
'Still,' said Duke William, 'there are thousands of the English,
|
||
firms as rocks around their King. Shoot upward, Norman archers,
|
||
that your arrows may fall down upon their faces!'
|
||
|
||
The sun rose high, and sank, and the battle still raged. Through
|
||
all the wild October day, the clash and din resounded in the air.
|
||
In the red sunset, and in the white moonlight, heaps upon heaps of
|
||
dead men lay strewn, a dreadful spectacle, all over the ground.
|
||
|
||
King Harold, wounded with an arrow in the eye, was nearly blind.
|
||
His brothers were already killed. Twenty Norman Knights, whose
|
||
battered armour had flashed fiery and golden in the sunshine all
|
||
day long, and now looked silvery in the moonlight, dashed forward
|
||
to seize the Royal banner from the English Knights and soldiers,
|
||
still faithfully collected round their blinded King. The King
|
||
received a mortal wound, and dropped. The English broke and fled.
|
||
The Normans rallied, and the day was lost.
|
||
|
||
O what a sight beneath the moon and stars, when lights were shining
|
||
in the tent of the victorious Duke William, which was pitched near
|
||
the spot where Harold fell - and he and his knights were carousing,
|
||
within - and soldiers with torches, going slowly to and fro,
|
||
without, sought for the corpse of Harold among piles of dead - and
|
||
the Warrior, worked in golden thread and precious stones, lay low,
|
||
all torn and soiled with blood - and the three Norman Lions kept
|
||
watch over the field!
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER VIII - ENGLAND UNDER WILLIAM THE FIRST, THE NORMAN
|
||
CONQUEROR
|
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UPON the ground where the brave Harold fell, William the Norman
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afterwards founded an abbey, which, under the name of Battle Abbey,
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was a rich and splendid place through many a troubled year, though
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now it is a grey ruin overgrown with ivy. But the first work he
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had to do, was to conquer the English thoroughly; and that, as you
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know by this time, was hard work for any man.
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He ravaged several counties; he burned and plundered many towns; he
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laid waste scores upon scores of miles of pleasant country; he
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destroyed innumerable lives. At length STIGAND, Archbishop of
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Canterbury, with other representatives of the clergy and the
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people, went to his camp, and submitted to him. EDGAR, the
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insignificant son of Edmund Ironside, was proclaimed King by
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others, but nothing came of it. He fled to Scotland afterwards,
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where his sister, who was young and beautiful, married the Scottish
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King. Edgar himself was not important enough for anybody to care
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much about him.
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On Christmas Day, William was crowned in Westminster Abbey, under
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the title of WILLIAM THE FIRST; but he is best known as WILLIAM THE
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CONQUEROR. It was a strange coronation. One of the bishops who
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performed the ceremony asked the Normans, in French, if they would
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have Duke William for their king? They answered Yes. Another of
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the bishops put the same question to the Saxons, in English. They
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too answered Yes, with a loud shout. The noise being heard by a
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guard of Norman horse-soldiers outside, was mistaken for resistance
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on the part of the English. The guard instantly set fire to the
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neighbouring houses, and a tumult ensued; in the midst of which the
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King, being left alone in the Abbey, with a few priests (and they
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all being in a terrible fright together), was hurriedly crowned.
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When the crown was placed upon his head, he swore to govern the
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English as well as the best of their own monarchs. I dare say you
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think, as I do, that if we except the Great Alfred, he might pretty
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easily have done that.
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Numbers of the English nobles had been killed in the last
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disastrous battle. Their estates, and the estates of all the
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nobles who had fought against him there, King William seized upon,
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and gave to his own Norman knights and nobles. Many great English
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families of the present time acquired their English lands in this
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way, and are very proud of it.
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But what is got by force must be maintained by force. These nobles
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were obliged to build castles all over England, to defend their new
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property; and, do what he would, the King could neither soothe nor
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quell the nation as he wished. He gradually introduced the Norman
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language and the Norman customs; yet, for a long time the great
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body of the English remained sullen and revengeful. On his going
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over to Normandy, to visit his subjects there, the oppressions of
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his half-brother ODO, whom he left in charge of his English
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kingdom, drove the people mad. The men of Kent even invited over,
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to take possession of Dover, their old enemy Count Eustace of
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Boulogne, who had led the fray when the Dover man was slain at his
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own fireside. The men of Hereford, aided by the Welsh, and
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commanded by a chief named EDRIC THE WILD, drove the Normans out of
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their country. Some of those who had been dispossessed of their
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lands, banded together in the North of England; some, in Scotland;
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some, in the thick woods and marshes; and whensoever they could
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fall upon the Normans, or upon the English who had submitted to the
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Normans, they fought, despoiled, and murdered, like the desperate
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outlaws that they were. Conspiracies were set on foot for a
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general massacre of the Normans, like the old massacre of the
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Danes. In short, the English were in a murderous mood all through
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the kingdom.
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King William, fearing he might lose his conquest, came back, and
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tried to pacify the London people by soft words. He then set forth
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to repress the country people by stern deeds. Among the towns
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which he besieged, and where he killed and maimed the inhabitants
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without any distinction, sparing none, young or old, armed or
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unarmed, were Oxford, Warwick, Leicester, Nottingham, Derby,
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Lincoln, York. In all these places, and in many others, fire and
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sword worked their utmost horrors, and made the land dreadful to
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behold. The streams and rivers were discoloured with blood; the
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sky was blackened with smoke; the fields were wastes of ashes; the
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waysides were heaped up with dead. Such are the fatal results of
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conquest and ambition! Although William was a harsh and angry man,
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I do not suppose that he deliberately meant to work this shocking
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ruin, when he invaded England. But what he had got by the strong
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hand, he could only keep by the strong hand, and in so doing he
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made England a great grave.
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Two sons of Harold, by name EDMUND and GODWIN, came over from
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Ireland, with some ships, against the Normans, but were defeated.
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This was scarcely done, when the outlaws in the woods so harassed
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York, that the Governor sent to the King for help. The King
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despatched a general and a large force to occupy the town of
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Durham. The Bishop of that place met the general outside the town,
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and warned him not to enter, as he would be in danger there. The
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general cared nothing for the warning, and went in with all his
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men. That night, on every hill within sight of Durham, signal
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fires were seen to blaze. When the morning dawned, the English,
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who had assembled in great strength, forced the gates, rushed into
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the town, and slew the Normans every one. The English afterwards
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besought the Danes to come and help them. The Danes came, with two
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hundred and forty ships. The outlawed nobles joined them; they
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captured York, and drove the Normans out of that city. Then,
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William bribed the Danes to go away; and took such vengeance on the
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English, that all the former fire and sword, smoke and ashes, death
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and ruin, were nothing compared with it. In melancholy songs, and
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doleful stories, it was still sung and told by cottage fires on
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winter evenings, a hundred years afterwards, how, in those dreadful
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days of the Normans, there was not, from the River Humber to the
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River Tyne, one inhabited village left, nor one cultivated field -
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how there was nothing but a dismal ruin, where the human creatures
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and the beasts lay dead together.
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The outlaws had, at this time, what they called a Camp of Refuge,
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in the midst of the fens of Cambridgeshire. Protected by those
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marshy grounds which were difficult of approach, they lay among the
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reeds and rushes, and were hidden by the mists that rose up from
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the watery earth. Now, there also was, at that time, over the sea
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in Flanders, an Englishman named HEREWARD, whose father had died in
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his absence, and whose property had been given to a Norman. When
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he heard of this wrong that had been done him (from such of the
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exiled English as chanced to wander into that country), he longed
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for revenge; and joining the outlaws in their camp of refuge,
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became their commander. He was so good a soldier, that the Normans
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supposed him to be aided by enchantment. William, even after he
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had made a road three miles in length across the Cambridgeshire
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marshes, on purpose to attack this supposed enchanter, thought it
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necessary to engage an old lady, who pretended to be a sorceress,
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to come and do a little enchantment in the royal cause. For this
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purpose she was pushed on before the troops in a wooden tower; but
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Hereward very soon disposed of this unfortunate sorceress, by
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burning her, tower and all. The monks of the convent of Ely near
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at hand, however, who were fond of good living, and who found it
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very uncomfortable to have the country blockaded and their supplies
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of meat and drink cut off, showed the King a secret way of
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surprising the camp. So Hereward was soon defeated. Whether he
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afterwards died quietly, or whether he was killed after killing
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sixteen of the men who attacked him (as some old rhymes relate that
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he did), I cannot say. His defeat put an end to the Camp of
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Refuge; and, very soon afterwards, the King, victorious both in
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Scotland and in England, quelled the last rebellious English noble.
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He then surrounded himself with Norman lords, enriched by the
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property of English nobles; had a great survey made of all the land
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in England, which was entered as the property of its new owners, on
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a roll called Doomsday Book; obliged the people to put out their
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fires and candles at a certain hour every night, on the ringing of
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a bell which was called The Curfew; introduced the Norman dresses
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and manners; made the Normans masters everywhere, and the English,
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servants; turned out the English bishops, and put Normans in their
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places; and showed himself to be the Conqueror indeed.
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But, even with his own Normans, he had a restless life. They were
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always hungering and thirsting for the riches of the English; and
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the more he gave, the more they wanted. His priests were as greedy
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as his soldiers. We know of only one Norman who plainly told his
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master, the King, that he had come with him to England to do his
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duty as a faithful servant, and that property taken by force from
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other men had no charms for him. His name was GUILBERT. We should
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not forget his name, for it is good to remember and to honour
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honest men.
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Besides all these troubles, William the Conqueror was troubled by
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quarrels among his sons. He had three living. ROBERT, called
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CURTHOSE, because of his short legs; WILLIAM, called RUFUS or the
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Red, from the colour of his hair; and HENRY, fond of learning, and
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called, in the Norman language, BEAUCLERC, or Fine-Scholar. When
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Robert grew up, he asked of his father the government of Normandy,
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which he had nominally possessed, as a child, under his mother,
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MATILDA. The King refusing to grant it, Robert became jealous and
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discontented; and happening one day, while in this temper, to be
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ridiculed by his brothers, who threw water on him from a balcony as
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he was walking before the door, he drew his sword, rushed up-
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stairs, and was only prevented by the King himself from putting
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them to death. That same night, he hotly departed with some
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followers from his father's court, and endeavoured to take the
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Castle of Rouen by surprise. Failing in this, he shut himself up
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in another Castle in Normandy, which the King besieged, and where
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Robert one day unhorsed and nearly killed him without knowing who
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he was. His submission when he discovered his father, and the
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intercession of the queen and others, reconciled them; but not
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soundly; for Robert soon strayed abroad, and went from court to
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court with his complaints. He was a gay, careless, thoughtless
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fellow, spending all he got on musicians and dancers; but his
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mother loved him, and often, against the King's command, supplied
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him with money through a messenger named SAMSON. At length the
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incensed King swore he would tear out Samson's eyes; and Samson,
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thinking that his only hope of safety was in becoming a monk,
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became one, went on such errands no more, and kept his eyes in his
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head.
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All this time, from the turbulent day of his strange coronation,
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the Conqueror had been struggling, you see, at any cost of cruelty
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and bloodshed, to maintain what he had seized. All his reign, he
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struggled still, with the same object ever before him. He was a
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stern, bold man, and he succeeded in it.
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He loved money, and was particular in his eating, but he had only
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leisure to indulge one other passion, and that was his love of
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hunting. He carried it to such a height that he ordered whole
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villages and towns to be swept away to make forests for the deer.
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Not satisfied with sixty-eight Royal Forests, he laid waste an
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immense district, to form another in Hampshire, called the New
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Forest. The many thousands of miserable peasants who saw their
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little houses pulled down, and themselves and children turned into
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the open country without a shelter, detested him for his merciless
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addition to their many sufferings; and when, in the twenty-first
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year of his reign (which proved to be the last), he went over to
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Rouen, England was as full of hatred against him, as if every leaf
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on every tree in all his Royal Forests had been a curse upon his
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head. In the New Forest, his son Richard (for he had four sons)
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had been gored to death by a Stag; and the people said that this so
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cruelly-made Forest would yet be fatal to others of the Conqueror's
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race.
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He was engaged in a dispute with the King of France about some
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territory. While he stayed at Rouen, negotiating with that King,
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he kept his bed and took medicines: being advised by his
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physicians to do so, on account of having grown to an unwieldy
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size. Word being brought to him that the King of France made light
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of this, and joked about it, he swore in a great rage that he
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should rue his jests. He assembled his army, marched into the
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disputed territory, burnt - his old way! - the vines, the crops,
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and fruit, and set the town of Mantes on fire. But, in an evil
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hour; for, as he rode over the hot ruins, his horse, setting his
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hoofs upon some burning embers, started, threw him forward against
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the pommel of the saddle, and gave him a mortal hurt. For six
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weeks he lay dying in a monastery near Rouen, and then made his
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will, giving England to William, Normandy to Robert, and five
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thousand pounds to Henry. And now, his violent deeds lay heavy on
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his mind. He ordered money to be given to many English churches
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and monasteries, and - which was much better repentance - released
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his prisoners of state, some of whom had been confined in his
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dungeons twenty years.
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It was a September morning, and the sun was rising, when the King
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was awakened from slumber by the sound of a church bell. 'What
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bell is that?' he faintly asked. They told him it was the bell of
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the chapel of Saint Mary. 'I commend my soul,' said he, 'to Mary!'
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and died.
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Think of his name, The Conqueror, and then consider how he lay in
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death! The moment he was dead, his physicians, priests, and
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nobles, not knowing what contest for the throne might now take
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place, or what might happen in it, hastened away, each man for
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himself and his own property; the mercenary servants of the court
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began to rob and plunder; the body of the King, in the indecent
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strife, was rolled from the bed, and lay alone, for hours, upon the
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ground. O Conqueror, of whom so many great names are proud now, of
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whom so many great names thought nothing then, it were better to
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have conquered one true heart, than England!
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By-and-by, the priests came creeping in with prayers and candles;
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and a good knight, named HERLUIN, undertook (which no one else
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would do) to convey the body to Caen, in Normandy, in order that it
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might be buried in St. Stephen's church there, which the Conqueror
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had founded. But fire, of which he had made such bad use in his
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life, seemed to follow him of itself in death. A great
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conflagration broke out in the town when the body was placed in the
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church; and those present running out to extinguish the flames, it
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was once again left alone.
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It was not even buried in peace. It was about to be let down, in
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its Royal robes, into a tomb near the high altar, in presence of a
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great concourse of people, when a loud voice in the crowd cried
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out, 'This ground is mine! Upon it, stood my father's house. This
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King despoiled me of both ground and house to build this church.
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In the great name of GOD, I here forbid his body to be covered with
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the earth that is my right!' The priests and bishops present,
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knowing the speaker's right, and knowing that the King had often
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denied him justice, paid him down sixty shillings for the grave.
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Even then, the corpse was not at rest. The tomb was too small, and
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they tried to force it in. It broke, a dreadful smell arose, the
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people hurried out into the air, and, for the third time, it was
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left alone.
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Where were the Conqueror's three sons, that they were not at their
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father's burial? Robert was lounging among minstrels, dancers, and
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gamesters, in France or Germany. Henry was carrying his five
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thousand pounds safely away in a convenient chest he had got made.
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William the Red was hurrying to England, to lay hands upon the
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Royal treasure and the crown.
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CHAPTER IX - ENGLAND UNDER WILLIAM THE SECOND, CALLED RUFUS
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WILLIAM THE RED, in breathless haste, secured the three great forts
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of Dover, Pevensey, and Hastings, and made with hot speed for
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Winchester, where the Royal treasure was kept. The treasurer
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delivering him the keys, he found that it amounted to sixty
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thousand pounds in silver, besides gold and jewels. Possessed of
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this wealth, he soon persuaded the Archbishop of Canterbury to
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crown him, and became William the Second, King of England.
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Rufus was no sooner on the throne, than he ordered into prison
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again the unhappy state captives whom his father had set free, and
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directed a goldsmith to ornament his father's tomb profusely with
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gold and silver. It would have been more dutiful in him to have
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attended the sick Conqueror when he was dying; but England itself,
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like this Red King, who once governed it, has sometimes made
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expensive tombs for dead men whom it treated shabbily when they
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were alive.
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The King's brother, Robert of Normandy, seeming quite content to be
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only Duke of that country; and the King's other brother, Fine-
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Scholar, being quiet enough with his five thousand pounds in a
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chest; the King flattered himself, we may suppose, with the hope of
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an easy reign. But easy reigns were difficult to have in those
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days. The turbulent Bishop ODO (who had blessed the Norman army at
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the Battle of Hastings, and who, I dare say, took all the credit of
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the victory to himself) soon began, in concert with some powerful
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Norman nobles, to trouble the Red King.
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The truth seems to be that this bishop and his friends, who had
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lands in England and lands in Normandy, wished to hold both under
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one Sovereign; and greatly preferred a thoughtless good-natured
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person, such as Robert was, to Rufus; who, though far from being an
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amiable man in any respect, was keen, and not to be imposed upon.
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They declared in Robert's favour, and retired to their castles
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(those castles were very troublesome to kings) in a sullen humour.
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The Red King, seeing the Normans thus falling from him, revenged
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himself upon them by appealing to the English; to whom he made a
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variety of promises, which he never meant to perform - in
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particular, promises to soften the cruelty of the Forest Laws; and
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who, in return, so aided him with their valour, that ODO was
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besieged in the Castle of Rochester, and forced to abandon it, and
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to depart from England for ever: whereupon the other rebellious
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Norman nobles were soon reduced and scattered.
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Then, the Red King went over to Normandy, where the people suffered
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greatly under the loose rule of Duke Robert. The King's object was
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to seize upon the Duke's dominions. This, the Duke, of course,
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prepared to resist; and miserable war between the two brothers
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||
seemed inevitable, when the powerful nobles on both sides, who had
|
||
seen so much of war, interfered to prevent it. A treaty was made.
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Each of the two brothers agreed to give up something of his claims,
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||
and that the longer-liver of the two should inherit all the
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dominions of the other. When they had come to this loving
|
||
understanding, they embraced and joined their forces against Fine-
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Scholar; who had bought some territory of Robert with a part of his
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five thousand pounds, and was considered a dangerous individual in
|
||
consequence.
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|
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St. Michael's Mount, in Normandy (there is another St. Michael's
|
||
Mount, in Cornwall, wonderfully like it), was then, as it is now, a
|
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strong place perched upon the top of a high rock, around which,
|
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when the tide is in, the sea flows, leaving no road to the
|
||
mainland. In this place, Fine-Scholar shut himself up with his
|
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soldiers, and here he was closely besieged by his two brothers. At
|
||
one time, when he was reduced to great distress for want of water,
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the generous Robert not only permitted his men to get water, but
|
||
sent Fine-Scholar wine from his own table; and, on being
|
||
remonstrated with by the Red King, said 'What! shall we let our own
|
||
brother die of thirst? Where shall we get another, when he is
|
||
gone?' At another time, the Red King riding alone on the shore of
|
||
the bay, looking up at the Castle, was taken by two of Fine-
|
||
Scholar's men, one of whom was about to kill him, when he cried
|
||
out, 'Hold, knave! I am the King of England!' The story says that
|
||
the soldier raised him from the ground respectfully and humbly, and
|
||
that the King took him into his service. The story may or may not
|
||
be true; but at any rate it is true that Fine-Scholar could not
|
||
hold out against his united brothers, and that he abandoned Mount
|
||
St. Michael, and wandered about - as poor and forlorn as other
|
||
scholars have been sometimes known to be.
|
||
|
||
The Scotch became unquiet in the Red King's time, and were twice
|
||
defeated - the second time, with the loss of their King, Malcolm,
|
||
and his son. The Welsh became unquiet too. Against them, Rufus
|
||
was less successful; for they fought among their native mountains,
|
||
and did great execution on the King's troops. Robert of Normandy
|
||
became unquiet too; and, complaining that his brother the King did
|
||
not faithfully perform his part of their agreement, took up arms,
|
||
and obtained assistance from the King of France, whom Rufus, in the
|
||
end, bought off with vast sums of money. England became unquiet
|
||
too. Lord Mowbray, the powerful Earl of Northumberland, headed a
|
||
great conspiracy to depose the King, and to place upon the throne,
|
||
STEPHEN, the Conqueror's near relative. The plot was discovered;
|
||
all the chief conspirators were seized; some were fined, some were
|
||
put in prison, some were put to death. The Earl of Northumberland
|
||
himself was shut up in a dungeon beneath Windsor Castle, where he
|
||
died, an old man, thirty long years afterwards. The Priests in
|
||
England were more unquiet than any other class or power; for the
|
||
Red King treated them with such small ceremony that he refused to
|
||
appoint new bishops or archbishops when the old ones died, but kept
|
||
all the wealth belonging to those offices in his own hands. In
|
||
return for this, the Priests wrote his life when he was dead, and
|
||
abused him well. I am inclined to think, myself, that there was
|
||
little to choose between the Priests and the Red King; that both
|
||
sides were greedy and designing; and that they were fairly matched.
|
||
|
||
The Red King was false of heart, selfish, covetous, and mean. He
|
||
had a worthy minister in his favourite, Ralph, nicknamed - for
|
||
almost every famous person had a nickname in those rough days -
|
||
Flambard, or the Firebrand. Once, the King being ill, became
|
||
penitent, and made ANSELM, a foreign priest and a good man,
|
||
Archbishop of Canterbury. But he no sooner got well again than he
|
||
repented of his repentance, and persisted in wrongfully keeping to
|
||
himself some of the wealth belonging to the archbishopric. This
|
||
led to violent disputes, which were aggravated by there being in
|
||
Rome at that time two rival Popes; each of whom declared he was the
|
||
only real original infallible Pope, who couldn't make a mistake.
|
||
At last, Anselm, knowing the Red King's character, and not feeling
|
||
himself safe in England, asked leave to return abroad. The Red
|
||
King gladly gave it; for he knew that as soon as Anselm was gone,
|
||
he could begin to store up all the Canterbury money again, for his
|
||
own use.
|
||
|
||
By such means, and by taxing and oppressing the English people in
|
||
every possible way, the Red King became very rich. When he wanted
|
||
money for any purpose, he raised it by some means or other, and
|
||
cared nothing for the injustice he did, or the misery he caused.
|
||
Having the opportunity of buying from Robert the whole duchy of
|
||
Normandy for five years, he taxed the English people more than
|
||
ever, and made the very convents sell their plate and valuables to
|
||
supply him with the means to make the purchase. But he was as
|
||
quick and eager in putting down revolt as he was in raising money;
|
||
for, a part of the Norman people objecting - very naturally, I
|
||
think - to being sold in this way, he headed an army against them
|
||
with all the speed and energy of his father. He was so impatient,
|
||
that he embarked for Normandy in a great gale of wind. And when
|
||
the sailors told him it was dangerous to go to sea in such angry
|
||
weather, he replied, 'Hoist sail and away! Did you ever hear of a
|
||
king who was drowned?'
|
||
|
||
You will wonder how it was that even the careless Robert came to
|
||
sell his dominions. It happened thus. It had long been the custom
|
||
for many English people to make journeys to Jerusalem, which were
|
||
called pilgrimages, in order that they might pray beside the tomb
|
||
of Our Saviour there. Jerusalem belonging to the Turks, and the
|
||
Turks hating Christianity, these Christian travellers were often
|
||
insulted and ill used. The Pilgrims bore it patiently for some
|
||
time, but at length a remarkable man, of great earnestness and
|
||
eloquence, called PETER THE HERMIT, began to preach in various
|
||
places against the Turks, and to declare that it was the duty of
|
||
good Christians to drive away those unbelievers from the tomb of
|
||
Our Saviour, and to take possession of it, and protect it. An
|
||
excitement such as the world had never known before was created.
|
||
Thousands and thousands of men of all ranks and conditions departed
|
||
for Jerusalem to make war against the Turks. The war is called in
|
||
history the first Crusade, and every Crusader wore a cross marked
|
||
on his right shoulder.
|
||
|
||
All the Crusaders were not zealous Christians. Among them were
|
||
vast numbers of the restless, idle, profligate, and adventurous
|
||
spirit of the time. Some became Crusaders for the love of change;
|
||
some, in the hope of plunder; some, because they had nothing to do
|
||
at home; some, because they did what the priests told them; some,
|
||
because they liked to see foreign countries; some, because they
|
||
were fond of knocking men about, and would as soon knock a Turk
|
||
about as a Christian. Robert of Normandy may have been influenced
|
||
by all these motives; and by a kind desire, besides, to save the
|
||
Christian Pilgrims from bad treatment in future. He wanted to
|
||
raise a number of armed men, and to go to the Crusade. He could
|
||
not do so without money. He had no money; and he sold his
|
||
dominions to his brother, the Red King, for five years. With the
|
||
large sum he thus obtained, he fitted out his Crusaders gallantly,
|
||
and went away to Jerusalem in martial state. The Red King, who
|
||
made money out of everything, stayed at home, busily squeezing more
|
||
money out of Normans and English.
|
||
|
||
After three years of great hardship and suffering - from shipwreck
|
||
at sea; from travel in strange lands; from hunger, thirst, and
|
||
fever, upon the burning sands of the desert; and from the fury of
|
||
the Turks - the valiant Crusaders got possession of Our Saviour's
|
||
tomb. The Turks were still resisting and fighting bravely, but
|
||
this success increased the general desire in Europe to join the
|
||
Crusade. Another great French Duke was proposing to sell his
|
||
dominions for a term to the rich Red King, when the Red King's
|
||
reign came to a sudden and violent end.
|
||
|
||
You have not forgotten the New Forest which the Conqueror made, and
|
||
which the miserable people whose homes he had laid waste, so hated.
|
||
The cruelty of the Forest Laws, and the torture and death they
|
||
brought upon the peasantry, increased this hatred. The poor
|
||
persecuted country people believed that the New Forest was
|
||
enchanted. They said that in thunder-storms, and on dark nights,
|
||
demons appeared, moving beneath the branches of the gloomy trees.
|
||
They said that a terrible spectre had foretold to Norman hunters
|
||
that the Red King should be punished there. And now, in the
|
||
pleasant season of May, when the Red King had reigned almost
|
||
thirteen years; and a second Prince of the Conqueror's blood -
|
||
another Richard, the son of Duke Robert - was killed by an arrow in
|
||
this dreaded Forest; the people said that the second time was not
|
||
the last, and that there was another death to come.
|
||
|
||
It was a lonely forest, accursed in the people's hearts for the
|
||
wicked deeds that had been done to make it; and no man save the
|
||
King and his Courtiers and Huntsmen, liked to stray there. But, in
|
||
reality, it was like any other forest. In the spring, the green
|
||
leaves broke out of the buds; in the summer, flourished heartily,
|
||
and made deep shades; in the winter, shrivelled and blew down, and
|
||
lay in brown heaps on the moss. Some trees were stately, and grew
|
||
high and strong; some had fallen of themselves; some were felled by
|
||
the forester's axe; some were hollow, and the rabbits burrowed at
|
||
their roots; some few were struck by lightning, and stood white and
|
||
bare. There were hill-sides covered with rich fern, on which the
|
||
morning dew so beautifully sparkled; there were brooks, where the
|
||
deer went down to drink, or over which the whole herd bounded,
|
||
flying from the arrows of the huntsmen; there were sunny glades,
|
||
and solemn places where but little light came through the rustling
|
||
leaves. The songs of the birds in the New Forest were pleasanter
|
||
to hear than the shouts of fighting men outside; and even when the
|
||
Red King and his Court came hunting through its solitudes, cursing
|
||
loud and riding hard, with a jingling of stirrups and bridles and
|
||
knives and daggers, they did much less harm there than among the
|
||
English or Normans, and the stags died (as they lived) far easier
|
||
than the people.
|
||
|
||
Upon a day in August, the Red King, now reconciled to his brother,
|
||
Fine-Scholar, came with a great train to hunt in the New Forest.
|
||
Fine-Scholar was of the party. They were a merry party, and had
|
||
lain all night at Malwood-Keep, a hunting-lodge in the forest,
|
||
where they had made good cheer, both at supper and breakfast, and
|
||
had drunk a deal of wine. The party dispersed in various
|
||
directions, as the custom of hunters then was. The King took with
|
||
him only SIR WALTER TYRREL, who was a famous sportsman, and to whom
|
||
he had given, before they mounted horse that morning, two fine
|
||
arrows.
|
||
|
||
The last time the King was ever seen alive, he was riding with Sir
|
||
Walter Tyrrel, and their dogs were hunting together.
|
||
|
||
It was almost night, when a poor charcoal-burner, passing through
|
||
the forest with his cart, came upon the solitary body of a dead
|
||
man, shot with an arrow in the breast, and still bleeding. He got
|
||
it into his cart. It was the body of the King. Shaken and
|
||
tumbled, with its red beard all whitened with lime and clotted with
|
||
blood, it was driven in the cart by the charcoal-burner next day to
|
||
Winchester Cathedral, where it was received and buried.
|
||
|
||
Sir Walter Tyrrel, who escaped to Normandy, and claimed the
|
||
protection of the King of France, swore in France that the Red King
|
||
was suddenly shot dead by an arrow from an unseen hand, while they
|
||
were hunting together; that he was fearful of being suspected as
|
||
the King's murderer; and that he instantly set spurs to his horse,
|
||
and fled to the sea-shore. Others declared that the King and Sir
|
||
Walter Tyrrel were hunting in company, a little before sunset,
|
||
standing in bushes opposite one another, when a stag came between
|
||
them. That the King drew his bow and took aim, but the string
|
||
broke. That the King then cried, 'Shoot, Walter, in the Devil's
|
||
name!' That Sir Walter shot. That the arrow glanced against a
|
||
tree, was turned aside from the stag, and struck the King from his
|
||
horse, dead.
|
||
|
||
By whose hand the Red King really fell, and whether that hand
|
||
despatched the arrow to his breast by accident or by design, is
|
||
only known to GOD. Some think his brother may have caused him to
|
||
be killed; but the Red King had made so many enemies, both among
|
||
priests and people, that suspicion may reasonably rest upon a less
|
||
unnatural murderer. Men know no more than that he was found dead
|
||
in the New Forest, which the suffering people had regarded as a
|
||
doomed ground for his race.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER X - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE FIRST, CALLED FINE-SCHOLAR
|
||
|
||
FINE-SCHOLAR, on hearing of the Red King's death, hurried to
|
||
Winchester with as much speed as Rufus himself had made, to seize
|
||
the Royal treasure. But the keeper of the treasure who had been
|
||
one of the hunting-party in the Forest, made haste to Winchester
|
||
too, and, arriving there at about the same time, refused to yield
|
||
it up. Upon this, Fine-Scholar drew his sword, and threatened to
|
||
kill the treasurer; who might have paid for his fidelity with his
|
||
life, but that he knew longer resistance to be useless when he
|
||
found the Prince supported by a company of powerful barons, who
|
||
declared they were determined to make him King. The treasurer,
|
||
therefore, gave up the money and jewels of the Crown: and on the
|
||
third day after the death of the Red King, being a Sunday, Fine-
|
||
Scholar stood before the high altar in Westminster Abbey, and made
|
||
a solemn declaration that he would resign the Church property which
|
||
his brother had seized; that he would do no wrong to the nobles;
|
||
and that he would restore to the people the laws of Edward the
|
||
Confessor, with all the improvements of William the Conqueror. So
|
||
began the reign of KING HENRY THE FIRST.
|
||
|
||
The people were attached to their new King, both because he had
|
||
known distresses, and because he was an Englishman by birth and not
|
||
a Norman. To strengthen this last hold upon them, the King wished
|
||
to marry an English lady; and could think of no other wife than
|
||
MAUD THE GOOD, the daughter of the King of Scotland. Although this
|
||
good Princess did not love the King, she was so affected by the
|
||
representations the nobles made to her of the great charity it
|
||
would be in her to unite the Norman and Saxon races, and prevent
|
||
hatred and bloodshed between them for the future, that she
|
||
consented to become his wife. After some disputing among the
|
||
priests, who said that as she had been in a convent in her youth,
|
||
and had worn the veil of a nun, she could not lawfully be married -
|
||
against which the Princess stated that her aunt, with whom she had
|
||
lived in her youth, had indeed sometimes thrown a piece of black
|
||
stuff over her, but for no other reason than because the nun's veil
|
||
was the only dress the conquering Normans respected in girl or
|
||
woman, and not because she had taken the vows of a nun, which she
|
||
never had - she was declared free to marry, and was made King
|
||
Henry's Queen. A good Queen she was; beautiful, kind-hearted, and
|
||
worthy of a better husband than the King.
|
||
|
||
For he was a cunning and unscrupulous man, though firm and clever.
|
||
He cared very little for his word, and took any means to gain his
|
||
ends. All this is shown in his treatment of his brother Robert -
|
||
Robert, who had suffered him to be refreshed with water, and who
|
||
had sent him the wine from his own table, when he was shut up, with
|
||
the crows flying below him, parched with thirst, in the castle on
|
||
the top of St. Michael's Mount, where his Red brother would have
|
||
let him die.
|
||
|
||
Before the King began to deal with Robert, he removed and disgraced
|
||
all the favourites of the late King; who were for the most part
|
||
base characters, much detested by the people. Flambard, or
|
||
Firebrand, whom the late King had made Bishop of Durham, of all
|
||
things in the world, Henry imprisoned in the Tower; but Firebrand
|
||
was a great joker and a jolly companion, and made himself so
|
||
popular with his guards that they pretended to know nothing about a
|
||
long rope that was sent into his prison at the bottom of a deep
|
||
flagon of wine. The guards took the wine, and Firebrand took the
|
||
rope; with which, when they were fast asleep, he let himself down
|
||
from a window in the night, and so got cleverly aboard ship and
|
||
away to Normandy.
|
||
|
||
Now Robert, when his brother Fine-Scholar came to the throne, was
|
||
still absent in the Holy Land. Henry pretended that Robert had
|
||
been made Sovereign of that country; and he had been away so long,
|
||
that the ignorant people believed it. But, behold, when Henry had
|
||
been some time King of England, Robert came home to Normandy;
|
||
having leisurely returned from Jerusalem through Italy, in which
|
||
beautiful country he had enjoyed himself very much, and had married
|
||
a lady as beautiful as itself! In Normandy, he found Firebrand
|
||
waiting to urge him to assert his claim to the English crown, and
|
||
declare war against King Henry. This, after great loss of time in
|
||
feasting and dancing with his beautiful Italian wife among his
|
||
Norman friends, he at last did.
|
||
|
||
The English in general were on King Henry's side, though many of
|
||
the Normans were on Robert's. But the English sailors deserted the
|
||
King, and took a great part of the English fleet over to Normandy;
|
||
so that Robert came to invade this country in no foreign vessels,
|
||
but in English ships. The virtuous Anselm, however, whom Henry had
|
||
invited back from abroad, and made Archbishop of Canterbury, was
|
||
steadfast in the King's cause; and it was so well supported that
|
||
the two armies, instead of fighting, made a peace. Poor Robert,
|
||
who trusted anybody and everybody, readily trusted his brother, the
|
||
King; and agreed to go home and receive a pension from England, on
|
||
condition that all his followers were fully pardoned. This the
|
||
King very faithfully promised, but Robert was no sooner gone than
|
||
he began to punish them.
|
||
|
||
Among them was the Earl of Shrewsbury, who, on being summoned by
|
||
the King to answer to five-and-forty accusations, rode away to one
|
||
of his strong castles, shut himself up therein, called around him
|
||
his tenants and vassals, and fought for his liberty, but was
|
||
defeated and banished. Robert, with all his faults, was so true to
|
||
his word, that when he first heard of this nobleman having risen
|
||
against his brother, he laid waste the Earl of Shrewsbury's estates
|
||
in Normandy, to show the King that he would favour no breach of
|
||
their treaty. Finding, on better information, afterwards, that the
|
||
Earl's only crime was having been his friend, he came over to
|
||
England, in his old thoughtless, warm-hearted way, to intercede
|
||
with the King, and remind him of the solemn promise to pardon all
|
||
his followers.
|
||
|
||
This confidence might have put the false King to the blush, but it
|
||
did not. Pretending to be very friendly, he so surrounded his
|
||
brother with spies and traps, that Robert, who was quite in his
|
||
power, had nothing for it but to renounce his pension and escape
|
||
while he could. Getting home to Normandy, and understanding the
|
||
King better now, he naturally allied himself with his old friend
|
||
the Earl of Shrewsbury, who had still thirty castles in that
|
||
country. This was exactly what Henry wanted. He immediately
|
||
declared that Robert had broken the treaty, and next year invaded
|
||
Normandy.
|
||
|
||
He pretended that he came to deliver the Normans, at their own
|
||
request, from his brother's misrule. There is reason to fear that
|
||
his misrule was bad enough; for his beautiful wife had died,
|
||
leaving him with an infant son, and his court was again so
|
||
careless, dissipated, and ill-regulated, that it was said he
|
||
sometimes lay in bed of a day for want of clothes to put on - his
|
||
attendants having stolen all his dresses. But he headed his army
|
||
like a brave prince and a gallant soldier, though he had the
|
||
misfortune to be taken prisoner by King Henry, with four hundred of
|
||
his Knights. Among them was poor harmless Edgar Atheling, who
|
||
loved Robert well. Edgar was not important enough to be severe
|
||
with. The King afterwards gave him a small pension, which he lived
|
||
upon and died upon, in peace, among the quiet woods and fields of
|
||
England.
|
||
|
||
And Robert - poor, kind, generous, wasteful, heedless Robert, with
|
||
so many faults, and yet with virtues that might have made a better
|
||
and a happier man - what was the end of him? If the King had had
|
||
the magnanimity to say with a kind air, 'Brother, tell me, before
|
||
these noblemen, that from this time you will be my faithful
|
||
follower and friend, and never raise your hand against me or my
|
||
forces more!' he might have trusted Robert to the death. But the
|
||
King was not a magnanimous man. He sentenced his brother to be
|
||
confined for life in one of the Royal Castles. In the beginning of
|
||
his imprisonment, he was allowed to ride out, guarded; but he one
|
||
day broke away from his guard and galloped of. He had the evil
|
||
fortune to ride into a swamp, where his horse stuck fast and he was
|
||
taken. When the King heard of it he ordered him to be blinded,
|
||
which was done by putting a red-hot metal basin on his eyes.
|
||
|
||
And so, in darkness and in prison, many years, he thought of all
|
||
his past life, of the time he had wasted, of the treasure he had
|
||
squandered, of the opportunities he had lost, of the youth he had
|
||
thrown away, of the talents he had neglected. Sometimes, on fine
|
||
autumn mornings, he would sit and think of the old hunting parties
|
||
in the free Forest, where he had been the foremost and the gayest.
|
||
Sometimes, in the still nights, he would wake, and mourn for the
|
||
many nights that had stolen past him at the gaming-table;
|
||
sometimes, would seem to hear, upon the melancholy wind, the old
|
||
songs of the minstrels; sometimes, would dream, in his blindness,
|
||
of the light and glitter of the Norman Court. Many and many a
|
||
time, he groped back, in his fancy, to Jerusalem, where he had
|
||
fought so well; or, at the head of his brave companions, bowed his
|
||
feathered helmet to the shouts of welcome greeting him in Italy,
|
||
and seemed again to walk among the sunny vineyards, or on the shore
|
||
of the blue sea, with his lovely wife. And then, thinking of her
|
||
grave, and of his fatherless boy, he would stretch out his solitary
|
||
arms and weep.
|
||
|
||
At length, one day, there lay in prison, dead, with cruel and
|
||
disfiguring scars upon his eyelids, bandaged from his jailer's
|
||
sight, but on which the eternal Heavens looked down, a worn old man
|
||
of eighty. He had once been Robert of Normandy. Pity him!
|
||
|
||
At the time when Robert of Normandy was taken prisoner by his
|
||
brother, Robert's little son was only five years old. This child
|
||
was taken, too, and carried before the King, sobbing and crying;
|
||
for, young as he was, he knew he had good reason to be afraid of
|
||
his Royal uncle. The King was not much accustomed to pity those
|
||
who were in his power, but his cold heart seemed for the moment to
|
||
soften towards the boy. He was observed to make a great effort, as
|
||
if to prevent himself from being cruel, and ordered the child to be
|
||
taken away; whereupon a certain Baron, who had married a daughter
|
||
of Duke Robert's (by name, Helie of Saint Saen), took charge of
|
||
him, tenderly. The King's gentleness did not last long. Before
|
||
two years were over, he sent messengers to this lord's Castle to
|
||
seize the child and bring him away. The Baron was not there at the
|
||
time, but his servants were faithful, and carried the boy off in
|
||
his sleep and hid him. When the Baron came home, and was told what
|
||
the King had done, he took the child abroad, and, leading him by
|
||
the hand, went from King to King and from Court to Court, relating
|
||
how the child had a claim to the throne of England, and how his
|
||
uncle the King, knowing that he had that claim, would have murdered
|
||
him, perhaps, but for his escape.
|
||
|
||
The youth and innocence of the pretty little WILLIAM FITZ-ROBERT
|
||
(for that was his name) made him many friends at that time. When
|
||
he became a young man, the King of France, uniting with the French
|
||
Counts of Anjou and Flanders, supported his cause against the King
|
||
of England, and took many of the King's towns and castles in
|
||
Normandy. But, King Henry, artful and cunning always, bribed some
|
||
of William's friends with money, some with promises, some with
|
||
power. He bought off the Count of Anjou, by promising to marry his
|
||
eldest son, also named WILLIAM, to the Count's daughter; and indeed
|
||
the whole trust of this King's life was in such bargains, and he
|
||
believed (as many another King has done since, and as one King did
|
||
in France a very little time ago) that every man's truth and honour
|
||
can be bought at some price. For all this, he was so afraid of
|
||
William Fitz-Robert and his friends, that, for a long time, he
|
||
believed his life to be in danger; and never lay down to sleep,
|
||
even in his palace surrounded by his guards, without having a sword
|
||
and buckler at his bedside.
|
||
|
||
To strengthen his power, the King with great ceremony betrothed his
|
||
eldest daughter MATILDA, then a child only eight years old, to be
|
||
the wife of Henry the Fifth, the Emperor of Germany. To raise her
|
||
marriage-portion, he taxed the English people in a most oppressive
|
||
manner; then treated them to a great procession, to restore their
|
||
good humour; and sent Matilda away, in fine state, with the German
|
||
ambassadors, to be educated in the country of her future husband.
|
||
|
||
And now his Queen, Maud the Good, unhappily died. It was a sad
|
||
thought for that gentle lady, that the only hope with which she had
|
||
married a man whom she had never loved - the hope of reconciling
|
||
the Norman and English races - had failed. At the very time of her
|
||
death, Normandy and all France was in arms against England; for, so
|
||
soon as his last danger was over, King Henry had been false to all
|
||
the French powers he had promised, bribed, and bought, and they had
|
||
naturally united against him. After some fighting, however, in
|
||
which few suffered but the unhappy common people (who always
|
||
suffered, whatsoever was the matter), he began to promise, bribe,
|
||
and buy again; and by those means, and by the help of the Pope, who
|
||
exerted himself to save more bloodshed, and by solemnly declaring,
|
||
over and over again, that he really was in earnest this time, and
|
||
would keep his word, the King made peace.
|
||
|
||
One of the first consequences of this peace was, that the King went
|
||
over to Normandy with his son Prince William and a great retinue,
|
||
to have the Prince acknowledged as his successor by the Norman
|
||
Nobles, and to contract the promised marriage (this was one of the
|
||
many promises the King had broken) between him and the daughter of
|
||
the Count of Anjou. Both these things were triumphantly done, with
|
||
great show and rejoicing; and on the twenty-fifth of November, in
|
||
the year one thousand one hundred and twenty, the whole retinue
|
||
prepared to embark at the Port of Barfleur, for the voyage home.
|
||
|
||
On that day, and at that place, there came to the King, Fitz-
|
||
Stephen, a sea-captain, and said:
|
||
|
||
'My liege, my father served your father all his life, upon the sea.
|
||
He steered the ship with the golden boy upon the prow, in which
|
||
your father sailed to conquer England. I beseech you to grant me
|
||
the same office. I have a fair vessel in the harbour here, called
|
||
The White Ship, manned by fifty sailors of renown. I pray you,
|
||
Sire, to let your servant have the honour of steering you in The
|
||
White Ship to England!'
|
||
|
||
'I am sorry, friend,' replied the King, 'that my vessel is already
|
||
chosen, and that I cannot (therefore) sail with the son of the man
|
||
who served my father. But the Prince and all his company shall go
|
||
along with you, in the fair White Ship, manned by the fifty sailors
|
||
of renown.'
|
||
|
||
An hour or two afterwards, the King set sail in the vessel he had
|
||
chosen, accompanied by other vessels, and, sailing all night with a
|
||
fair and gentle wind, arrived upon the coast of England in the
|
||
morning. While it was yet night, the people in some of those ships
|
||
heard a faint wild cry come over the sea, and wondered what it was.
|
||
|
||
Now, the Prince was a dissolute, debauched young man of eighteen,
|
||
who bore no love to the English, and had declared that when he came
|
||
to the throne he would yoke them to the plough like oxen. He went
|
||
aboard The White Ship, with one hundred and forty youthful Nobles
|
||
like himself, among whom were eighteen noble ladies of the highest
|
||
rank. All this gay company, with their servants and the fifty
|
||
sailors, made three hundred souls aboard the fair White Ship.
|
||
|
||
'Give three casks of wine, Fitz-Stephen,' said the Prince, 'to the
|
||
fifty sailors of renown! My father the King has sailed out of the
|
||
harbour. What time is there to make merry here, and yet reach
|
||
England with the rest?'
|
||
|
||
'Prince!' said Fitz-Stephen, 'before morning, my fifty and The
|
||
White Ship shall overtake the swiftest vessel in attendance on your
|
||
father the King, if we sail at midnight!'
|
||
|
||
Then the Prince commanded to make merry; and the sailors drank out
|
||
the three casks of wine; and the Prince and all the noble company
|
||
danced in the moonlight on the deck of The White Ship.
|
||
|
||
When, at last, she shot out of the harbour of Barfleur, there was
|
||
not a sober seaman on board. But the sails were all set, and the
|
||
oars all going merrily. Fitz-Stephen had the helm. The gay young
|
||
nobles and the beautiful ladies, wrapped in mantles of various
|
||
bright colours to protect them from the cold, talked, laughed, and
|
||
sang. The Prince encouraged the fifty sailors to row harder yet,
|
||
for the honour of The White Ship.
|
||
|
||
Crash! A terrific cry broke from three hundred hearts. It was the
|
||
cry the people in the distant vessels of the King heard faintly on
|
||
the water. The White Ship had struck upon a rock - was filling -
|
||
going down!
|
||
|
||
Fitz-Stephen hurried the Prince into a boat, with some few Nobles.
|
||
'Push off,' he whispered; 'and row to land. It is not far, and the
|
||
sea is smooth. The rest of us must die.'
|
||
|
||
But, as they rowed away, fast, from the sinking ship, the Prince
|
||
heard the voice of his sister MARIE, the Countess of Perche,
|
||
calling for help. He never in his life had been so good as he was
|
||
then. He cried in an agony, 'Row back at any risk! I cannot bear
|
||
to leave her!'
|
||
|
||
They rowed back. As the Prince held out his arms to catch his
|
||
sister, such numbers leaped in, that the boat was overset. And in
|
||
the same instant The White Ship went down.
|
||
|
||
Only two men floated. They both clung to the main yard of the
|
||
ship, which had broken from the mast, and now supported them. One
|
||
asked the other who he was? He said, 'I am a nobleman, GODFREY by
|
||
name, the son of GILBERT DE L'AIGLE. And you?' said he. 'I am
|
||
BEROLD, a poor butcher of Rouen,' was the answer. Then, they said
|
||
together, 'Lord be merciful to us both!' and tried to encourage one
|
||
another, as they drifted in the cold benumbing sea on that
|
||
unfortunate November night.
|
||
|
||
By-and-by, another man came swimming towards them, whom they knew,
|
||
when he pushed aside his long wet hair, to be Fitz-Stephen. 'Where
|
||
is the Prince?' said he. 'Gone! Gone!' the two cried together.
|
||
'Neither he, nor his brother, nor his sister, nor the King's niece,
|
||
nor her brother, nor any one of all the brave three hundred, noble
|
||
or commoner, except we three, has risen above the water!' Fitz-
|
||
Stephen, with a ghastly face, cried, 'Woe! woe, to me!' and sunk to
|
||
the bottom.
|
||
|
||
The other two clung to the yard for some hours. At length the
|
||
young noble said faintly, 'I am exhausted, and chilled with the
|
||
cold, and can hold no longer. Farewell, good friend! God preserve
|
||
you!' So, he dropped and sunk; and of all the brilliant crowd, the
|
||
poor Butcher of Rouen alone was saved. In the morning, some
|
||
fishermen saw him floating in his sheep-skin coat, and got him into
|
||
their boat - the sole relater of the dismal tale.
|
||
|
||
For three days, no one dared to carry the intelligence to the King.
|
||
At length, they sent into his presence a little boy, who, weeping
|
||
bitterly, and kneeling at his feet, told him that The White Ship
|
||
was lost with all on board. The King fell to the ground like a
|
||
dead man, and never, never afterwards, was seen to smile.
|
||
|
||
But he plotted again, and promised again, and bribed and bought
|
||
again, in his old deceitful way. Having no son to succeed him,
|
||
after all his pains ('The Prince will never yoke us to the plough,
|
||
now!' said the English people), he took a second wife - ADELAIS or
|
||
ALICE, a duke's daughter, and the Pope's niece. Having no more
|
||
children, however, he proposed to the Barons to swear that they
|
||
would recognise as his successor, his daughter Matilda, whom, as
|
||
she was now a widow, he married to the eldest son of the Count of
|
||
Anjou, GEOFFREY, surnamed PLANTAGENET, from a custom he had of
|
||
wearing a sprig of flowering broom (called Gen<65>t in French) in his
|
||
cap for a feather. As one false man usually makes many, and as a
|
||
false King, in particular, is pretty certain to make a false Court,
|
||
the Barons took the oath about the succession of Matilda (and her
|
||
children after her), twice over, without in the least intending to
|
||
keep it. The King was now relieved from any remaining fears of
|
||
William Fitz-Robert, by his death in the Monastery of St. Omer, in
|
||
France, at twenty-six years old, of a pike-wound in the hand. And
|
||
as Matilda gave birth to three sons, he thought the succession to
|
||
the throne secure.
|
||
|
||
He spent most of the latter part of his life, which was troubled by
|
||
family quarrels, in Normandy, to be near Matilda. When he had
|
||
reigned upward of thirty-five years, and was sixty-seven years old,
|
||
he died of an indigestion and fever, brought on by eating, when he
|
||
was far from well, of a fish called Lamprey, against which he had
|
||
often been cautioned by his physicians. His remains were brought
|
||
over to Reading Abbey to be buried.
|
||
|
||
You may perhaps hear the cunning and promise-breaking of King Henry
|
||
the First, called 'policy' by some people, and 'diplomacy' by
|
||
others. Neither of these fine words will in the least mean that it
|
||
was true; and nothing that is not true can possibly be good.
|
||
|
||
His greatest merit, that I know of, was his love of learning - I
|
||
should have given him greater credit even for that, if it had been
|
||
strong enough to induce him to spare the eyes of a certain poet he
|
||
once took prisoner, who was a knight besides. But he ordered the
|
||
poet's eyes to be torn from his head, because he had laughed at him
|
||
in his verses; and the poet, in the pain of that torture, dashed
|
||
out his own brains against his prison wall. King Henry the First
|
||
was avaricious, revengeful, and so false, that I suppose a man
|
||
never lived whose word was less to be relied upon.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XI - ENGLAND UNDER MATILDA AND STEPHEN
|
||
|
||
THE King was no sooner dead than all the plans and schemes he had
|
||
laboured at so long, and lied so much for, crumbled away like a
|
||
hollow heap of sand. STEPHEN, whom he had never mistrusted or
|
||
suspected, started up to claim the throne.
|
||
|
||
Stephen was the son of ADELA, the Conqueror's daughter, married to
|
||
the Count of Blois. To Stephen, and to his brother HENRY, the late
|
||
King had been liberal; making Henry Bishop of Winchester, and
|
||
finding a good marriage for Stephen, and much enriching him. This
|
||
did not prevent Stephen from hastily producing a false witness, a
|
||
servant of the late King, to swear that the King had named him for
|
||
his heir upon his death-bed. On this evidence the Archbishop of
|
||
Canterbury crowned him. The new King, so suddenly made, lost not a
|
||
moment in seizing the Royal treasure, and hiring foreign soldiers
|
||
with some of it to protect his throne.
|
||
|
||
If the dead King had even done as the false witness said, he would
|
||
have had small right to will away the English people, like so many
|
||
sheep or oxen, without their consent. But he had, in fact,
|
||
bequeathed all his territory to Matilda; who, supported by ROBERT,
|
||
Earl of Gloucester, soon began to dispute the crown. Some of the
|
||
powerful barons and priests took her side; some took Stephen's; all
|
||
fortified their castles; and again the miserable English people
|
||
were involved in war, from which they could never derive advantage
|
||
whosoever was victorious, and in which all parties plundered,
|
||
tortured, starved, and ruined them.
|
||
|
||
Five years had passed since the death of Henry the First - and
|
||
during those five years there had been two terrible invasions by
|
||
the people of Scotland under their King, David, who was at last
|
||
defeated with all his army - when Matilda, attended by her brother
|
||
Robert and a large force, appeared in England to maintain her
|
||
claim. A battle was fought between her troops and King Stephen's
|
||
at Lincoln; in which the King himself was taken prisoner, after
|
||
bravely fighting until his battle-axe and sword were broken, and
|
||
was carried into strict confinement at Gloucester. Matilda then
|
||
submitted herself to the Priests, and the Priests crowned her Queen
|
||
of England.
|
||
|
||
She did not long enjoy this dignity. The people of London had a
|
||
great affection for Stephen; many of the Barons considered it
|
||
degrading to be ruled by a woman; and the Queen's temper was so
|
||
haughty that she made innumerable enemies. The people of London
|
||
revolted; and, in alliance with the troops of Stephen, besieged her
|
||
at Winchester, where they took her brother Robert prisoner, whom,
|
||
as her best soldier and chief general, she was glad to exchange for
|
||
Stephen himself, who thus regained his liberty. Then, the long war
|
||
went on afresh. Once, she was pressed so hard in the Castle of
|
||
Oxford, in the winter weather when the snow lay thick upon the
|
||
ground, that her only chance of escape was to dress herself all in
|
||
white, and, accompanied by no more than three faithful Knights,
|
||
dressed in like manner that their figures might not be seen from
|
||
Stephen's camp as they passed over the snow, to steal away on foot,
|
||
cross the frozen Thames, walk a long distance, and at last gallop
|
||
away on horseback. All this she did, but to no great purpose then;
|
||
for her brother dying while the struggle was yet going on, she at
|
||
last withdrew to Normandy.
|
||
|
||
In two or three years after her withdrawal her cause appeared in
|
||
England, afresh, in the person of her son Henry, young Plantagenet,
|
||
who, at only eighteen years of age, was very powerful: not only on
|
||
account of his mother having resigned all Normandy to him, but also
|
||
from his having married ELEANOR, the divorced wife of the French
|
||
King, a bad woman, who had great possessions in France. Louis, the
|
||
French King, not relishing this arrangement, helped EUSTACE, King
|
||
Stephen's son, to invade Normandy: but Henry drove their united
|
||
forces out of that country, and then returned here, to assist his
|
||
partisans, whom the King was then besieging at Wallingford upon the
|
||
Thames. Here, for two days, divided only by the river, the two
|
||
armies lay encamped opposite to one another - on the eve, as it
|
||
seemed to all men, of another desperate fight, when the EARL OF
|
||
ARUNDEL took heart and said 'that it was not reasonable to prolong
|
||
the unspeakable miseries of two kingdoms to minister to the
|
||
ambition of two princes.'
|
||
|
||
Many other noblemen repeating and supporting this when it was once
|
||
uttered, Stephen and young Plantagenet went down, each to his own
|
||
bank of the river, and held a conversation across it, in which they
|
||
arranged a truce; very much to the dissatisfaction of Eustace, who
|
||
swaggered away with some followers, and laid violent hands on the
|
||
Abbey of St. Edmund's-Bury, where he presently died mad. The truce
|
||
led to a solemn council at Winchester, in which it was agreed that
|
||
Stephen should retain the crown, on condition of his declaring
|
||
Henry his successor; that WILLIAM, another son of the King's,
|
||
should inherit his father's rightful possessions; and that all the
|
||
Crown lands which Stephen had given away should be recalled, and
|
||
all the Castles he had permitted to be built demolished. Thus
|
||
terminated the bitter war, which had now lasted fifteen years, and
|
||
had again laid England waste. In the next year STEPHEN died, after
|
||
a troubled reign of nineteen years.
|
||
|
||
Although King Stephen was, for the time in which he lived, a humane
|
||
and moderate man, with many excellent qualities; and although
|
||
nothing worse is known of him than his usurpation of the Crown,
|
||
which he probably excused to himself by the consideration that King
|
||
Henry the First was a usurper too - which was no excuse at all; the
|
||
people of England suffered more in these dread nineteen years, than
|
||
at any former period even of their suffering history. In the
|
||
division of the nobility between the two rival claimants of the
|
||
Crown, and in the growth of what is called the Feudal System (which
|
||
made the peasants the born vassals and mere slaves of the Barons),
|
||
every Noble had his strong Castle, where he reigned the cruel king
|
||
of all the neighbouring people. Accordingly, he perpetrated
|
||
whatever cruelties he chose. And never were worse cruelties
|
||
committed upon earth than in wretched England in those nineteen
|
||
years.
|
||
|
||
The writers who were living then describe them fearfully. They say
|
||
that the castles were filled with devils rather than with men; that
|
||
the peasants, men and women, were put into dungeons for their gold
|
||
and silver, were tortured with fire and smoke, were hung up by the
|
||
thumbs, were hung up by the heels with great weights to their
|
||
heads, were torn with jagged irons, killed with hunger, broken to
|
||
death in narrow chests filled with sharp-pointed stones, murdered
|
||
in countless fiendish ways. In England there was no corn, no meat,
|
||
no cheese, no butter, there were no tilled lands, no harvests.
|
||
Ashes of burnt towns, and dreary wastes, were all that the
|
||
traveller, fearful of the robbers who prowled abroad at all hours,
|
||
would see in a long day's journey; and from sunrise until night, he
|
||
would not come upon a home.
|
||
|
||
The clergy sometimes suffered, and heavily too, from pillage, but
|
||
many of them had castles of their own, and fought in helmet and
|
||
armour like the barons, and drew lots with other fighting men for
|
||
their share of booty. The Pope (or Bishop of Rome), on King
|
||
Stephen's resisting his ambition, laid England under an Interdict
|
||
at one period of this reign; which means that he allowed no service
|
||
to be performed in the churches, no couples to be married, no bells
|
||
to be rung, no dead bodies to be buried. Any man having the power
|
||
to refuse these things, no matter whether he were called a Pope or
|
||
a Poulterer, would, of course, have the power of afflicting numbers
|
||
of innocent people. That nothing might be wanting to the miseries
|
||
of King Stephen's time, the Pope threw in this contribution to the
|
||
public store - not very like the widow's contribution, as I think,
|
||
when Our Saviour sat in Jerusalem over-against the Treasury, 'and
|
||
she threw in two mites, which make a farthing.'
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XII - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE SECOND - PART THE FIRST
|
||
|
||
HENRY PLANTAGENET, when he was but twenty-one years old, quietly
|
||
succeeded to the throne of England, according to his agreement made
|
||
with the late King at Winchester. Six weeks after Stephen's death,
|
||
he and his Queen, Eleanor, were crowned in that city; into which
|
||
they rode on horseback in great state, side by side, amidst much
|
||
shouting and rejoicing, and clashing of music, and strewing of
|
||
flowers.
|
||
|
||
The reign of King Henry the Second began well. The King had great
|
||
possessions, and (what with his own rights, and what with those of
|
||
his wife) was lord of one-third part of France. He was a young man
|
||
of vigour, ability, and resolution, and immediately applied himself
|
||
to remove some of the evils which had arisen in the last unhappy
|
||
reign. He revoked all the grants of land that had been hastily
|
||
made, on either side, during the late struggles; he obliged numbers
|
||
of disorderly soldiers to depart from England; he reclaimed all the
|
||
castles belonging to the Crown; and he forced the wicked nobles to
|
||
pull down their own castles, to the number of eleven hundred, in
|
||
which such dismal cruelties had been inflicted on the people. The
|
||
King's brother, GEOFFREY, rose against him in France, while he was
|
||
so well employed, and rendered it necessary for him to repair to
|
||
that country; where, after he had subdued and made a friendly
|
||
arrangement with his brother (who did not live long), his ambition
|
||
to increase his possessions involved him in a war with the French
|
||
King, Louis, with whom he had been on such friendly terms just
|
||
before, that to the French King's infant daughter, then a baby in
|
||
the cradle, he had promised one of his little sons in marriage, who
|
||
was a child of five years old. However, the war came to nothing at
|
||
last, and the Pope made the two Kings friends again.
|
||
|
||
Now, the clergy, in the troubles of the last reign, had gone on
|
||
very ill indeed. There were all kinds of criminals among them -
|
||
murderers, thieves, and vagabonds; and the worst of the matter was,
|
||
that the good priests would not give up the bad priests to justice,
|
||
when they committed crimes, but persisted in sheltering and
|
||
defending them. The King, well knowing that there could be no
|
||
peace or rest in England while such things lasted, resolved to
|
||
reduce the power of the clergy; and, when he had reigned seven
|
||
years, found (as he considered) a good opportunity for doing so, in
|
||
the death of the Archbishop of Canterbury. 'I will have for the
|
||
new Archbishop,' thought the King, 'a friend in whom I can trust,
|
||
who will help me to humble these rebellious priests, and to have
|
||
them dealt with, when they do wrong, as other men who do wrong are
|
||
dealt with.' So, he resolved to make his favourite, the new
|
||
Archbishop; and this favourite was so extraordinary a man, and his
|
||
story is so curious, that I must tell you all about him.
|
||
|
||
Once upon a time, a worthy merchant of London, named GILBERT A
|
||
BECKET, made a pilgrimage to the Holy Land, and was taken prisoner
|
||
by a Saracen lord. This lord, who treated him kindly and not like
|
||
a slave, had one fair daughter, who fell in love with the merchant;
|
||
and who told him that she wanted to become a Christian, and was
|
||
willing to marry him if they could fly to a Christian country. The
|
||
merchant returned her love, until he found an opportunity to
|
||
escape, when he did not trouble himself about the Saracen lady, but
|
||
escaped with his servant Richard, who had been taken prisoner along
|
||
with him, and arrived in England and forgot her. The Saracen lady,
|
||
who was more loving than the merchant, left her father's house in
|
||
disguise to follow him, and made her way, under many hardships, to
|
||
the sea-shore. The merchant had taught her only two English words
|
||
(for I suppose he must have learnt the Saracen tongue himself, and
|
||
made love in that language), of which LONDON was one, and his own
|
||
name, GILBERT, the other. She went among the ships, saying,
|
||
'London! London!' over and over again, until the sailors understood
|
||
that she wanted to find an English vessel that would carry her
|
||
there; so they showed her such a ship, and she paid for her passage
|
||
with some of her jewels, and sailed away. Well! The merchant was
|
||
sitting in his counting-house in London one day, when he heard a
|
||
great noise in the street; and presently Richard came running in
|
||
from the warehouse, with his eyes wide open and his breath almost
|
||
gone, saying, 'Master, master, here is the Saracen lady!' The
|
||
merchant thought Richard was mad; but Richard said, 'No, master!
|
||
As I live, the Saracen lady is going up and down the city, calling
|
||
Gilbert! Gilbert!' Then, he took the merchant by the sleeve, and
|
||
pointed out of window; and there they saw her among the gables and
|
||
water-spouts of the dark, dirty street, in her foreign dress, so
|
||
forlorn, surrounded by a wondering crowd, and passing slowly along,
|
||
calling Gilbert, Gilbert! When the merchant saw her, and thought
|
||
of the tenderness she had shown him in his captivity, and of her
|
||
constancy, his heart was moved, and he ran down into the street;
|
||
and she saw him coming, and with a great cry fainted in his arms.
|
||
They were married without loss of time, and Richard (who was an
|
||
excellent man) danced with joy the whole day of the wedding; and
|
||
they all lived happy ever afterwards.
|
||
|
||
This merchant and this Saracen lady had one son, THOMAS A BECKET.
|
||
He it was who became the Favourite of King Henry the Second.
|
||
|
||
He had become Chancellor, when the King thought of making him
|
||
Archbishop. He was clever, gay, well educated, brave; had fought
|
||
in several battles in France; had defeated a French knight in
|
||
single combat, and brought his horse away as a token of the
|
||
victory. He lived in a noble palace, he was the tutor of the young
|
||
Prince Henry, he was served by one hundred and forty knights, his
|
||
riches were immense. The King once sent him as his ambassador to
|
||
France; and the French people, beholding in what state he
|
||
travelled, cried out in the streets, 'How splendid must the King of
|
||
England be, when this is only the Chancellor!' They had good
|
||
reason to wonder at the magnificence of Thomas a Becket, for, when
|
||
he entered a French town, his procession was headed by two hundred
|
||
and fifty singing boys; then, came his hounds in couples; then,
|
||
eight waggons, each drawn by five horses driven by five drivers:
|
||
two of the waggons filled with strong ale to be given away to the
|
||
people; four, with his gold and silver plate and stately clothes;
|
||
two, with the dresses of his numerous servants. Then, came twelve
|
||
horses, each with a monkey on his back; then, a train of people
|
||
bearing shields and leading fine war-horses splendidly equipped;
|
||
then, falconers with hawks upon their wrists; then, a host of
|
||
knights, and gentlemen and priests; then, the Chancellor with his
|
||
brilliant garments flashing in the sun, and all the people capering
|
||
and shouting with delight.
|
||
|
||
The King was well pleased with all this, thinking that it only made
|
||
himself the more magnificent to have so magnificent a favourite;
|
||
but he sometimes jested with the Chancellor upon his splendour too.
|
||
Once, when they were riding together through the streets of London
|
||
in hard winter weather, they saw a shivering old man in rags.
|
||
'Look at the poor object!' said the King. 'Would it not be a
|
||
charitable act to give that aged man a comfortable warm cloak?'
|
||
'Undoubtedly it would,' said Thomas a Becket, 'and you do well,
|
||
Sir, to think of such Christian duties.' 'Come!' cried the King,
|
||
'then give him your cloak!' It was made of rich crimson trimmed
|
||
with ermine. The King tried to pull it off, the Chancellor tried
|
||
to keep it on, both were near rolling from their saddles in the
|
||
mud, when the Chancellor submitted, and the King gave the cloak to
|
||
the old beggar: much to the beggar's astonishment, and much to the
|
||
merriment of all the courtiers in attendance. For, courtiers are
|
||
not only eager to laugh when the King laughs, but they really do
|
||
enjoy a laugh against a Favourite.
|
||
|
||
'I will make,' thought King Henry the second, 'this Chancellor of
|
||
mine, Thomas a Becket, Archbishop of Canterbury. He will then be
|
||
the head of the Church, and, being devoted to me, will help me to
|
||
correct the Church. He has always upheld my power against the
|
||
power of the clergy, and once publicly told some bishops (I
|
||
remember), that men of the Church were equally bound to me, with
|
||
men of the sword. Thomas a Becket is the man, of all other men in
|
||
England, to help me in my great design.' So the King, regardless
|
||
of all objection, either that he was a fighting man, or a lavish
|
||
man, or a courtly man, or a man of pleasure, or anything but a
|
||
likely man for the office, made him Archbishop accordingly.
|
||
|
||
Now, Thomas a Becket was proud and loved to be famous. He was
|
||
already famous for the pomp of his life, for his riches, his gold
|
||
and silver plate, his waggons, horses, and attendants. He could do
|
||
no more in that way than he had done; and being tired of that kind
|
||
of fame (which is a very poor one), he longed to have his name
|
||
celebrated for something else. Nothing, he knew, would render him
|
||
so famous in the world, as the setting of his utmost power and
|
||
ability against the utmost power and ability of the King. He
|
||
resolved with the whole strength of his mind to do it.
|
||
|
||
He may have had some secret grudge against the King besides. The
|
||
King may have offended his proud humour at some time or other, for
|
||
anything I know. I think it likely, because it is a common thing
|
||
for Kings, Princes, and other great people, to try the tempers of
|
||
their favourites rather severely. Even the little affair of the
|
||
crimson cloak must have been anything but a pleasant one to a
|
||
haughty man. Thomas a Becket knew better than any one in England
|
||
what the King expected of him. In all his sumptuous life, he had
|
||
never yet been in a position to disappoint the King. He could take
|
||
up that proud stand now, as head of the Church; and he determined
|
||
that it should be written in history, either that he subdued the
|
||
King, or that the King subdued him.
|
||
|
||
So, of a sudden, he completely altered the whole manner of his
|
||
life. He turned off all his brilliant followers, ate coarse food,
|
||
drank bitter water, wore next his skin sackcloth covered with dirt
|
||
and vermin (for it was then thought very religious to be very
|
||
dirty), flogged his back to punish himself, lived chiefly in a
|
||
little cell, washed the feet of thirteen poor people every day, and
|
||
looked as miserable as he possibly could. If he had put twelve
|
||
hundred monkeys on horseback instead of twelve, and had gone in
|
||
procession with eight thousand waggons instead of eight, he could
|
||
not have half astonished the people so much as by this great
|
||
change. It soon caused him to be more talked about as an
|
||
Archbishop than he had been as a Chancellor.
|
||
|
||
The King was very angry; and was made still more so, when the new
|
||
Archbishop, claiming various estates from the nobles as being
|
||
rightfully Church property, required the King himself, for the same
|
||
reason, to give up Rochester Castle, and Rochester City too. Not
|
||
satisfied with this, he declared that no power but himself should
|
||
appoint a priest to any Church in the part of England over which he
|
||
was Archbishop; and when a certain gentleman of Kent made such an
|
||
appointment, as he claimed to have the right to do, Thomas a Becket
|
||
excommunicated him.
|
||
|
||
Excommunication was, next to the Interdict I told you of at the
|
||
close of the last chapter, the great weapon of the clergy. It
|
||
consisted in declaring the person who was excommunicated, an
|
||
outcast from the Church and from all religious offices; and in
|
||
cursing him all over, from the top of his head to the sole of his
|
||
foot, whether he was standing up, lying down, sitting, kneeling,
|
||
walking, running, hopping, jumping, gaping, coughing, sneezing, or
|
||
whatever else he was doing. This unchristian nonsense would of
|
||
course have made no sort of difference to the person cursed - who
|
||
could say his prayers at home if he were shut out of church, and
|
||
whom none but GOD could judge - but for the fears and superstitions
|
||
of the people, who avoided excommunicated persons, and made their
|
||
lives unhappy. So, the King said to the New Archbishop, 'Take off
|
||
this Excommunication from this gentleman of Kent.' To which the
|
||
Archbishop replied, 'I shall do no such thing.'
|
||
|
||
The quarrel went on. A priest in Worcestershire committed a most
|
||
dreadful murder, that aroused the horror of the whole nation. The
|
||
King demanded to have this wretch delivered up, to be tried in the
|
||
same court and in the same way as any other murderer. The
|
||
Archbishop refused, and kept him in the Bishop's prison. The King,
|
||
holding a solemn assembly in Westminster Hall, demanded that in
|
||
future all priests found guilty before their Bishops of crimes
|
||
against the law of the land should be considered priests no longer,
|
||
and should be delivered over to the law of the land for punishment.
|
||
The Archbishop again refused. The King required to know whether
|
||
the clergy would obey the ancient customs of the country? Every
|
||
priest there, but one, said, after Thomas a Becket, 'Saving my
|
||
order.' This really meant that they would only obey those customs
|
||
when they did not interfere with their own claims; and the King
|
||
went out of the Hall in great wrath.
|
||
|
||
Some of the clergy began to be afraid, now, that they were going
|
||
too far. Though Thomas a Becket was otherwise as unmoved as
|
||
Westminster Hall, they prevailed upon him, for the sake of their
|
||
fears, to go to the King at Woodstock, and promise to observe the
|
||
ancient customs of the country, without saying anything about his
|
||
order. The King received this submission favourably, and summoned
|
||
a great council of the clergy to meet at the Castle of Clarendon,
|
||
by Salisbury. But when the council met, the Archbishop again
|
||
insisted on the words 'saying my order;' and he still insisted,
|
||
though lords entreated him, and priests wept before him and knelt
|
||
to him, and an adjoining room was thrown open, filled with armed
|
||
soldiers of the King, to threaten him. At length he gave way, for
|
||
that time, and the ancient customs (which included what the King
|
||
had demanded in vain) were stated in writing, and were signed and
|
||
sealed by the chief of the clergy, and were called the
|
||
Constitutions of Clarendon.
|
||
|
||
The quarrel went on, for all that. The Archbishop tried to see the
|
||
King. The King would not see him. The Archbishop tried to escape
|
||
from England. The sailors on the coast would launch no boat to
|
||
take him away. Then, he again resolved to do his worst in
|
||
opposition to the King, and began openly to set the ancient customs
|
||
at defiance.
|
||
|
||
The King summoned him before a great council at Northampton, where
|
||
he accused him of high treason, and made a claim against him, which
|
||
was not a just one, for an enormous sum of money. Thomas a Becket
|
||
was alone against the whole assembly, and the very Bishops advised
|
||
him to resign his office and abandon his contest with the King.
|
||
His great anxiety and agitation stretched him on a sick-bed for two
|
||
days, but he was still undaunted. He went to the adjourned
|
||
council, carrying a great cross in his right hand, and sat down
|
||
holding it erect before him. The King angrily retired into an
|
||
inner room. The whole assembly angrily retired and left him there.
|
||
But there he sat. The Bishops came out again in a body, and
|
||
renounced him as a traitor. He only said, 'I hear!' and sat there
|
||
still. They retired again into the inner room, and his trial
|
||
proceeded without him. By-and-by, the Earl of Leicester, heading
|
||
the barons, came out to read his sentence. He refused to hear it,
|
||
denied the power of the court, and said he would refer his cause to
|
||
the Pope. As he walked out of the hall, with the cross in his
|
||
hand, some of those present picked up rushes - rushes were strewn
|
||
upon the floors in those days by way of carpet - and threw them at
|
||
him. He proudly turned his head, and said that were he not
|
||
Archbishop, he would chastise those cowards with the sword he had
|
||
known how to use in bygone days. He then mounted his horse, and
|
||
rode away, cheered and surrounded by the common people, to whom he
|
||
threw open his house that night and gave a supper, supping with
|
||
them himself. That same night he secretly departed from the town;
|
||
and so, travelling by night and hiding by day, and calling himself
|
||
'Brother Dearman,' got away, not without difficulty, to Flanders.
|
||
|
||
The struggle still went on. The angry King took possession of the
|
||
revenues of the archbishopric, and banished all the relations and
|
||
servants of Thomas a Becket, to the number of four hundred. The
|
||
Pope and the French King both protected him, and an abbey was
|
||
assigned for his residence. Stimulated by this support, Thomas a
|
||
Becket, on a great festival day, formally proceeded to a great
|
||
church crowded with people, and going up into the pulpit publicly
|
||
cursed and excommunicated all who had supported the Constitutions
|
||
of Clarendon: mentioning many English noblemen by name, and not
|
||
distantly hinting at the King of England himself.
|
||
|
||
When intelligence of this new affront was carried to the King in
|
||
his chamber, his passion was so furious that he tore his clothes,
|
||
and rolled like a madman on his bed of straw and rushes. But he
|
||
was soon up and doing. He ordered all the ports and coasts of
|
||
England to be narrowly watched, that no letters of Interdict might
|
||
be brought into the kingdom; and sent messengers and bribes to the
|
||
Pope's palace at Rome. Meanwhile, Thomas a Becket, for his part,
|
||
was not idle at Rome, but constantly employed his utmost arts in
|
||
his own behalf. Thus the contest stood, until there was peace
|
||
between France and England (which had been for some time at war),
|
||
and until the two children of the two Kings were married in
|
||
celebration of it. Then, the French King brought about a meeting
|
||
between Henry and his old favourite, so long his enemy.
|
||
|
||
Even then, though Thomas a Becket knelt before the King, he was
|
||
obstinate and immovable as to those words about his order. King
|
||
Louis of France was weak enough in his veneration for Thomas a
|
||
Becket and such men, but this was a little too much for him. He
|
||
said that a Becket 'wanted to be greater than the saints and better
|
||
than St. Peter,' and rode away from him with the King of England.
|
||
His poor French Majesty asked a Becket's pardon for so doing,
|
||
however, soon afterwards, and cut a very pitiful figure.
|
||
|
||
At last, and after a world of trouble, it came to this. There was
|
||
another meeting on French ground between King Henry and Thomas a
|
||
Becket, and it was agreed that Thomas a Becket should be Archbishop
|
||
of Canterbury, according to the customs of former Archbishops, and
|
||
that the King should put him in possession of the revenues of that
|
||
post. And now, indeed, you might suppose the struggle at an end,
|
||
and Thomas a Becket at rest. NO, not even yet. For Thomas a
|
||
Becket hearing, by some means, that King Henry, when he was in
|
||
dread of his kingdom being placed under an interdict, had had his
|
||
eldest son Prince Henry secretly crowned, not only persuaded the
|
||
Pope to suspend the Archbishop of York who had performed that
|
||
ceremony, and to excommunicate the Bishops who had assisted at it,
|
||
but sent a messenger of his own into England, in spite of all the
|
||
King's precautions along the coast, who delivered the letters of
|
||
excommunication into the Bishops' own hands. Thomas a Becket then
|
||
came over to England himself, after an absence of seven years. He
|
||
was privately warned that it was dangerous to come, and that an
|
||
ireful knight, named RANULF DE BROC, had threatened that he should
|
||
not live to eat a loaf of bread in England; but he came.
|
||
|
||
The common people received him well, and marched about with him in
|
||
a soldierly way, armed with such rustic weapons as they could get.
|
||
He tried to see the young prince who had once been his pupil, but
|
||
was prevented. He hoped for some little support among the nobles
|
||
and priests, but found none. He made the most of the peasants who
|
||
attended him, and feasted them, and went from Canterbury to Harrow-
|
||
on-the-Hill, and from Harrow-on-the-Hill back to Canterbury, and on
|
||
Christmas Day preached in the Cathedral there, and told the people
|
||
in his sermon that he had come to die among them, and that it was
|
||
likely he would be murdered. He had no fear, however - or, if he
|
||
had any, he had much more obstinacy - for he, then and there,
|
||
excommunicated three of his enemies, of whom Ranulf de Broc, the
|
||
ireful knight, was one.
|
||
|
||
As men in general had no fancy for being cursed, in their sitting
|
||
and walking, and gaping and sneezing, and all the rest of it, it
|
||
was very natural in the persons so freely excommunicated to
|
||
complain to the King. It was equally natural in the King, who had
|
||
hoped that this troublesome opponent was at last quieted, to fall
|
||
into a mighty rage when he heard of these new affronts; and, on the
|
||
Archbishop of York telling him that he never could hope for rest
|
||
while Thomas a Becket lived, to cry out hastily before his court,
|
||
'Have I no one here who will deliver me from this man?' There were
|
||
four knights present, who, hearing the King's words, looked at one
|
||
another, and went out.
|
||
|
||
The names of these knights were REGINALD FITZURSE, WILLIAM TRACY,
|
||
HUGH DE MORVILLE, and RICHARD BRITO; three of whom had been in the
|
||
train of Thomas a Becket in the old days of his splendour. They
|
||
rode away on horseback, in a very secret manner, and on the third
|
||
day after Christmas Day arrived at Saltwood House, not far from
|
||
Canterbury, which belonged to the family of Ranulf de Broc. They
|
||
quietly collected some followers here, in case they should need
|
||
any; and proceeding to Canterbury, suddenly appeared (the four
|
||
knights and twelve men) before the Archbishop, in his own house, at
|
||
two o'clock in the afternoon. They neither bowed nor spoke, but
|
||
sat down on the floor in silence, staring at the Archbishop.
|
||
|
||
Thomas a Becket said, at length, 'What do you want?'
|
||
|
||
'We want,' said Reginald Fitzurse, 'the excommunication taken from
|
||
the Bishops, and you to answer for your offences to the King.'
|
||
Thomas a Becket defiantly replied, that the power of the clergy was
|
||
above the power of the King. That it was not for such men as they
|
||
were, to threaten him. That if he were threatened by all the
|
||
swords in England, he would never yield.
|
||
|
||
'Then we will do more than threaten!' said the knights. And they
|
||
went out with the twelve men, and put on their armour, and drew
|
||
their shining swords, and came back.
|
||
|
||
His servants, in the meantime, had shut up and barred the great
|
||
gate of the palace. At first, the knights tried to shatter it with
|
||
their battle-axes; but, being shown a window by which they could
|
||
enter, they let the gate alone, and climbed in that way. While
|
||
they were battering at the door, the attendants of Thomas a Becket
|
||
had implored him to take refuge in the Cathedral; in which, as a
|
||
sanctuary or sacred place, they thought the knights would dare to
|
||
do no violent deed. He told them, again and again, that he would
|
||
not stir. Hearing the distant voices of the monks singing the
|
||
evening service, however, he said it was now his duty to attend,
|
||
and therefore, and for no other reason, he would go.
|
||
|
||
There was a near way between his Palace and the Cathedral, by some
|
||
beautiful old cloisters which you may yet see. He went into the
|
||
Cathedral, without any hurry, and having the Cross carried before
|
||
him as usual. When he was safely there, his servants would have
|
||
fastened the door, but he said NO! it was the house of God and not
|
||
a fortress.
|
||
|
||
As he spoke, the shadow of Reginald Fitzurse appeared in the
|
||
Cathedral doorway, darkening the little light there was outside, on
|
||
the dark winter evening. This knight said, in a strong voice,
|
||
'Follow me, loyal servants of the King!' The rattle of the armour
|
||
of the other knights echoed through the Cathedral, as they came
|
||
clashing in.
|
||
|
||
It was so dark, in the lofty aisles and among the stately pillars
|
||
of the church, and there were so many hiding-places in the crypt
|
||
below and in the narrow passages above, that Thomas a Becket might
|
||
even at that pass have saved himself if he would. But he would
|
||
not. He told the monks resolutely that he would not. And though
|
||
they all dispersed and left him there with no other follower than
|
||
EDWARD GRYME, his faithful cross-bearer, he was as firm then, as
|
||
ever he had been in his life.
|
||
|
||
The knights came on, through the darkness, making a terrible noise
|
||
with their armed tread upon the stone pavement of the church.
|
||
'Where is the traitor?' they cried out. He made no answer. But
|
||
when they cried, 'Where is the Archbishop?' he said proudly, 'I am
|
||
here!' and came out of the shade and stood before them.
|
||
|
||
The knights had no desire to kill him, if they could rid the King
|
||
and themselves of him by any other means. They told him he must
|
||
either fly or go with them. He said he would do neither; and he
|
||
threw William Tracy off with such force when he took hold of his
|
||
sleeve, that Tracy reeled again. By his reproaches and his
|
||
steadiness, he so incensed them, and exasperated their fierce
|
||
humour, that Reginald Fitzurse, whom he called by an ill name,
|
||
said, 'Then die!' and struck at his head. But the faithful Edward
|
||
Gryme put out his arm, and there received the main force of the
|
||
blow, so that it only made his master bleed. Another voice from
|
||
among the knights again called to Thomas a Becket to fly; but, with
|
||
his blood running down his face, and his hands clasped, and his
|
||
head bent, he commanded himself to God, and stood firm. Then they
|
||
cruelly killed him close to the altar of St. Bennet; and his body
|
||
fell upon the pavement, which was dirtied with his blood and
|
||
brains.
|
||
|
||
It is an awful thing to think of the murdered mortal, who had so
|
||
showered his curses about, lying, all disfigured, in the church,
|
||
where a few lamps here and there were but red specks on a pall of
|
||
darkness; and to think of the guilty knights riding away on
|
||
horseback, looking over their shoulders at the dim Cathedral, and
|
||
remembering what they had left inside.
|
||
|
||
PART THE SECOND
|
||
|
||
WHEN the King heard how Thomas a Becket had lost his life in
|
||
Canterbury Cathedral, through the ferocity of the four Knights, he
|
||
was filled with dismay. Some have supposed that when the King
|
||
spoke those hasty words, 'Have I no one here who will deliver me
|
||
from this man?' he wished, and meant a Becket to be slain. But few
|
||
things are more unlikely; for, besides that the King was not
|
||
naturally cruel (though very passionate), he was wise, and must
|
||
have known full well what any stupid man in his dominions must have
|
||
known, namely, that such a murder would rouse the Pope and the
|
||
whole Church against him.
|
||
|
||
He sent respectful messengers to the Pope, to represent his
|
||
innocence (except in having uttered the hasty words); and he swore
|
||
solemnly and publicly to his innocence, and contrived in time to
|
||
make his peace. As to the four guilty Knights, who fled into
|
||
Yorkshire, and never again dared to show themselves at Court, the
|
||
Pope excommunicated them; and they lived miserably for some time,
|
||
shunned by all their countrymen. At last, they went humbly to
|
||
Jerusalem as a penance, and there died and were buried.
|
||
|
||
It happened, fortunately for the pacifying of the Pope, that an
|
||
opportunity arose very soon after the murder of a Becket, for the
|
||
King to declare his power in Ireland - which was an acceptable
|
||
undertaking to the Pope, as the Irish, who had been converted to
|
||
Christianity by one Patricius (otherwise Saint Patrick) long ago,
|
||
before any Pope existed, considered that the Pope had nothing at
|
||
all to do with them, or they with the Pope, and accordingly refused
|
||
to pay him Peter's Pence, or that tax of a penny a house which I
|
||
have elsewhere mentioned. The King's opportunity arose in this
|
||
way.
|
||
|
||
The Irish were, at that time, as barbarous a people as you can well
|
||
imagine. They were continually quarrelling and fighting, cutting
|
||
one another's throats, slicing one another's noses, burning one
|
||
another's houses, carrying away one another's wives, and committing
|
||
all sorts of violence. The country was divided into five kingdoms
|
||
- DESMOND, THOMOND, CONNAUGHT, ULSTER, and LEINSTER - each governed
|
||
by a separate King, of whom one claimed to be the chief of the
|
||
rest. Now, one of these Kings, named DERMOND MAC MURROUGH (a wild
|
||
kind of name, spelt in more than one wild kind of way), had carried
|
||
off the wife of a friend of his, and concealed her on an island in
|
||
a bog. The friend resenting this (though it was quite the custom
|
||
of the country), complained to the chief King, and, with the chief
|
||
King's help, drove Dermond Mac Murrough out of his dominions.
|
||
Dermond came over to England for revenge; and offered to hold his
|
||
realm as a vassal of King Henry, if King Henry would help him to
|
||
regain it. The King consented to these terms; but only assisted
|
||
him, then, with what were called Letters Patent, authorising any
|
||
English subjects who were so disposed, to enter into his service,
|
||
and aid his cause.
|
||
|
||
There was, at Bristol, a certain EARL RICHARD DE CLARE, called
|
||
STRONGBOW; of no very good character; needy and desperate, and
|
||
ready for anything that offered him a chance of improving his
|
||
fortunes. There were, in South Wales, two other broken knights of
|
||
the same good-for-nothing sort, called ROBERT FITZ-STEPHEN, and
|
||
MAURICE FITZ-GERALD. These three, each with a small band of
|
||
followers, took up Dermond's cause; and it was agreed that if it
|
||
proved successful, Strongbow should marry Dermond's daughter EVA,
|
||
and be declared his heir.
|
||
|
||
The trained English followers of these knights were so superior in
|
||
all the discipline of battle to the Irish, that they beat them
|
||
against immense superiority of numbers. In one fight, early in the
|
||
war, they cut off three hundred heads, and laid them before Mac
|
||
Murrough; who turned them every one up with his hands, rejoicing,
|
||
and, coming to one which was the head of a man whom he had much
|
||
disliked, grasped it by the hair and ears, and tore off the nose
|
||
and lips with his teeth. You may judge from this, what kind of a
|
||
gentleman an Irish King in those times was. The captives, all
|
||
through this war, were horribly treated; the victorious party
|
||
making nothing of breaking their limbs, and casting them into the
|
||
sea from the tops of high rocks. It was in the midst of the
|
||
miseries and cruelties attendant on the taking of Waterford, where
|
||
the dead lay piled in the streets, and the filthy gutters ran with
|
||
blood, that Strongbow married Eva. An odious marriage-company
|
||
those mounds of corpse's must have made, I think, and one quite
|
||
worthy of the young lady's father.
|
||
|
||
He died, after Waterford and Dublin had been taken, and various
|
||
successes achieved; and Strongbow became King of Leinster. Now
|
||
came King Henry's opportunity. To restrain the growing power of
|
||
Strongbow, he himself repaired to Dublin, as Strongbow's Royal
|
||
Master, and deprived him of his kingdom, but confirmed him in the
|
||
enjoyment of great possessions. The King, then, holding state in
|
||
Dublin, received the homage of nearly all the Irish Kings and
|
||
Chiefs, and so came home again with a great addition to his
|
||
reputation as Lord of Ireland, and with a new claim on the favour
|
||
of the Pope. And now, their reconciliation was completed - more
|
||
easily and mildly by the Pope, than the King might have expected, I
|
||
think.
|
||
|
||
At this period of his reign, when his troubles seemed so few and
|
||
his prospects so bright, those domestic miseries began which
|
||
gradually made the King the most unhappy of men, reduced his great
|
||
spirit, wore away his health, and broke his heart.
|
||
|
||
He had four sons. HENRY, now aged eighteen - his secret crowning
|
||
of whom had given such offence to Thomas a Becket. RICHARD, aged
|
||
sixteen; GEOFFREY, fifteen; and JOHN, his favourite, a young boy
|
||
whom the courtiers named LACKLAND, because he had no inheritance,
|
||
but to whom the King meant to give the Lordship of Ireland. All
|
||
these misguided boys, in their turn, were unnatural sons to him,
|
||
and unnatural brothers to each other. Prince Henry, stimulated by
|
||
the French King, and by his bad mother, Queen Eleanor, began the
|
||
undutiful history,
|
||
|
||
First, he demanded that his young wife, MARGARET, the French King's
|
||
daughter, should be crowned as well as he. His father, the King,
|
||
consented, and it was done. It was no sooner done, than he
|
||
demanded to have a part of his father's dominions, during his
|
||
father's life. This being refused, he made off from his father in
|
||
the night, with his bad heart full of bitterness, and took refuge
|
||
at the French King's Court. Within a day or two, his brothers
|
||
Richard and Geoffrey followed. Their mother tried to join them -
|
||
escaping in man's clothes - but she was seized by King Henry's men,
|
||
and immured in prison, where she lay, deservedly, for sixteen
|
||
years. Every day, however, some grasping English noblemen, to whom
|
||
the King's protection of his people from their avarice and
|
||
oppression had given offence, deserted him and joined the Princes.
|
||
Every day he heard some fresh intelligence of the Princes levying
|
||
armies against him; of Prince Henry's wearing a crown before his
|
||
own ambassadors at the French Court, and being called the Junior
|
||
King of England; of all the Princes swearing never to make peace
|
||
with him, their father, without the consent and approval of the
|
||
Barons of France. But, with his fortitude and energy unshaken,
|
||
King Henry met the shock of these disasters with a resolved and
|
||
cheerful face. He called upon all Royal fathers who had sons, to
|
||
help him, for his cause was theirs; he hired, out of his riches,
|
||
twenty thousand men to fight the false French King, who stirred his
|
||
own blood against him; and he carried on the war with such vigour,
|
||
that Louis soon proposed a conference to treat for peace.
|
||
|
||
The conference was held beneath an old wide-spreading green elm-
|
||
tree, upon a plain in France. It led to nothing. The war
|
||
recommenced. Prince Richard began his fighting career, by leading
|
||
an army against his father; but his father beat him and his army
|
||
back; and thousands of his men would have rued the day in which
|
||
they fought in such a wicked cause, had not the King received news
|
||
of an invasion of England by the Scots, and promptly come home
|
||
through a great storm to repress it. And whether he really began
|
||
to fear that he suffered these troubles because a Becket had been
|
||
murdered; or whether he wished to rise in the favour of the Pope,
|
||
who had now declared a Becket to be a saint, or in the favour of
|
||
his own people, of whom many believed that even a Becket's
|
||
senseless tomb could work miracles, I don't know: but the King no
|
||
sooner landed in England than he went straight to Canterbury; and
|
||
when he came within sight of the distant Cathedral, he dismounted
|
||
from his horse, took off his shoes, and walked with bare and
|
||
bleeding feet to a Becket's grave. There, he lay down on the
|
||
ground, lamenting, in the presence of many people; and by-and-by he
|
||
went into the Chapter House, and, removing his clothes from his
|
||
back and shoulders, submitted himself to be beaten with knotted
|
||
cords (not beaten very hard, I dare say though) by eighty Priests,
|
||
one after another. It chanced that on the very day when the King
|
||
made this curious exhibition of himself, a complete victory was
|
||
obtained over the Scots; which very much delighted the Priests, who
|
||
said that it was won because of his great example of repentance.
|
||
For the Priests in general had found out, since a Becket's death,
|
||
that they admired him of all things - though they had hated him
|
||
very cordially when he was alive.
|
||
|
||
The Earl of Flanders, who was at the head of the base conspiracy of
|
||
the King's undutiful sons and their foreign friends, took the
|
||
opportunity of the King being thus employed at home, to lay siege
|
||
to Rouen, the capital of Normandy. But the King, who was
|
||
extraordinarily quick and active in all his movements, was at
|
||
Rouen, too, before it was supposed possible that he could have left
|
||
England; and there he so defeated the said Earl of Flanders, that
|
||
the conspirators proposed peace, and his bad sons Henry and
|
||
Geoffrey submitted. Richard resisted for six weeks; but, being
|
||
beaten out of castle after castle, he at last submitted too, and
|
||
his father forgave him.
|
||
|
||
To forgive these unworthy princes was only to afford them
|
||
breathing-time for new faithlessness. They were so false,
|
||
disloyal, and dishonourable, that they were no more to be trusted
|
||
than common thieves. In the very next year, Prince Henry rebelled
|
||
again, and was again forgiven. In eight years more, Prince Richard
|
||
rebelled against his elder brother; and Prince Geoffrey infamously
|
||
said that the brothers could never agree well together, unless they
|
||
were united against their father. In the very next year after
|
||
their reconciliation by the King, Prince Henry again rebelled
|
||
against his father; and again submitted, swearing to be true; and
|
||
was again forgiven; and again rebelled with Geoffrey.
|
||
|
||
But the end of this perfidious Prince was come. He fell sick at a
|
||
French town; and his conscience terribly reproaching him with his
|
||
baseness, he sent messengers to the King his father, imploring him
|
||
to come and see him, and to forgive him for the last time on his
|
||
bed of death. The generous King, who had a royal and forgiving
|
||
mind towards his children always, would have gone; but this Prince
|
||
had been so unnatural, that the noblemen about the King suspected
|
||
treachery, and represented to him that he could not safely trust
|
||
his life with such a traitor, though his own eldest son. Therefore
|
||
the King sent him a ring from off his finger as a token of
|
||
forgiveness; and when the Prince had kissed it, with much grief and
|
||
many tears, and had confessed to those around him how bad, and
|
||
wicked, and undutiful a son he had been; he said to the attendant
|
||
Priests: 'O, tie a rope about my body, and draw me out of bed, and
|
||
lay me down upon a bed of ashes, that I may die with prayers to God
|
||
in a repentant manner!' And so he died, at twenty-seven years old.
|
||
|
||
Three years afterwards, Prince Geoffrey, being unhorsed at a
|
||
tournament, had his brains trampled out by a crowd of horses
|
||
passing over him. So, there only remained Prince Richard, and
|
||
Prince John - who had grown to be a young man now, and had solemnly
|
||
sworn to be faithful to his father. Richard soon rebelled again,
|
||
encouraged by his friend the French King, PHILIP THE SECOND (son of
|
||
Louis, who was dead); and soon submitted and was again forgiven,
|
||
swearing on the New Testament never to rebel again; and in another
|
||
year or so, rebelled again; and, in the presence of his father,
|
||
knelt down on his knee before the King of France; and did the
|
||
French King homage: and declared that with his aid he would
|
||
possess himself, by force, of all his father's French dominions.
|
||
|
||
And yet this Richard called himself a soldier of Our Saviour! And
|
||
yet this Richard wore the Cross, which the Kings of France and
|
||
England had both taken, in the previous year, at a brotherly
|
||
meeting underneath the old wide-spreading elm-tree on the plain,
|
||
when they had sworn (like him) to devote themselves to a new
|
||
Crusade, for the love and honour of the Truth!
|
||
|
||
Sick at heart, wearied out by the falsehood of his sons, and almost
|
||
ready to lie down and die, the unhappy King who had so long stood
|
||
firm, began to fail. But the Pope, to his honour, supported him;
|
||
and obliged the French King and Richard, though successful in
|
||
fight, to treat for peace. Richard wanted to be Crowned King of
|
||
England, and pretended that he wanted to be married (which he
|
||
really did not) to the French King's sister, his promised wife,
|
||
whom King Henry detained in England. King Henry wanted, on the
|
||
other hand, that the French King's sister should be married to his
|
||
favourite son, John: the only one of his sons (he said) who had
|
||
never rebelled against him. At last King Henry, deserted by his
|
||
nobles one by one, distressed, exhausted, broken-hearted, consented
|
||
to establish peace.
|
||
|
||
One final heavy sorrow was reserved for him, even yet. When they
|
||
brought him the proposed treaty of peace, in writing, as he lay
|
||
very ill in bed, they brought him also the list of the deserters
|
||
from their allegiance, whom he was required to pardon. The first
|
||
name upon this list was John, his favourite son, in whom he had
|
||
trusted to the last.
|
||
|
||
'O John! child of my heart!' exclaimed the King, in a great agony
|
||
of mind. 'O John, whom I have loved the best! O John, for whom I
|
||
have contended through these many troubles! Have you betrayed me
|
||
too!' And then he lay down with a heavy groan, and said, 'Now let
|
||
the world go as it will. I care for nothing more!'
|
||
|
||
After a time, he told his attendants to take him to the French town
|
||
of Chinon - a town he had been fond of, during many years. But he
|
||
was fond of no place now; it was too true that he could care for
|
||
nothing more upon this earth. He wildly cursed the hour when he
|
||
was born, and cursed the children whom he left behind him; and
|
||
expired.
|
||
|
||
As, one hundred years before, the servile followers of the Court
|
||
had abandoned the Conqueror in the hour of his death, so they now
|
||
abandoned his descendant. The very body was stripped, in the
|
||
plunder of the Royal chamber; and it was not easy to find the means
|
||
of carrying it for burial to the abbey church of Fontevraud.
|
||
|
||
Richard was said in after years, by way of flattery, to have the
|
||
heart of a Lion. It would have been far better, I think, to have
|
||
had the heart of a Man. His heart, whatever it was, had cause to
|
||
beat remorsefully within his breast, when he came - as he did -
|
||
into the solemn abbey, and looked on his dead father's uncovered
|
||
face. His heart, whatever it was, had been a black and perjured
|
||
heart, in all its dealings with the deceased King, and more
|
||
deficient in a single touch of tenderness than any wild beast's in
|
||
the forest.
|
||
|
||
There is a pretty story told of this Reign, called the story of
|
||
FAIR ROSAMOND. It relates how the King doted on Fair Rosamond, who
|
||
was the loveliest girl in all the world; and how he had a beautiful
|
||
Bower built for her in a Park at Woodstock; and how it was erected
|
||
in a labyrinth, and could only be found by a clue of silk. How the
|
||
bad Queen Eleanor, becoming jealous of Fair Rosamond, found out the
|
||
secret of the clue, and one day, appeared before her, with a dagger
|
||
and a cup of poison, and left her to the choice between those
|
||
deaths. How Fair Rosamond, after shedding many piteous tears and
|
||
offering many useless prayers to the cruel Queen, took the poison,
|
||
and fell dead in the midst of the beautiful bower, while the
|
||
unconscious birds sang gaily all around her.
|
||
|
||
Now, there WAS a fair Rosamond, and she was (I dare say) the
|
||
loveliest girl in all the world, and the King was certainly very
|
||
fond of her, and the bad Queen Eleanor was certainly made jealous.
|
||
But I am afraid - I say afraid, because I like the story so much -
|
||
that there was no bower, no labyrinth, no silken clue, no dagger,
|
||
no poison. I am afraid fair Rosamond retired to a nunnery near
|
||
Oxford, and died there, peaceably; her sister-nuns hanging a silken
|
||
drapery over her tomb, and often dressing it with flowers, in
|
||
remembrance of the youth and beauty that had enchanted the King
|
||
when he too was young, and when his life lay fair before him.
|
||
|
||
It was dark and ended now; faded and gone. Henry Plantagenet lay
|
||
quiet in the abbey church of Fontevraud, in the fifty-seventh year
|
||
of his age - never to be completed - after governing England well,
|
||
for nearly thirty-five years.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIII - ENGLAND UNDER RICHARD THE FIRST, CALLED THE LION-
|
||
HEART
|
||
|
||
IN the year of our Lord one thousand one hundred and eighty-nine,
|
||
Richard of the Lion Heart succeeded to the throne of King Henry the
|
||
Second, whose paternal heart he had done so much to break. He had
|
||
been, as we have seen, a rebel from his boyhood; but, the moment he
|
||
became a king against whom others might rebel, he found out that
|
||
rebellion was a great wickedness. In the heat of this pious
|
||
discovery, he punished all the leading people who had befriended
|
||
him against his father. He could scarcely have done anything that
|
||
would have been a better instance of his real nature, or a better
|
||
warning to fawners and parasites not to trust in lion-hearted
|
||
princes.
|
||
|
||
He likewise put his late father's treasurer in chains, and locked
|
||
him up in a dungeon from which he was not set free until he had
|
||
relinquished, not only all the Crown treasure, but all his own
|
||
money too. So, Richard certainly got the Lion's share of the
|
||
wealth of this wretched treasurer, whether he had a Lion's heart or
|
||
not.
|
||
|
||
He was crowned King of England, with great pomp, at Westminster:
|
||
walking to the Cathedral under a silken canopy stretched on the
|
||
tops of four lances, each carried by a great lord. On the day of
|
||
his coronation, a dreadful murdering of the Jews took place, which
|
||
seems to have given great delight to numbers of savage persons
|
||
calling themselves Christians. The King had issued a proclamation
|
||
forbidding the Jews (who were generally hated, though they were the
|
||
most useful merchants in England) to appear at the ceremony; but as
|
||
they had assembled in London from all parts, bringing presents to
|
||
show their respect for the new Sovereign, some of them ventured
|
||
down to Westminster Hall with their gifts; which were very readily
|
||
accepted. It is supposed, now, that some noisy fellow in the
|
||
crowd, pretending to be a very delicate Christian, set up a howl at
|
||
this, and struck a Jew who was trying to get in at the Hall door
|
||
with his present. A riot arose. The Jews who had got into the
|
||
Hall, were driven forth; and some of the rabble cried out that the
|
||
new King had commanded the unbelieving race to be put to death.
|
||
Thereupon the crowd rushed through the narrow streets of the city,
|
||
slaughtering all the Jews they met; and when they could find no
|
||
more out of doors (on account of their having fled to their houses,
|
||
and fastened themselves in), they ran madly about, breaking open
|
||
all the houses where the Jews lived, rushing in and stabbing or
|
||
spearing them, sometimes even flinging old people and children out
|
||
of window into blazing fires they had lighted up below. This great
|
||
cruelty lasted four-and-twenty hours, and only three men were
|
||
punished for it. Even they forfeited their lives not for murdering
|
||
and robbing the Jews, but for burning the houses of some
|
||
Christians.
|
||
|
||
King Richard, who was a strong, restless, burly man, with one idea
|
||
always in his head, and that the very troublesome idea of breaking
|
||
the heads of other men, was mightily impatient to go on a Crusade
|
||
to the Holy Land, with a great army. As great armies could not be
|
||
raised to go, even to the Holy Land, without a great deal of money,
|
||
he sold the Crown domains, and even the high offices of State;
|
||
recklessly appointing noblemen to rule over his English subjects,
|
||
not because they were fit to govern, but because they could pay
|
||
high for the privilege. In this way, and by selling pardons at a
|
||
dear rate and by varieties of avarice and oppression, he scraped
|
||
together a large treasure. He then appointed two Bishops to take
|
||
care of his kingdom in his absence, and gave great powers and
|
||
possessions to his brother John, to secure his friendship. John
|
||
would rather have been made Regent of England; but he was a sly
|
||
man, and friendly to the expedition; saying to himself, no doubt,
|
||
'The more fighting, the more chance of my brother being killed; and
|
||
when he IS killed, then I become King John!'
|
||
|
||
Before the newly levied army departed from England, the recruits
|
||
and the general populace distinguished themselves by astonishing
|
||
cruelties on the unfortunate Jews: whom, in many large towns, they
|
||
murdered by hundreds in the most horrible manner.
|
||
|
||
At York, a large body of Jews took refuge in the Castle, in the
|
||
absence of its Governor, after the wives and children of many of
|
||
them had been slain before their eyes. Presently came the
|
||
Governor, and demanded admission. 'How can we give it thee, O
|
||
Governor!' said the Jews upon the walls, 'when, if we open the gate
|
||
by so much as the width of a foot, the roaring crowd behind thee
|
||
will press in and kill us?'
|
||
|
||
Upon this, the unjust Governor became angry, and told the people
|
||
that he approved of their killing those Jews; and a mischievous
|
||
maniac of a friar, dressed all in white, put himself at the head of
|
||
the assault, and they assaulted the Castle for three days.
|
||
|
||
Then said JOCEN, the head-Jew (who was a Rabbi or Priest), to the
|
||
rest, 'Brethren, there is no hope for us with the Christians who
|
||
are hammering at the gates and walls, and who must soon break in.
|
||
As we and our wives and children must die, either by Christian
|
||
hands, or by our own, let it be by our own. Let us destroy by fire
|
||
what jewels and other treasure we have here, then fire the castle,
|
||
and then perish!'
|
||
|
||
A few could not resolve to do this, but the greater part complied.
|
||
They made a blazing heap of all their valuables, and, when those
|
||
were consumed, set the castle in flames. While the flames roared
|
||
and crackled around them, and shooting up into the sky, turned it
|
||
blood-red, Jocen cut the throat of his beloved wife, and stabbed
|
||
himself. All the others who had wives or children, did the like
|
||
dreadful deed. When the populace broke in, they found (except the
|
||
trembling few, cowering in corners, whom they soon killed) only
|
||
heaps of greasy cinders, with here and there something like part of
|
||
the blackened trunk of a burnt tree, but which had lately been a
|
||
human creature, formed by the beneficent hand of the Creator as
|
||
they were.
|
||
|
||
After this bad beginning, Richard and his troops went on, in no
|
||
very good manner, with the Holy Crusade. It was undertaken jointly
|
||
by the King of England and his old friend Philip of France. They
|
||
commenced the business by reviewing their forces, to the number of
|
||
one hundred thousand men. Afterwards, they severally embarked
|
||
their troops for Messina, in Sicily, which was appointed as the
|
||
next place of meeting.
|
||
|
||
King Richard's sister had married the King of this place, but he
|
||
was dead: and his uncle TANCRED had usurped the crown, cast the
|
||
Royal Widow into prison, and possessed himself of her estates.
|
||
Richard fiercely demanded his sister's release, the restoration of
|
||
her lands, and (according to the Royal custom of the Island) that
|
||
she should have a golden chair, a golden table, four-and-twenty
|
||
silver cups, and four-and-twenty silver dishes. As he was too
|
||
powerful to be successfully resisted, Tancred yielded to his
|
||
demands; and then the French King grew jealous, and complained that
|
||
the English King wanted to be absolute in the Island of Messina and
|
||
everywhere else. Richard, however, cared little or nothing for
|
||
this complaint; and in consideration of a present of twenty
|
||
thousand pieces of gold, promised his pretty little nephew ARTHUR,
|
||
then a child of two years old, in marriage to Tancred's daughter.
|
||
We shall hear again of pretty little Arthur by-and-by.
|
||
|
||
This Sicilian affair arranged without anybody's brains being
|
||
knocked out (which must have rather disappointed him), King Richard
|
||
took his sister away, and also a fair lady named BERENGARIA, with
|
||
whom he had fallen in love in France, and whom his mother, Queen
|
||
Eleanor (so long in prison, you remember, but released by Richard
|
||
on his coming to the Throne), had brought out there to be his wife;
|
||
and sailed with them for Cyprus.
|
||
|
||
He soon had the pleasure of fighting the King of the Island of
|
||
Cyprus, for allowing his subjects to pillage some of the English
|
||
troops who were shipwrecked on the shore; and easily conquering
|
||
this poor monarch, he seized his only daughter, to be a companion
|
||
to the lady Berengaria, and put the King himself into silver
|
||
fetters. He then sailed away again with his mother, sister, wife,
|
||
and the captive princess; and soon arrived before the town of Acre,
|
||
which the French King with his fleet was besieging from the sea.
|
||
But the French King was in no triumphant condition, for his army
|
||
had been thinned by the swords of the Saracens, and wasted by the
|
||
plague; and SALADIN, the brave Sultan of the Turks, at the head of
|
||
a numerous army, was at that time gallantly defending the place
|
||
from the hills that rise above it.
|
||
|
||
Wherever the united army of Crusaders went, they agreed in few
|
||
points except in gaming, drinking, and quarrelling, in a most
|
||
unholy manner; in debauching the people among whom they tarried,
|
||
whether they were friends or foes; and in carrying disturbance and
|
||
ruin into quiet places. The French King was jealous of the English
|
||
King, and the English King was jealous of the French King, and the
|
||
disorderly and violent soldiers of the two nations were jealous of
|
||
one another; consequently, the two Kings could not at first agree,
|
||
even upon a joint assault on Acre; but when they did make up their
|
||
quarrel for that purpose, the Saracens promised to yield the town,
|
||
to give up to the Christians the wood of the Holy Cross, to set at
|
||
liberty all their Christian captives, and to pay two hundred
|
||
thousand pieces of gold. All this was to be done within forty
|
||
days; but, not being done, King Richard ordered some three thousand
|
||
Saracen prisoners to be brought out in the front of his camp, and
|
||
there, in full view of their own countrymen, to be butchered.
|
||
|
||
The French King had no part in this crime; for he was by that time
|
||
travelling homeward with the greater part of his men; being
|
||
offended by the overbearing conduct of the English King; being
|
||
anxious to look after his own dominions; and being ill, besides,
|
||
from the unwholesome air of that hot and sandy country. King
|
||
Richard carried on the war without him; and remained in the East,
|
||
meeting with a variety of adventures, nearly a year and a half.
|
||
Every night when his army was on the march, and came to a halt, the
|
||
heralds cried out three times, to remind all the soldiers of the
|
||
cause in which they were engaged, 'Save the Holy Sepulchre!' and
|
||
then all the soldiers knelt and said 'Amen!' Marching or
|
||
encamping, the army had continually to strive with the hot air of
|
||
the glaring desert, or with the Saracen soldiers animated and
|
||
directed by the brave Saladin, or with both together. Sickness and
|
||
death, battle and wounds, were always among them; but through every
|
||
difficulty King Richard fought like a giant, and worked like a
|
||
common labourer. Long and long after he was quiet in his grave,
|
||
his terrible battle-axe, with twenty English pounds of English
|
||
steel in its mighty head, was a legend among the Saracens; and when
|
||
all the Saracen and Christian hosts had been dust for many a year,
|
||
if a Saracen horse started at any object by the wayside, his rider
|
||
would exclaim, 'What dost thou fear, Fool? Dost thou think King
|
||
Richard is behind it?'
|
||
|
||
No one admired this King's renown for bravery more than Saladin
|
||
himself, who was a generous and gallant enemy. When Richard lay
|
||
ill of a fever, Saladin sent him fresh fruits from Damascus, and
|
||
snow from the mountain-tops. Courtly messages and compliments were
|
||
frequently exchanged between them - and then King Richard would
|
||
mount his horse and kill as many Saracens as he could; and Saladin
|
||
would mount his, and kill as many Christians as he could. In this
|
||
way King Richard fought to his heart's content at Arsoof and at
|
||
Jaffa; and finding himself with nothing exciting to do at Ascalon,
|
||
except to rebuild, for his own defence, some fortifications there
|
||
which the Saracens had destroyed, he kicked his ally the Duke of
|
||
Austria, for being too proud to work at them.
|
||
|
||
The army at last came within sight of the Holy City of Jerusalem;
|
||
but, being then a mere nest of jealousy, and quarrelling and
|
||
fighting, soon retired, and agreed with the Saracens upon a truce
|
||
for three years, three months, three days, and three hours. Then,
|
||
the English Christians, protected by the noble Saladin from Saracen
|
||
revenge, visited Our Saviour's tomb; and then King Richard embarked
|
||
with a small force at Acre to return home.
|
||
|
||
But he was shipwrecked in the Adriatic Sea, and was fain to pass
|
||
through Germany, under an assumed name. Now, there were many
|
||
people in Germany who had served in the Holy Land under that proud
|
||
Duke of Austria who had been kicked; and some of them, easily
|
||
recognising a man so remarkable as King Richard, carried their
|
||
intelligence to the kicked Duke, who straightway took him prisoner
|
||
at a little inn near Vienna.
|
||
|
||
The Duke's master the Emperor of Germany, and the King of France,
|
||
were equally delighted to have so troublesome a monarch in safe
|
||
keeping. Friendships which are founded on a partnership in doing
|
||
wrong, are never true; and the King of France was now quite as
|
||
heartily King Richard's foe, as he had ever been his friend in his
|
||
unnatural conduct to his father. He monstrously pretended that
|
||
King Richard had designed to poison him in the East; he charged him
|
||
with having murdered, there, a man whom he had in truth befriended;
|
||
he bribed the Emperor of Germany to keep him close prisoner; and,
|
||
finally, through the plotting of these two princes, Richard was
|
||
brought before the German legislature, charged with the foregoing
|
||
crimes, and many others. But he defended himself so well, that
|
||
many of the assembly were moved to tears by his eloquence and
|
||
earnestness. It was decided that he should be treated, during the
|
||
rest of his captivity, in a manner more becoming his dignity than
|
||
he had been, and that he should be set free on the payment of a
|
||
heavy ransom. This ransom the English people willingly raised.
|
||
When Queen Eleanor took it over to Germany, it was at first evaded
|
||
and refused. But she appealed to the honour of all the princes of
|
||
the German Empire in behalf of her son, and appealed so well that
|
||
it was accepted, and the King released. Thereupon, the King of
|
||
France wrote to Prince John - 'Take care of thyself. The devil is
|
||
unchained!'
|
||
|
||
Prince John had reason to fear his brother, for he had been a
|
||
traitor to him in his captivity. He had secretly joined the French
|
||
King; had vowed to the English nobles and people that his brother
|
||
was dead; and had vainly tried to seize the crown. He was now in
|
||
France, at a place called Evreux. Being the meanest and basest of
|
||
men, he contrived a mean and base expedient for making himself
|
||
acceptable to his brother. He invited the French officers of the
|
||
garrison in that town to dinner, murdered them all, and then took
|
||
the fortress. With this recommendation to the good will of a lion-
|
||
hearted monarch, he hastened to King Richard, fell on his knees
|
||
before him, and obtained the intercession of Queen Eleanor. 'I
|
||
forgive him,' said the King, 'and I hope I may forget the injury he
|
||
has done me, as easily as I know he will forget my pardon.'
|
||
|
||
While King Richard was in Sicily, there had been trouble in his
|
||
dominions at home: one of the bishops whom he had left in charge
|
||
thereof, arresting the other; and making, in his pride and
|
||
ambition, as great a show as if he were King himself. But the King
|
||
hearing of it at Messina, and appointing a new Regency, this
|
||
LONGCHAMP (for that was his name) had fled to France in a woman's
|
||
dress, and had there been encouraged and supported by the French
|
||
King. With all these causes of offence against Philip in his mind,
|
||
King Richard had no sooner been welcomed home by his enthusiastic
|
||
subjects with great display and splendour, and had no sooner been
|
||
crowned afresh at Winchester, than he resolved to show the French
|
||
King that the Devil was unchained indeed, and made war against him
|
||
with great fury.
|
||
|
||
There was fresh trouble at home about this time, arising out of the
|
||
discontents of the poor people, who complained that they were far
|
||
more heavily taxed than the rich, and who found a spirited champion
|
||
in WILLIAM FITZ-OSBERT, called LONGBEARD. He became the leader of
|
||
a secret society, comprising fifty thousand men; he was seized by
|
||
surprise; he stabbed the citizen who first laid hands upon him; and
|
||
retreated, bravely fighting, to a church, which he maintained four
|
||
days, until he was dislodged by fire, and run through the body as
|
||
he came out. He was not killed, though; for he was dragged, half
|
||
dead, at the tail of a horse to Smithfield, and there hanged.
|
||
Death was long a favourite remedy for silencing the people's
|
||
advocates; but as we go on with this history, I fancy we shall find
|
||
them difficult to make an end of, for all that.
|
||
|
||
The French war, delayed occasionally by a truce, was still in
|
||
progress when a certain Lord named VIDOMAR, Viscount of Limoges,
|
||
chanced to find in his ground a treasure of ancient coins. As the
|
||
King's vassal, he sent the King half of it; but the King claimed
|
||
the whole. The lord refused to yield the whole. The King besieged
|
||
the lord in his castle, swore that he would take the castle by
|
||
storm, and hang every man of its defenders on the battlements.
|
||
|
||
There was a strange old song in that part of the country, to the
|
||
effect that in Limoges an arrow would be made by which King Richard
|
||
would die. It may be that BERTRAND DE GOURDON, a young man who was
|
||
one of the defenders of the castle, had often sung it or heard it
|
||
sung of a winter night, and remembered it when he saw, from his
|
||
post upon the ramparts, the King attended only by his chief officer
|
||
riding below the walls surveying the place. He drew an arrow to
|
||
the head, took steady aim, said between his teeth, 'Now I pray God
|
||
speed thee well, arrow!' discharged it, and struck the King in the
|
||
left shoulder.
|
||
|
||
Although the wound was not at first considered dangerous, it was
|
||
severe enough to cause the King to retire to his tent, and direct
|
||
the assault to be made without him. The castle was taken; and
|
||
every man of its defenders was hanged, as the King had sworn all
|
||
should be, except Bertrand de Gourdon, who was reserved until the
|
||
royal pleasure respecting him should be known.
|
||
|
||
By that time unskilful treatment had made the wound mortal and the
|
||
King knew that he was dying. He directed Bertrand to be brought
|
||
into his tent. The young man was brought there, heavily chained,
|
||
King Richard looked at him steadily. He looked, as steadily, at
|
||
the King.
|
||
|
||
'Knave!' said King Richard. 'What have I done to thee that thou
|
||
shouldest take my life?'
|
||
|
||
'What hast thou done to me?' replied the young man. 'With thine
|
||
own hands thou hast killed my father and my two brothers. Myself
|
||
thou wouldest have hanged. Let me die now, by any torture that
|
||
thou wilt. My comfort is, that no torture can save Thee. Thou too
|
||
must die; and, through me, the world is quit of thee!'
|
||
|
||
Again the King looked at the young man steadily. Again the young
|
||
man looked steadily at him. Perhaps some remembrance of his
|
||
generous enemy Saladin, who was not a Christian, came into the mind
|
||
of the dying King.
|
||
|
||
'Youth!' he said, 'I forgive thee. Go unhurt!' Then, turning to
|
||
the chief officer who had been riding in his company when he
|
||
received the wound, King Richard said:
|
||
|
||
'Take off his chains, give him a hundred shillings, and let him
|
||
depart.'
|
||
|
||
He sunk down on his couch, and a dark mist seemed in his weakened
|
||
eyes to fill the tent wherein he had so often rested, and he died.
|
||
His age was forty-two; he had reigned ten years. His last command
|
||
was not obeyed; for the chief officer flayed Bertrand de Gourdon
|
||
alive, and hanged him.
|
||
|
||
There is an old tune yet known - a sorrowful air will sometimes
|
||
outlive many generations of strong men, and even last longer than
|
||
battle-axes with twenty pounds of steel in the head - by which this
|
||
King is said to have been discovered in his captivity. BLONDEL, a
|
||
favourite Minstrel of King Richard, as the story relates,
|
||
faithfully seeking his Royal master, went singing it outside the
|
||
gloomy walls of many foreign fortresses and prisons; until at last
|
||
he heard it echoed from within a dungeon, and knew the voice, and
|
||
cried out in ecstasy, 'O Richard, O my King!' You may believe it,
|
||
if you like; it would be easy to believe worse things. Richard was
|
||
himself a Minstrel and a Poet. If he had not been a Prince too, he
|
||
might have been a better man perhaps, and might have gone out of
|
||
the world with less bloodshed and waste of life to answer for.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIV - ENGLAND UNDER KING JOHN, CALLED LACKLAND
|
||
|
||
AT two-and-thirty years of age, JOHN became King of England. His
|
||
pretty little nephew ARTHUR had the best claim to the throne; but
|
||
John seized the treasure, and made fine promises to the nobility,
|
||
and got himself crowned at Westminster within a few weeks after his
|
||
brother Richard's death. I doubt whether the crown could possibly
|
||
have been put upon the head of a meaner coward, or a more
|
||
detestable villain, if England had been searched from end to end to
|
||
find him out.
|
||
|
||
The French King, Philip, refused to acknowledge the right of John
|
||
to his new dignity, and declared in favour of Arthur. You must not
|
||
suppose that he had any generosity of feeling for the fatherless
|
||
boy; it merely suited his ambitious schemes to oppose the King of
|
||
England. So John and the French King went to war about Arthur.
|
||
|
||
He was a handsome boy, at that time only twelve years old. He was
|
||
not born when his father, Geoffrey, had his brains trampled out at
|
||
the tournament; and, besides the misfortune of never having known a
|
||
father's guidance and protection, he had the additional misfortune
|
||
to have a foolish mother (CONSTANCE by name), lately married to her
|
||
third husband. She took Arthur, upon John's accession, to the
|
||
French King, who pretended to be very much his friend, and who made
|
||
him a Knight, and promised him his daughter in marriage; but, who
|
||
cared so little about him in reality, that finding it his interest
|
||
to make peace with King John for a time, he did so without the
|
||
least consideration for the poor little Prince, and heartlessly
|
||
sacrificed all his interests.
|
||
|
||
Young Arthur, for two years afterwards, lived quietly; and in the
|
||
course of that time his mother died. But, the French King then
|
||
finding it his interest to quarrel with King John again, again made
|
||
Arthur his pretence, and invited the orphan boy to court. 'You
|
||
know your rights, Prince,' said the French King, 'and you would
|
||
like to be a King. Is it not so?' 'Truly,' said Prince Arthur, 'I
|
||
should greatly like to be a King!' 'Then,' said Philip, 'you shall
|
||
have two hundred gentlemen who are Knights of mine, and with them
|
||
you shall go to win back the provinces belonging to you, of which
|
||
your uncle, the usurping King of England, has taken possession. I
|
||
myself, meanwhile, will head a force against him in Normandy.'
|
||
Poor Arthur was so flattered and so grateful that he signed a
|
||
treaty with the crafty French King, agreeing to consider him his
|
||
superior Lord, and that the French King should keep for himself
|
||
whatever he could take from King John.
|
||
|
||
Now, King John was so bad in all ways, and King Philip was so
|
||
perfidious, that Arthur, between the two, might as well have been a
|
||
lamb between a fox and a wolf. But, being so young, he was ardent
|
||
and flushed with hope; and, when the people of Brittany (which was
|
||
his inheritance) sent him five hundred more knights and five
|
||
thousand foot soldiers, he believed his fortune was made. The
|
||
people of Brittany had been fond of him from his birth, and had
|
||
requested that he might be called Arthur, in remembrance of that
|
||
dimly-famous English Arthur, of whom I told you early in this book,
|
||
whom they believed to have been the brave friend and companion of
|
||
an old King of their own. They had tales among them about a
|
||
prophet called MERLIN (of the same old time), who had foretold that
|
||
their own King should be restored to them after hundreds of years;
|
||
and they believed that the prophecy would be fulfilled in Arthur;
|
||
that the time would come when he would rule them with a crown of
|
||
Brittany upon his head; and when neither King of France nor King of
|
||
England would have any power over them. When Arthur found himself
|
||
riding in a glittering suit of armour on a richly caparisoned
|
||
horse, at the head of his train of knights and soldiers, he began
|
||
to believe this too, and to consider old Merlin a very superior
|
||
prophet.
|
||
|
||
He did not know - how could he, being so innocent and
|
||
inexperienced? - that his little army was a mere nothing against
|
||
the power of the King of England. The French King knew it; but the
|
||
poor boy's fate was little to him, so that the King of England was
|
||
worried and distressed. Therefore, King Philip went his way into
|
||
Normandy and Prince Arthur went his way towards Mirebeau, a French
|
||
town near Poictiers, both very well pleased.
|
||
|
||
Prince Arthur went to attack the town of Mirebeau, because his
|
||
grandmother Eleanor, who has so often made her appearance in this
|
||
history (and who had always been his mother's enemy), was living
|
||
there, and because his Knights said, 'Prince, if you can take her
|
||
prisoner, you will be able to bring the King your uncle to terms!'
|
||
But she was not to be easily taken. She was old enough by this
|
||
time - eighty - but she was as full of stratagem as she was full of
|
||
years and wickedness. Receiving intelligence of young Arthur's
|
||
approach, she shut herself up in a high tower, and encouraged her
|
||
soldiers to defend it like men. Prince Arthur with his little army
|
||
besieged the high tower. King John, hearing how matters stood,
|
||
came up to the rescue, with HIS army. So here was a strange
|
||
family-party! The boy-Prince besieging his grandmother, and his
|
||
uncle besieging him!
|
||
|
||
This position of affairs did not last long. One summer night King
|
||
John, by treachery, got his men into the town, surprised Prince
|
||
Arthur's force, took two hundred of his knights, and seized the
|
||
Prince himself in his bed. The Knights were put in heavy irons,
|
||
and driven away in open carts drawn by bullocks, to various
|
||
dungeons where they were most inhumanly treated, and where some of
|
||
them were starved to death. Prince Arthur was sent to the castle
|
||
of Falaise.
|
||
|
||
One day, while he was in prison at that castle, mournfully thinking
|
||
it strange that one so young should be in so much trouble, and
|
||
looking out of the small window in the deep dark wall, at the
|
||
summer sky and the birds, the door was softly opened, and he saw
|
||
his uncle the King standing in the shadow of the archway, looking
|
||
very grim.
|
||
|
||
'Arthur,' said the King, with his wicked eyes more on the stone
|
||
floor than on his nephew, 'will you not trust to the gentleness,
|
||
the friendship, and the truthfulness of your loving uncle?'
|
||
|
||
'I will tell my loving uncle that,' replied the boy, 'when he does
|
||
me right. Let him restore to me my kingdom of England, and then
|
||
come to me and ask the question.'
|
||
|
||
The King looked at him and went out. 'Keep that boy close
|
||
prisoner,' said he to the warden of the castle.
|
||
|
||
Then, the King took secret counsel with the worst of his nobles how
|
||
the Prince was to be got rid of. Some said, 'Put out his eyes and
|
||
keep him in prison, as Robort of Normandy was kept.' Others said,
|
||
'Have him stabbed.' Others, 'Have him hanged.' Others, 'Have him
|
||
poisoned.'
|
||
|
||
King John, feeling that in any case, whatever was done afterwards,
|
||
it would be a satisfaction to his mind to have those handsome eyes
|
||
burnt out that had looked at him so proudly while his own royal
|
||
eyes were blinking at the stone floor, sent certain ruffians to
|
||
Falaise to blind the boy with red-hot irons. But Arthur so
|
||
pathetically entreated them, and shed such piteous tears, and so
|
||
appealed to HUBERT DE BOURG (or BURGH), the warden of the castle,
|
||
who had a love for him, and was an honourable, tender man, that
|
||
Hubert could not bear it. To his eternal honour he prevented the
|
||
torture from being performed, and, at his own risk, sent the
|
||
savages away.
|
||
|
||
The chafed and disappointed King bethought himself of the stabbing
|
||
suggestion next, and, with his shuffling manner and his cruel face,
|
||
proposed it to one William de Bray. 'I am a gentleman and not an
|
||
executioner,' said William de Bray, and left the presence with
|
||
disdain.
|
||
|
||
But it was not difficult for a King to hire a murderer in those
|
||
days. King John found one for his money, and sent him down to the
|
||
castle of Falaise. 'On what errand dost thou come?' said Hubert to
|
||
this fellow. 'To despatch young Arthur,' he returned. 'Go back to
|
||
him who sent thee,' answered Hubert, 'and say that I will do it!'
|
||
|
||
King John very well knowing that Hubert would never do it, but that
|
||
he courageously sent this reply to save the Prince or gain time,
|
||
despatched messengers to convey the young prisoner to the castle of
|
||
Rouen.
|
||
|
||
Arthur was soon forced from the good Hubert - of whom he had never
|
||
stood in greater need than then - carried away by night, and lodged
|
||
in his new prison: where, through his grated window, he could hear
|
||
the deep waters of the river Seine, rippling against the stone wall
|
||
below.
|
||
|
||
One dark night, as he lay sleeping, dreaming perhaps of rescue by
|
||
those unfortunate gentlemen who were obscurely suffering and dying
|
||
in his cause, he was roused, and bidden by his jailer to come down
|
||
the staircase to the foot of the tower. He hurriedly dressed
|
||
himself and obeyed. When they came to the bottom of the winding
|
||
stairs, and the night air from the river blew upon their faces, the
|
||
jailer trod upon his torch and put it out. Then, Arthur, in the
|
||
darkness, was hurriedly drawn into a solitary boat. And in that
|
||
boat, he found his uncle and one other man.
|
||
|
||
He knelt to them, and prayed them not to murder him. Deaf to his
|
||
entreaties, they stabbed him and sunk his body in the river with
|
||
heavy stones. When the spring-morning broke, the tower-door was
|
||
closed, the boat was gone, the river sparkled on its way, and never
|
||
more was any trace of the poor boy beheld by mortal eyes.
|
||
|
||
The news of this atrocious murder being spread in England, awakened
|
||
a hatred of the King (already odious for his many vices, and for
|
||
his having stolen away and married a noble lady while his own wife
|
||
was living) that never slept again through his whole reign. In
|
||
Brittany, the indignation was intense. Arthur's own sister ELEANOR
|
||
was in the power of John and shut up in a convent at Bristol, but
|
||
his half-sister ALICE was in Brittany. The people chose her, and
|
||
the murdered prince's father-in-law, the last husband of Constance,
|
||
to represent them; and carried their fiery complaints to King
|
||
Philip. King Philip summoned King John (as the holder of territory
|
||
in France) to come before him and defend himself. King John
|
||
refusing to appear, King Philip declared him false, perjured, and
|
||
guilty; and again made war. In a little time, by conquering the
|
||
greater part of his French territory, King Philip deprived him of
|
||
one-third of his dominions. And, through all the fighting that
|
||
took place, King John was always found, either to be eating and
|
||
drinking, like a gluttonous fool, when the danger was at a
|
||
distance, or to be running away, like a beaten cur, when it was
|
||
near.
|
||
|
||
You might suppose that when he was losing his dominions at this
|
||
rate, and when his own nobles cared so little for him or his cause
|
||
that they plainly refused to follow his banner out of England, he
|
||
had enemies enough. But he made another enemy of the Pope, which
|
||
he did in this way.
|
||
|
||
The Archbishop of Canterbury dying, and the junior monks of that
|
||
place wishing to get the start of the senior monks in the
|
||
appointment of his successor, met together at midnight, secretly
|
||
elected a certain REGINALD, and sent him off to Rome to get the
|
||
Pope's approval. The senior monks and the King soon finding this
|
||
out, and being very angry about it, the junior monks gave way, and
|
||
all the monks together elected the Bishop of Norwich, who was the
|
||
King's favourite. The Pope, hearing the whole story, declared that
|
||
neither election would do for him, and that HE elected STEPHEN
|
||
LANGTON. The monks submitting to the Pope, the King turned them
|
||
all out bodily, and banished them as traitors. The Pope sent three
|
||
bishops to the King, to threaten him with an Interdict. The King
|
||
told the bishops that if any Interdict were laid upon his kingdom,
|
||
he would tear out the eyes and cut off the noses of all the monks
|
||
he could lay hold of, and send them over to Rome in that
|
||
undecorated state as a present for their master. The bishops,
|
||
nevertheless, soon published the Interdict, and fled.
|
||
|
||
After it had lasted a year, the Pope proceeded to his next step;
|
||
which was Excommunication. King John was declared excommunicated,
|
||
with all the usual ceremonies. The King was so incensed at this,
|
||
and was made so desperate by the disaffection of his Barons and the
|
||
hatred of his people, that it is said he even privately sent
|
||
ambassadors to the Turks in Spain, offering to renounce his
|
||
religion and hold his kingdom of them if they would help him. It
|
||
is related that the ambassadors were admitted to the presence of
|
||
the Turkish Emir through long lines of Moorish guards, and that
|
||
they found the Emir with his eyes seriously fixed on the pages of a
|
||
large book, from which he never once looked up. That they gave him
|
||
a letter from the King containing his proposals, and were gravely
|
||
dismissed. That presently the Emir sent for one of them, and
|
||
conjured him, by his faith in his religion, to say what kind of man
|
||
the King of England truly was? That the ambassador, thus pressed,
|
||
replied that the King of England was a false tyrant, against whom
|
||
his own subjects would soon rise. And that this was quite enough
|
||
for the Emir.
|
||
|
||
Money being, in his position, the next best thing to men, King John
|
||
spared no means of getting it. He set on foot another oppressing
|
||
and torturing of the unhappy Jews (which was quite in his way), and
|
||
invented a new punishment for one wealthy Jew of Bristol. Until
|
||
such time as that Jew should produce a certain large sum of money,
|
||
the King sentenced him to be imprisoned, and, every day, to have
|
||
one tooth violently wrenched out of his head - beginning with the
|
||
double teeth. For seven days, the oppressed man bore the daily
|
||
pain and lost the daily tooth; but, on the eighth, he paid the
|
||
money. With the treasure raised in such ways, the King made an
|
||
expedition into Ireland, where some English nobles had revolted.
|
||
It was one of the very few places from which he did not run away;
|
||
because no resistance was shown. He made another expedition into
|
||
Wales - whence he DID run away in the end: but not before he had
|
||
got from the Welsh people, as hostages, twenty-seven young men of
|
||
the best families; every one of whom he caused to be slain in the
|
||
following year.
|
||
|
||
To Interdict and Excommunication, the Pope now added his last
|
||
sentence; Deposition. He proclaimed John no longer King, absolved
|
||
all his subjects from their allegiance, and sent Stephen Langton
|
||
and others to the King of France to tell him that, if he would
|
||
invade England, he should be forgiven all his sins - at least,
|
||
should be forgiven them by the Pope, if that would do.
|
||
|
||
As there was nothing that King Philip desired more than to invade
|
||
England, he collected a great army at Rouen, and a fleet of
|
||
seventeen hundred ships to bring them over. But the English
|
||
people, however bitterly they hated the King, were not a people to
|
||
suffer invasion quietly. They flocked to Dover, where the English
|
||
standard was, in such great numbers to enrol themselves as
|
||
defenders of their native land, that there were not provisions for
|
||
them, and the King could only select and retain sixty thousand.
|
||
But, at this crisis, the Pope, who had his own reasons for
|
||
objecting to either King John or King Philip being too powerful,
|
||
interfered. He entrusted a legate, whose name was PANDOLF, with
|
||
the easy task of frightening King John. He sent him to the English
|
||
Camp, from France, to terrify him with exaggerations of King
|
||
Philip's power, and his own weakness in the discontent of the
|
||
English Barons and people. Pandolf discharged his commission so
|
||
well, that King John, in a wretched panic, consented to acknowledge
|
||
Stephen Langton; to resign his kingdom 'to God, Saint Peter, and
|
||
Saint Paul' - which meant the Pope; and to hold it, ever
|
||
afterwards, by the Pope's leave, on payment of an annual sum of
|
||
money. To this shameful contract he publicly bound himself in the
|
||
church of the Knights Templars at Dover: where he laid at the
|
||
legate's feet a part of the tribute, which the legate haughtily
|
||
trampled upon. But they DO say, that this was merely a genteel
|
||
flourish, and that he was afterwards seen to pick it up and pocket
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
There was an unfortunate prophet, the name of Peter, who had
|
||
greatly increased King John's terrors by predicting that he would
|
||
be unknighted (which the King supposed to signify that he would
|
||
die) before the Feast of the Ascension should be past. That was
|
||
the day after this humiliation. When the next morning came, and
|
||
the King, who had been trembling all night, found himself alive and
|
||
safe, he ordered the prophet - and his son too - to be dragged
|
||
through the streets at the tails of horses, and then hanged, for
|
||
having frightened him.
|
||
|
||
As King John had now submitted, the Pope, to King Philip's great
|
||
astonishment, took him under his protection, and informed King
|
||
Philip that he found he could not give him leave to invade England.
|
||
The angry Philip resolved to do it without his leave but he gained
|
||
nothing and lost much; for, the English, commanded by the Earl of
|
||
Salisbury, went over, in five hundred ships, to the French coast,
|
||
before the French fleet had sailed away from it, and utterly
|
||
defeated the whole.
|
||
|
||
The Pope then took off his three sentences, one after another, and
|
||
empowered Stephen Langton publicly to receive King John into the
|
||
favour of the Church again, and to ask him to dinner. The King,
|
||
who hated Langton with all his might and main - and with reason
|
||
too, for he was a great and a good man, with whom such a King could
|
||
have no sympathy - pretended to cry and to be VERY grateful. There
|
||
was a little difficulty about settling how much the King should pay
|
||
as a recompense to the clergy for the losses he had caused them;
|
||
but, the end of it was, that the superior clergy got a good deal,
|
||
and the inferior clergy got little or nothing - which has also
|
||
happened since King John's time, I believe.
|
||
|
||
When all these matters were arranged, the King in his triumph
|
||
became more fierce, and false, and insolent to all around him than
|
||
he had ever been. An alliance of sovereigns against King Philip,
|
||
gave him an opportunity of landing an army in France; with which he
|
||
even took a town! But, on the French King's gaining a great
|
||
victory, he ran away, of course, and made a truce for five years.
|
||
|
||
And now the time approached when he was to be still further
|
||
humbled, and made to feel, if he could feel anything, what a
|
||
wretched creature he was. Of all men in the world, Stephen Langton
|
||
seemed raised up by Heaven to oppose and subdue him. When he
|
||
ruthlessly burnt and destroyed the property of his own subjects,
|
||
because their Lords, the Barons, would not serve him abroad,
|
||
Stephen Langton fearlessly reproved and threatened him. When he
|
||
swore to restore the laws of King Edward, or the laws of King Henry
|
||
the First, Stephen Langton knew his falsehood, and pursued him
|
||
through all his evasions. When the Barons met at the abbey of
|
||
Saint Edmund's-Bury, to consider their wrongs and the King's
|
||
oppressions, Stephen Langton roused them by his fervid words to
|
||
demand a solemn charter of rights and liberties from their perjured
|
||
master, and to swear, one by one, on the High Altar, that they
|
||
would have it, or would wage war against him to the death. When
|
||
the King hid himself in London from the Barons, and was at last
|
||
obliged to receive them, they told him roundly they would not
|
||
believe him unless Stephen Langton became a surety that he would
|
||
keep his word. When he took the Cross to invest himself with some
|
||
interest, and belong to something that was received with favour,
|
||
Stephen Langton was still immovable. When he appealed to the Pope,
|
||
and the Pope wrote to Stephen Langton in behalf of his new
|
||
favourite, Stephen Langton was deaf, even to the Pope himself, and
|
||
saw before him nothing but the welfare of England and the crimes of
|
||
the English King.
|
||
|
||
At Easter-time, the Barons assembled at Stamford, in Lincolnshire,
|
||
in proud array, and, marching near to Oxford where the King was,
|
||
delivered into the hands of Stephen Langton and two others, a list
|
||
of grievances. 'And these,' they said, 'he must redress, or we
|
||
will do it for ourselves!' When Stephen Langton told the King as
|
||
much, and read the list to him, he went half mad with rage. But
|
||
that did him no more good than his afterwards trying to pacify the
|
||
Barons with lies. They called themselves and their followers, 'The
|
||
army of God and the Holy Church.' Marching through the country,
|
||
with the people thronging to them everywhere (except at
|
||
Northampton, where they failed in an attack upon the castle), they
|
||
at last triumphantly set up their banner in London itself, whither
|
||
the whole land, tired of the tyrant, seemed to flock to join them.
|
||
Seven knights alone, of all the knights in England, remained with
|
||
the King; who, reduced to this strait, at last sent the Earl of
|
||
Pembroke to the Barons to say that he approved of everything, and
|
||
would meet them to sign their charter when they would. 'Then,'
|
||
said the Barons, 'let the day be the fifteenth of June, and the
|
||
place, Runny-Mead.'
|
||
|
||
On Monday, the fifteenth of June, one thousand two hundred and
|
||
fourteen, the King came from Windsor Castle, and the Barons came
|
||
from the town of Staines, and they met on Runny-Mead, which is
|
||
still a pleasant meadow by the Thames, where rushes grow in the
|
||
clear water of the winding river, and its banks are green with
|
||
grass and trees. On the side of the Barons, came the General of
|
||
their army, ROBERT FITZ-WALTER, and a great concourse of the
|
||
nobility of England. With the King, came, in all, some four-and-
|
||
twenty persons of any note, most of whom despised him, and were
|
||
merely his advisers in form. On that great day, and in that great
|
||
company, the King signed MAGNA CHARTA - the great charter of
|
||
England - by which he pledged himself to maintain the Church in its
|
||
rights; to relieve the Barons of oppressive obligations as vassals
|
||
of the Crown - of which the Barons, in their turn, pledged
|
||
themselves to relieve THEIR vassals, the people; to respect the
|
||
liberties of London and all other cities and boroughs; to protect
|
||
foreign merchants who came to England; to imprison no man without a
|
||
fair trial; and to sell, delay, or deny justice to none. As the
|
||
Barons knew his falsehood well, they further required, as their
|
||
securities, that he should send out of his kingdom all his foreign
|
||
troops; that for two months they should hold possession of the city
|
||
of London, and Stephen Langton of the Tower; and that five-and-
|
||
twenty of their body, chosen by themselves, should be a lawful
|
||
committee to watch the keeping of the charter, and to make war upon
|
||
him if he broke it.
|
||
|
||
All this he was obliged to yield. He signed the charter with a
|
||
smile, and, if he could have looked agreeable, would have done so,
|
||
as he departed from the splendid assembly. When he got home to
|
||
Windsor Castle, he was quite a madman in his helpless fury. And he
|
||
broke the charter immediately afterwards.
|
||
|
||
He sent abroad for foreign soldiers, and sent to the Pope for help,
|
||
and plotted to take London by surprise, while the Barons should be
|
||
holding a great tournament at Stamford, which they had agreed to
|
||
hold there as a celebration of the charter. The Barons, however,
|
||
found him out and put it off. Then, when the Barons desired to see
|
||
him and tax him with his treachery, he made numbers of appointments
|
||
with them, and kept none, and shifted from place to place, and was
|
||
constantly sneaking and skulking about. At last he appeared at
|
||
Dover, to join his foreign soldiers, of whom numbers came into his
|
||
pay; and with them he besieged and took Rochester Castle, which was
|
||
occupied by knights and soldiers of the Barons. He would have
|
||
hanged them every one; but the leader of the foreign soldiers,
|
||
fearful of what the English people might afterwards do to him,
|
||
interfered to save the knights; therefore the King was fain to
|
||
satisfy his vengeance with the death of all the common men. Then,
|
||
he sent the Earl of Salisbury, with one portion of his army, to
|
||
ravage the eastern part of his own dominions, while he carried fire
|
||
and slaughter into the northern part; torturing, plundering,
|
||
killing, and inflicting every possible cruelty upon the people;
|
||
and, every morning, setting a worthy example to his men by setting
|
||
fire, with his own monster-hands, to the house where he had slept
|
||
last night. Nor was this all; for the Pope, coming to the aid of
|
||
his precious friend, laid the kingdom under an Interdict again,
|
||
because the people took part with the Barons. It did not much
|
||
matter, for the people had grown so used to it now, that they had
|
||
begun to think nothing about it. It occurred to them - perhaps to
|
||
Stephen Langton too - that they could keep their churches open, and
|
||
ring their bells, without the Pope's permission as well as with it.
|
||
So, they tried the experiment - and found that it succeeded
|
||
perfectly.
|
||
|
||
It being now impossible to bear the country, as a wilderness of
|
||
cruelty, or longer to hold any terms with such a forsworn outlaw of
|
||
a King, the Barons sent to Louis, son of the French monarch, to
|
||
offer him the English crown. Caring as little for the Pope's
|
||
excommunication of him if he accepted the offer, as it is possible
|
||
his father may have cared for the Pope's forgiveness of his sins,
|
||
he landed at Sandwich (King John immediately running away from
|
||
Dover, where he happened to be), and went on to London. The
|
||
Scottish King, with whom many of the Northern English Lords had
|
||
taken refuge; numbers of the foreign soldiers, numbers of the
|
||
Barons, and numbers of the people went over to him every day; -
|
||
King John, the while, continually running away in all directions.
|
||
|
||
The career of Louis was checked however, by the suspicions of the
|
||
Barons, founded on the dying declaration of a French Lord, that
|
||
when the kingdom was conquered he was sworn to banish them as
|
||
traitors, and to give their estates to some of his own Nobles.
|
||
Rather than suffer this, some of the Barons hesitated: others even
|
||
went over to King John.
|
||
|
||
It seemed to be the turning-point of King John's fortunes, for, in
|
||
his savage and murderous course, he had now taken some towns and
|
||
met with some successes. But, happily for England and humanity,
|
||
his death was near. Crossing a dangerous quicksand, called the
|
||
Wash, not very far from Wisbeach, the tide came up and nearly
|
||
drowned his army. He and his soldiers escaped; but, looking back
|
||
from the shore when he was safe, he saw the roaring water sweep
|
||
down in a torrent, overturn the waggons, horses, and men, that
|
||
carried his treasure, and engulf them in a raging whirlpool from
|
||
which nothing could be delivered.
|
||
|
||
Cursing, and swearing, and gnawing his fingers, he went on to
|
||
Swinestead Abbey, where the monks set before him quantities of
|
||
pears, and peaches, and new cider - some say poison too, but there
|
||
is very little reason to suppose so - of which he ate and drank in
|
||
an immoderate and beastly way. All night he lay ill of a burning
|
||
fever, and haunted with horrible fears. Next day, they put him in
|
||
a horse-litter, and carried him to Sleaford Castle, where he passed
|
||
another night of pain and horror. Next day, they carried him, with
|
||
greater difficulty than on the day before, to the castle of Newark
|
||
upon Trent; and there, on the eighteenth of October, in the forty-
|
||
ninth year of his age, and the seventeenth of his vile reign, was
|
||
an end of this miserable brute.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XV - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE THIRD, CALLED, OF WINCHESTER
|
||
|
||
IF any of the English Barons remembered the murdered Arthur's
|
||
sister, Eleanor the fair maid of Brittany, shut up in her convent
|
||
at Bristol, none among them spoke of her now, or maintained her
|
||
right to the Crown. The dead Usurper's eldest boy, HENRY by name,
|
||
was taken by the Earl of Pembroke, the Marshal of England, to the
|
||
city of Gloucester, and there crowned in great haste when he was
|
||
only ten years old. As the Crown itself had been lost with the
|
||
King's treasure in the raging water, and as there was no time to
|
||
make another, they put a circle of plain gold upon his head
|
||
instead. 'We have been the enemies of this child's father,' said
|
||
Lord Pembroke, a good and true gentleman, to the few Lords who were
|
||
present, 'and he merited our ill-will; but the child himself is
|
||
innocent, and his youth demands our friendship and protection.'
|
||
Those Lords felt tenderly towards the little boy, remembering their
|
||
own young children; and they bowed their heads, and said, 'Long
|
||
live King Henry the Third!'
|
||
|
||
Next, a great council met at Bristol, revised Magna Charta, and
|
||
made Lord Pembroke Regent or Protector of England, as the King was
|
||
too young to reign alone. The next thing to be done, was to get
|
||
rid of Prince Louis of France, and to win over those English Barons
|
||
who were still ranged under his banner. He was strong in many
|
||
parts of England, and in London itself; and he held, among other
|
||
places, a certain Castle called the Castle of Mount Sorel, in
|
||
Leicestershire. To this fortress, after some skirmishing and
|
||
truce-making, Lord Pembroke laid siege. Louis despatched an army
|
||
of six hundred knights and twenty thousand soldiers to relieve it.
|
||
Lord Pembroke, who was not strong enough for such a force, retired
|
||
with all his men. The army of the French Prince, which had marched
|
||
there with fire and plunder, marched away with fire and plunder,
|
||
and came, in a boastful swaggering manner, to Lincoln. The town
|
||
submitted; but the Castle in the town, held by a brave widow lady,
|
||
named NICHOLA DE CAMVILLE (whose property it was), made such a
|
||
sturdy resistance, that the French Count in command of the army of
|
||
the French Prince found it necessary to besiege this Castle. While
|
||
he was thus engaged, word was brought to him that Lord Pembroke,
|
||
with four hundred knights, two hundred and fifty men with cross-
|
||
bows, and a stout force both of horse and foot, was marching
|
||
towards him. 'What care I?' said the French Count. 'The
|
||
Englishman is not so mad as to attack me and my great army in a
|
||
walled town!' But the Englishman did it for all that, and did it -
|
||
not so madly but so wisely, that he decoyed the great army into the
|
||
narrow, ill-paved lanes and byways of Lincoln, where its horse-
|
||
soldiers could not ride in any strong body; and there he made such
|
||
havoc with them, that the whole force surrendered themselves
|
||
prisoners, except the Count; who said that he would never yield to
|
||
any English traitor alive, and accordingly got killed. The end of
|
||
this victory, which the English called, for a joke, the Fair of
|
||
Lincoln, was the usual one in those times - the common men were
|
||
slain without any mercy, and the knights and gentlemen paid ransom
|
||
and went home.
|
||
|
||
The wife of Louis, the fair BLANCHE OF CASTILE, dutifully equipped
|
||
a fleet of eighty good ships, and sent it over from France to her
|
||
husband's aid. An English fleet of forty ships, some good and some
|
||
bad, gallantly met them near the mouth of the Thames, and took or
|
||
sunk sixty-five in one fight. This great loss put an end to the
|
||
French Prince's hopes. A treaty was made at Lambeth, in virtue of
|
||
which the English Barons who had remained attached to his cause
|
||
returned to their allegiance, and it was engaged on both sides that
|
||
the Prince and all his troops should retire peacefully to France.
|
||
It was time to go; for war had made him so poor that he was obliged
|
||
to borrow money from the citizens of London to pay his expenses
|
||
home.
|
||
|
||
Lord Pembroke afterwards applied himself to governing the country
|
||
justly, and to healing the quarrels and disturbances that had
|
||
arisen among men in the days of the bad King John. He caused Magna
|
||
Charta to be still more improved, and so amended the Forest Laws
|
||
that a Peasant was no longer put to death for killing a stag in a
|
||
Royal Forest, but was only imprisoned. It would have been well for
|
||
England if it could have had so good a Protector many years longer,
|
||
but that was not to be. Within three years after the young King's
|
||
Coronation, Lord Pembroke died; and you may see his tomb, at this
|
||
day, in the old Temple Church in London.
|
||
|
||
The Protectorship was now divided. PETER DE ROCHES, whom King John
|
||
had made Bishop of Winchester, was entrusted with the care of the
|
||
person of the young sovereign; and the exercise of the Royal
|
||
authority was confided to EARL HUBERT DE BURGH. These two
|
||
personages had from the first no liking for each other, and soon
|
||
became enemies. When the young King was declared of age, Peter de
|
||
Roches, finding that Hubert increased in power and favour, retired
|
||
discontentedly, and went abroad. For nearly ten years afterwards
|
||
Hubert had full sway alone.
|
||
|
||
But ten years is a long time to hold the favour of a King. This
|
||
King, too, as he grew up, showed a strong resemblance to his
|
||
father, in feebleness, inconsistency, and irresolution. The best
|
||
that can be said of him is that he was not cruel. De Roches coming
|
||
home again, after ten years, and being a novelty, the King began to
|
||
favour him and to look coldly on Hubert. Wanting money besides,
|
||
and having made Hubert rich, he began to dislike Hubert. At last
|
||
he was made to believe, or pretended to believe, that Hubert had
|
||
misappropriated some of the Royal treasure; and ordered him to
|
||
furnish an account of all he had done in his administration.
|
||
Besides which, the foolish charge was brought against Hubert that
|
||
he had made himself the King's favourite by magic. Hubert very
|
||
well knowing that he could never defend himself against such
|
||
nonsense, and that his old enemy must be determined on his ruin,
|
||
instead of answering the charges fled to Merton Abbey. Then the
|
||
King, in a violent passion, sent for the Mayor of London, and said
|
||
to the Mayor, 'Take twenty thousand citizens, and drag me Hubert de
|
||
Burgh out of that abbey, and bring him here.' The Mayor posted off
|
||
to do it, but the Archbishop of Dublin (who was a friend of
|
||
Hubert's) warning the King that an abbey was a sacred place, and
|
||
that if he committed any violence there, he must answer for it to
|
||
the Church, the King changed his mind and called the Mayor back,
|
||
and declared that Hubert should have four months to prepare his
|
||
defence, and should be safe and free during that time.
|
||
|
||
Hubert, who relied upon the King's word, though I think he was old
|
||
enough to have known better, came out of Merton Abbey upon these
|
||
conditions, and journeyed away to see his wife: a Scottish
|
||
Princess who was then at St. Edmund's-Bury.
|
||
|
||
Almost as soon as he had departed from the Sanctuary, his enemies
|
||
persuaded the weak King to send out one SIR GODFREY DE CRANCUMB,
|
||
who commanded three hundred vagabonds called the Black Band, with
|
||
orders to seize him. They came up with him at a little town in
|
||
Essex, called Brentwood, when he was in bed. He leaped out of bed,
|
||
got out of the house, fled to the church, ran up to the altar, and
|
||
laid his hand upon the cross. Sir Godfrey and the Black Band,
|
||
caring neither for church, altar, nor cross, dragged him forth to
|
||
the church door, with their drawn swords flashing round his head,
|
||
and sent for a Smith to rivet a set of chains upon him. When the
|
||
Smith (I wish I knew his name!) was brought, all dark and swarthy
|
||
with the smoke of his forge, and panting with the speed he had
|
||
made; and the Black Band, falling aside to show him the Prisoner,
|
||
cried with a loud uproar, 'Make the fetters heavy! make them
|
||
strong!' the Smith dropped upon his knee - but not to the Black
|
||
Band - and said, 'This is the brave Earl Hubert de Burgh, who
|
||
fought at Dover Castle, and destroyed the French fleet, and has
|
||
done his country much good service. You may kill me, if you like,
|
||
but I will never make a chain for Earl Hubert de Burgh!'
|
||
|
||
The Black Band never blushed, or they might have blushed at this.
|
||
They knocked the Smith about from one to another, and swore at him,
|
||
and tied the Earl on horseback, undressed as he was, and carried
|
||
him off to the Tower of London. The Bishops, however, were so
|
||
indignant at the violation of the Sanctuary of the Church, that the
|
||
frightened King soon ordered the Black Band to take him back again;
|
||
at the same time commanding the Sheriff of Essex to prevent his
|
||
escaping out of Brentwood Church. Well! the Sheriff dug a deep
|
||
trench all round the church, and erected a high fence, and watched
|
||
the church night and day; the Black Band and their Captain watched
|
||
it too, like three hundred and one black wolves. For thirty-nine
|
||
days, Hubert de Burgh remained within. At length, upon the
|
||
fortieth day, cold and hunger were too much for him, and he gave
|
||
himself up to the Black Band, who carried him off, for the second
|
||
time, to the Tower. When his trial came on, he refused to plead;
|
||
but at last it was arranged that he should give up all the royal
|
||
lands which had been bestowed upon him, and should be kept at the
|
||
Castle of Devizes, in what was called 'free prison,' in charge of
|
||
four knights appointed by four lords. There, he remained almost a
|
||
year, until, learning that a follower of his old enemy the Bishop
|
||
was made Keeper of the Castle, and fearing that he might be killed
|
||
by treachery, he climbed the ramparts one dark night, dropped from
|
||
the top of the high Castle wall into the moat, and coming safely to
|
||
the ground, took refuge in another church. From this place he was
|
||
delivered by a party of horse despatched to his help by some
|
||
nobles, who were by this time in revolt against the King, and
|
||
assembled in Wales. He was finally pardoned and restored to his
|
||
estates, but he lived privately, and never more aspired to a high
|
||
post in the realm, or to a high place in the King's favour. And
|
||
thus end - more happily than the stories of many favourites of
|
||
Kings - the adventures of Earl Hubert de Burgh.
|
||
|
||
The nobles, who had risen in revolt, were stirred up to rebellion
|
||
by the overbearing conduct of the Bishop of Winchester, who,
|
||
finding that the King secretly hated the Great Charter which had
|
||
been forced from his father, did his utmost to confirm him in that
|
||
dislike, and in the preference he showed to foreigners over the
|
||
English. Of this, and of his even publicly declaring that the
|
||
Barons of England were inferior to those of France, the English
|
||
Lords complained with such bitterness, that the King, finding them
|
||
well supported by the clergy, became frightened for his throne, and
|
||
sent away the Bishop and all his foreign associates. On his
|
||
marriage, however, with ELEANOR, a French lady, the daughter of the
|
||
Count of Provence, he openly favoured the foreigners again; and so
|
||
many of his wife's relations came over, and made such an immense
|
||
family-party at court, and got so many good things, and pocketed so
|
||
much money, and were so high with the English whose money they
|
||
pocketed, that the bolder English Barons murmured openly about a
|
||
clause there was in the Great Charter, which provided for the
|
||
banishment of unreasonable favourites. But, the foreigners only
|
||
laughed disdainfully, and said, 'What are your English laws to us?'
|
||
|
||
King Philip of France had died, and had been succeeded by Prince
|
||
Louis, who had also died after a short reign of three years, and
|
||
had been succeeded by his son of the same name - so moderate and
|
||
just a man that he was not the least in the world like a King, as
|
||
Kings went. ISABELLA, King Henry's mother, wished very much (for a
|
||
certain spite she had) that England should make war against this
|
||
King; and, as King Henry was a mere puppet in anybody's hands who
|
||
knew how to manage his feebleness, she easily carried her point
|
||
with him. But, the Parliament were determined to give him no money
|
||
for such a war. So, to defy the Parliament, he packed up thirty
|
||
large casks of silver - I don't know how he got so much; I dare say
|
||
he screwed it out of the miserable Jews - and put them aboard ship,
|
||
and went away himself to carry war into France: accompanied by his
|
||
mother and his brother Richard, Earl of Cornwall, who was rich and
|
||
clever. But he only got well beaten, and came home.
|
||
|
||
The good-humour of the Parliament was not restored by this. They
|
||
reproached the King with wasting the public money to make greedy
|
||
foreigners rich, and were so stern with him, and so determined not
|
||
to let him have more of it to waste if they could help it, that he
|
||
was at his wit's end for some, and tried so shamelessly to get all
|
||
he could from his subjects, by excuses or by force, that the people
|
||
used to say the King was the sturdiest beggar in England. He took
|
||
the Cross, thinking to get some money by that means; but, as it was
|
||
very well known that he never meant to go on a crusade, he got
|
||
none. In all this contention, the Londoners were particularly keen
|
||
against the King, and the King hated them warmly in return. Hating
|
||
or loving, however, made no difference; he continued in the same
|
||
condition for nine or ten years, when at last the Barons said that
|
||
if he would solemnly confirm their liberties afresh, the Parliament
|
||
would vote him a large sum.
|
||
|
||
As he readily consented, there was a great meeting held in
|
||
Westminster Hall, one pleasant day in May, when all the clergy,
|
||
dressed in their robes and holding every one of them a burning
|
||
candle in his hand, stood up (the Barons being also there) while
|
||
the Archbishop of Canterbury read the sentence of excommunication
|
||
against any man, and all men, who should henceforth, in any way,
|
||
infringe the Great Charter of the Kingdom. When he had done, they
|
||
all put out their burning candles with a curse upon the soul of any
|
||
one, and every one, who should merit that sentence. The King
|
||
concluded with an oath to keep the Charter, 'As I am a man, as I am
|
||
a Christian, as I am a Knight, as I am a King!'
|
||
|
||
It was easy to make oaths, and easy to break them; and the King did
|
||
both, as his father had done before him. He took to his old
|
||
courses again when he was supplied with money, and soon cured of
|
||
their weakness the few who had ever really trusted him. When his
|
||
money was gone, and he was once more borrowing and begging
|
||
everywhere with a meanness worthy of his nature, he got into a
|
||
difficulty with the Pope respecting the Crown of Sicily, which the
|
||
Pope said he had a right to give away, and which he offered to King
|
||
Henry for his second son, PRINCE EDMUND. But, if you or I give
|
||
away what we have not got, and what belongs to somebody else, it is
|
||
likely that the person to whom we give it, will have some trouble
|
||
in taking it. It was exactly so in this case. It was necessary to
|
||
conquer the Sicilian Crown before it could be put upon young
|
||
Edmund's head. It could not be conquered without money. The Pope
|
||
ordered the clergy to raise money. The clergy, however, were not
|
||
so obedient to him as usual; they had been disputing with him for
|
||
some time about his unjust preference of Italian Priests in
|
||
England; and they had begun to doubt whether the King's chaplain,
|
||
whom he allowed to be paid for preaching in seven hundred churches,
|
||
could possibly be, even by the Pope's favour, in seven hundred
|
||
places at once. 'The Pope and the King together,' said the Bishop
|
||
of London, 'may take the mitre off my head; but, if they do, they
|
||
will find that I shall put on a soldier's helmet. I pay nothing.'
|
||
The Bishop of Worcester was as bold as the Bishop of London, and
|
||
would pay nothing either. Such sums as the more timid or more
|
||
helpless of the clergy did raise were squandered away, without
|
||
doing any good to the King, or bringing the Sicilian Crown an inch
|
||
nearer to Prince Edmund's head. The end of the business was, that
|
||
the Pope gave the Crown to the brother of the King of France (who
|
||
conquered it for himself), and sent the King of England in, a bill
|
||
of one hundred thousand pounds for the expenses of not having won
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
The King was now so much distressed that we might almost pity him,
|
||
if it were possible to pity a King so shabby and ridiculous. His
|
||
clever brother, Richard, had bought the title of King of the Romans
|
||
from the German people, and was no longer near him, to help him
|
||
with advice. The clergy, resisting the very Pope, were in alliance
|
||
with the Barons. The Barons were headed by SIMON DE MONTFORT, Earl
|
||
of Leicester, married to King Henry's sister, and, though a
|
||
foreigner himself, the most popular man in England against the
|
||
foreign favourites. When the King next met his Parliament, the
|
||
Barons, led by this Earl, came before him, armed from head to foot,
|
||
and cased in armour. When the Parliament again assembled, in a
|
||
month's time, at Oxford, this Earl was at their head, and the King
|
||
was obliged to consent, on oath, to what was called a Committee of
|
||
Government: consisting of twenty-four members: twelve chosen by
|
||
the Barons, and twelve chosen by himself.
|
||
|
||
But, at a good time for him, his brother Richard came back.
|
||
Richard's first act (the Barons would not admit him into England on
|
||
other terms) was to swear to be faithful to the Committee of
|
||
Government - which he immediately began to oppose with all his
|
||
might. Then, the Barons began to quarrel among themselves;
|
||
especially the proud Earl of Gloucester with the Earl of Leicester,
|
||
who went abroad in disgust. Then, the people began to be
|
||
dissatisfied with the Barons, because they did not do enough for
|
||
them. The King's chances seemed so good again at length, that he
|
||
took heart enough - or caught it from his brother - to tell the
|
||
Committee of Government that he abolished them - as to his oath,
|
||
never mind that, the Pope said! - and to seize all the money in the
|
||
Mint, and to shut himself up in the Tower of London. Here he was
|
||
joined by his eldest son, Prince Edward; and, from the Tower, he
|
||
made public a letter of the Pope's to the world in general,
|
||
informing all men that he had been an excellent and just King for
|
||
five-and-forty years.
|
||
|
||
As everybody knew he had been nothing of the sort, nobody cared
|
||
much for this document. It so chanced that the proud Earl of
|
||
Gloucester dying, was succeeded by his son; and that his son,
|
||
instead of being the enemy of the Earl of Leicester, was (for the
|
||
time) his friend. It fell out, therefore, that these two Earls
|
||
joined their forces, took several of the Royal Castles in the
|
||
country, and advanced as hard as they could on London. The London
|
||
people, always opposed to the King, declared for them with great
|
||
joy. The King himself remained shut up, not at all gloriously, in
|
||
the Tower. Prince Edward made the best of his way to Windsor
|
||
Castle. His mother, the Queen, attempted to follow him by water;
|
||
but, the people seeing her barge rowing up the river, and hating
|
||
her with all their hearts, ran to London Bridge, got together a
|
||
quantity of stones and mud, and pelted the barge as it came
|
||
through, crying furiously, 'Drown the Witch! Drown her!' They
|
||
were so near doing it, that the Mayor took the old lady under his
|
||
protection, and shut her up in St. Paul's until the danger was
|
||
past.
|
||
|
||
It would require a great deal of writing on my part, and a great
|
||
deal of reading on yours, to follow the King through his disputes
|
||
with the Barons, and to follow the Barons through their disputes
|
||
with one another - so I will make short work of it for both of us,
|
||
and only relate the chief events that arose out of these quarrels.
|
||
The good King of France was asked to decide between them. He gave
|
||
it as his opinion that the King must maintain the Great Charter,
|
||
and that the Barons must give up the Committee of Government, and
|
||
all the rest that had been done by the Parliament at Oxford: which
|
||
the Royalists, or King's party, scornfully called the Mad
|
||
Parliament. The Barons declared that these were not fair terms,
|
||
and they would not accept them. Then they caused the great bell of
|
||
St. Paul's to be tolled, for the purpose of rousing up the London
|
||
people, who armed themselves at the dismal sound and formed quite
|
||
an army in the streets. I am sorry to say, however, that instead
|
||
of falling upon the King's party with whom their quarrel was, they
|
||
fell upon the miserable Jews, and killed at least five hundred of
|
||
them. They pretended that some of these Jews were on the King's
|
||
side, and that they kept hidden in their houses, for the
|
||
destruction of the people, a certain terrible composition called
|
||
Greek Fire, which could not be put out with water, but only burnt
|
||
the fiercer for it. What they really did keep in their houses was
|
||
money; and this their cruel enemies wanted, and this their cruel
|
||
enemies took, like robbers and murderers.
|
||
|
||
The Earl of Leicester put himself at the head of these Londoners
|
||
and other forces, and followed the King to Lewes in Sussex, where
|
||
he lay encamped with his army. Before giving the King's forces
|
||
battle here, the Earl addressed his soldiers, and said that King
|
||
Henry the Third had broken so many oaths, that he had become the
|
||
enemy of God, and therefore they would wear white crosses on their
|
||
breasts, as if they were arrayed, not against a fellow-Christian,
|
||
but against a Turk. White-crossed accordingly, they rushed into
|
||
the fight. They would have lost the day - the King having on his
|
||
side all the foreigners in England: and, from Scotland, JOHN
|
||
COMYN, JOHN BALIOL, and ROBERT BRUCE, with all their men - but for
|
||
the impatience of PRINCE EDWARD, who, in his hot desire to have
|
||
vengeance on the people of London, threw the whole of his father's
|
||
army into confusion. He was taken Prisoner; so was the King; so
|
||
was the King's brother the King of the Romans; and five thousand
|
||
Englishmen were left dead upon the bloody grass.
|
||
|
||
For this success, the Pope excommunicated the Earl of Leicester:
|
||
which neither the Earl nor the people cared at all about. The
|
||
people loved him and supported him, and he became the real King;
|
||
having all the power of the government in his own hands, though he
|
||
was outwardly respectful to King Henry the Third, whom he took with
|
||
him wherever he went, like a poor old limp court-card. He summoned
|
||
a Parliament (in the year one thousand two hundred and sixty-five)
|
||
which was the first Parliament in England that the people had any
|
||
real share in electing; and he grew more and more in favour with
|
||
the people every day, and they stood by him in whatever he did.
|
||
|
||
Many of the other Barons, and particularly the Earl of Gloucester,
|
||
who had become by this time as proud as his father, grew jealous of
|
||
this powerful and popular Earl, who was proud too, and began to
|
||
conspire against him. Since the battle of Lewes, Prince Edward had
|
||
been kept as a hostage, and, though he was otherwise treated like a
|
||
Prince, had never been allowed to go out without attendants
|
||
appointed by the Earl of Leicester, who watched him. The
|
||
conspiring Lords found means to propose to him, in secret, that
|
||
they should assist him to escape, and should make him their leader;
|
||
to which he very heartily consented.
|
||
|
||
So, on a day that was agreed upon, he said to his attendants after
|
||
dinner (being then at Hereford), 'I should like to ride on
|
||
horseback, this fine afternoon, a little way into the country.' As
|
||
they, too, thought it would be very pleasant to have a canter in
|
||
the sunshine, they all rode out of the town together in a gay
|
||
little troop. When they came to a fine level piece of turf, the
|
||
Prince fell to comparing their horses one with another, and
|
||
offering bets that one was faster than another; and the attendants,
|
||
suspecting no harm, rode galloping matches until their horses were
|
||
quite tired. The Prince rode no matches himself, but looked on
|
||
from his saddle, and staked his money. Thus they passed the whole
|
||
merry afternoon. Now, the sun was setting, and they were all going
|
||
slowly up a hill, the Prince's horse very fresh and all the other
|
||
horses very weary, when a strange rider mounted on a grey steed
|
||
appeared at the top of the hill, and waved his hat. 'What does the
|
||
fellow mean?' said the attendants one to another. The Prince
|
||
answered on the instant by setting spurs to his horse, dashing away
|
||
at his utmost speed, joining the man, riding into the midst of a
|
||
little crowd of horsemen who were then seen waiting under some
|
||
trees, and who closed around him; and so he departed in a cloud of
|
||
dust, leaving the road empty of all but the baffled attendants, who
|
||
sat looking at one another, while their horses drooped their ears
|
||
and panted.
|
||
|
||
The Prince joined the Earl of Gloucester at Ludlow. The Earl of
|
||
Leicester, with a part of the army and the stupid old King, was at
|
||
Hereford. One of the Earl of Leicester's sons, Simon de Montfort,
|
||
with another part of the army, was in Sussex. To prevent these two
|
||
parts from uniting was the Prince's first object. He attacked
|
||
Simon de Montfort by night, defeated him, seized his banners and
|
||
treasure, and forced him into Kenilworth Castle in Warwickshire,
|
||
which belonged to his family.
|
||
|
||
His father, the Earl of Leicester, in the meanwhile, not knowing
|
||
what had happened, marched out of Hereford, with his part of the
|
||
army and the King, to meet him. He came, on a bright morning in
|
||
August, to Evesham, which is watered by the pleasant river Avon.
|
||
Looking rather anxiously across the prospect towards Kenilworth, he
|
||
saw his own banners advancing; and his face brightened with joy.
|
||
But, it clouded darkly when he presently perceived that the banners
|
||
were captured, and in the enemy's hands; and he said, 'It is over.
|
||
The Lord have mercy on our souls, for our bodies are Prince
|
||
Edward's!'
|
||
|
||
He fought like a true Knight, nevertheless. When his horse was
|
||
killed under him, he fought on foot. It was a fierce battle, and
|
||
the dead lay in heaps everywhere. The old King, stuck up in a suit
|
||
of armour on a big war-horse, which didn't mind him at all, and
|
||
which carried him into all sorts of places where he didn't want to
|
||
go, got into everybody's way, and very nearly got knocked on the
|
||
head by one of his son's men. But he managed to pipe out, 'I am
|
||
Harry of Winchester!' and the Prince, who heard him, seized his
|
||
bridle, and took him out of peril. The Earl of Leicester still
|
||
fought bravely, until his best son Henry was killed, and the bodies
|
||
of his best friends choked his path; and then he fell, still
|
||
fighting, sword in hand. They mangled his body, and sent it as a
|
||
present to a noble lady - but a very unpleasant lady, I should
|
||
think - who was the wife of his worst enemy. They could not mangle
|
||
his memory in the minds of the faithful people, though. Many years
|
||
afterwards, they loved him more than ever, and regarded him as a
|
||
Saint, and always spoke of him as 'Sir Simon the Righteous.'
|
||
|
||
And even though he was dead, the cause for which he had fought
|
||
still lived, and was strong, and forced itself upon the King in the
|
||
very hour of victory. Henry found himself obliged to respect the
|
||
Great Charter, however much he hated it, and to make laws similar
|
||
to the laws of the Great Earl of Leicester, and to be moderate and
|
||
forgiving towards the people at last - even towards the people of
|
||
London, who had so long opposed him. There were more risings
|
||
before all this was done, but they were set at rest by these means,
|
||
and Prince Edward did his best in all things to restore peace. One
|
||
Sir Adam de Gourdon was the last dissatisfied knight in arms; but,
|
||
the Prince vanquished him in single combat, in a wood, and nobly
|
||
gave him his life, and became his friend, instead of slaying him.
|
||
Sir Adam was not ungrateful. He ever afterwards remained devoted
|
||
to his generous conqueror.
|
||
|
||
When the troubles of the Kingdom were thus calmed, Prince Edward
|
||
and his cousin Henry took the Cross, and went away to the Holy
|
||
Land, with many English Lords and Knights. Four years afterwards
|
||
the King of the Romans died, and, next year (one thousand two
|
||
hundred and seventy-two), his brother the weak King of England
|
||
died. He was sixty-eight years old then, and had reigned fifty-six
|
||
years. He was as much of a King in death, as he had ever been in
|
||
life. He was the mere pale shadow of a King at all times.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVI - ENGLAND UNDER EDWARD THE FIRST, CALLED LONGSHANKS
|
||
|
||
IT was now the year of our Lord one thousand two hundred and
|
||
seventy-two; and Prince Edward, the heir to the throne, being away
|
||
in the Holy Land, knew nothing of his father's death. The Barons,
|
||
however, proclaimed him King, immediately after the Royal funeral;
|
||
and the people very willingly consented, since most men knew too
|
||
well by this time what the horrors of a contest for the crown were.
|
||
So King Edward the First, called, in a not very complimentary
|
||
manner, LONGSHANKS, because of the slenderness of his legs, was
|
||
peacefully accepted by the English Nation.
|
||
|
||
His legs had need to be strong, however long and thin they were;
|
||
for they had to support him through many difficulties on the fiery
|
||
sands of Asia, where his small force of soldiers fainted, died,
|
||
deserted, and seemed to melt away. But his prowess made light of
|
||
it, and he said, 'I will go on, if I go on with no other follower
|
||
than my groom!'
|
||
|
||
A Prince of this spirit gave the Turks a deal of trouble. He
|
||
stormed Nazareth, at which place, of all places on earth, I am
|
||
sorry to relate, he made a frightful slaughter of innocent people;
|
||
and then he went to Acre, where he got a truce of ten years from
|
||
the Sultan. He had very nearly lost his life in Acre, through the
|
||
treachery of a Saracen Noble, called the Emir of Jaffa, who, making
|
||
the pretence that he had some idea of turning Christian and wanted
|
||
to know all about that religion, sent a trusty messenger to Edward
|
||
very often - with a dagger in his sleeve. At last, one Friday in
|
||
Whitsun week, when it was very hot, and all the sandy prospect lay
|
||
beneath the blazing sun, burnt up like a great overdone biscuit,
|
||
and Edward was lying on a couch, dressed for coolness in only a
|
||
loose robe, the messenger, with his chocolate-coloured face and his
|
||
bright dark eyes and white teeth, came creeping in with a letter,
|
||
and kneeled down like a tame tiger. But, the moment Edward
|
||
stretched out his hand to take the letter, the tiger made a spring
|
||
at his heart. He was quick, but Edward was quick too. He seized
|
||
the traitor by his chocolate throat, threw him to the ground, and
|
||
slew him with the very dagger he had drawn. The weapon had struck
|
||
Edward in the arm, and although the wound itself was slight, it
|
||
threatened to be mortal, for the blade of the dagger had been
|
||
smeared with poison. Thanks, however, to a better surgeon than was
|
||
often to be found in those times, and to some wholesome herbs, and
|
||
above all, to his faithful wife, ELEANOR, who devotedly nursed him,
|
||
and is said by some to have sucked the poison from the wound with
|
||
her own red lips (which I am very willing to believe), Edward soon
|
||
recovered and was sound again.
|
||
|
||
As the King his father had sent entreaties to him to return home,
|
||
he now began the journey. He had got as far as Italy, when he met
|
||
messengers who brought him intelligence of the King's death.
|
||
Hearing that all was quiet at home, he made no haste to return to
|
||
his own dominions, but paid a visit to the Pope, and went in state
|
||
through various Italian Towns, where he was welcomed with
|
||
acclamations as a mighty champion of the Cross from the Holy Land,
|
||
and where he received presents of purple mantles and prancing
|
||
horses, and went along in great triumph. The shouting people
|
||
little knew that he was the last English monarch who would ever
|
||
embark in a crusade, or that within twenty years every conquest
|
||
which the Christians had made in the Holy Land at the cost of so
|
||
much blood, would be won back by the Turks. But all this came to
|
||
pass.
|
||
|
||
There was, and there is, an old town standing in a plain in France,
|
||
called Ch<43>lons. When the King was coming towards this place on his
|
||
way to England, a wily French Lord, called the Count of Ch<43>lons,
|
||
sent him a polite challenge to come with his knights and hold a
|
||
fair tournament with the Count and HIS knights, and make a day of
|
||
it with sword and lance. It was represented to the King that the
|
||
Count of Ch<43>lons was not to be trusted, and that, instead of a
|
||
holiday fight for mere show and in good humour, he secretly meant a
|
||
real battle, in which the English should be defeated by superior
|
||
force.
|
||
|
||
The King, however, nothing afraid, went to the appointed place on
|
||
the appointed day with a thousand followers. When the Count came
|
||
with two thousand and attacked the English in earnest, the English
|
||
rushed at them with such valour that the Count's men and the
|
||
Count's horses soon began to be tumbled down all over the field.
|
||
The Count himself seized the King round the neck, but the King
|
||
tumbled HIM out of his saddle in return for the compliment, and,
|
||
jumping from his own horse, and standing over him, beat away at his
|
||
iron armour like a blacksmith hammering on his anvil. Even when
|
||
the Count owned himself defeated and offered his sword, the King
|
||
would not do him the honour to take it, but made him yield it up to
|
||
a common soldier. There had been such fury shown in this fight,
|
||
that it was afterwards called the little Battle of Ch<43>lons.
|
||
|
||
The English were very well disposed to be proud of their King after
|
||
these adventures; so, when he landed at Dover in the year one
|
||
thousand two hundred and seventy-four (being then thirty-six years
|
||
old), and went on to Westminster where he and his good Queen were
|
||
crowned with great magnificence, splendid rejoicings took place.
|
||
For the coronation-feast there were provided, among other eatables,
|
||
four hundred oxen, four hundred sheep, four hundred and fifty pigs,
|
||
eighteen wild boars, three hundred flitches of bacon, and twenty
|
||
thousand fowls. The fountains and conduits in the street flowed
|
||
with red and white wine instead of water; the rich citizens hung
|
||
silks and cloths of the brightest colours out of their windows to
|
||
increase the beauty of the show, and threw out gold and silver by
|
||
whole handfuls to make scrambles for the crowd. In short, there
|
||
was such eating and drinking, such music and capering, such a
|
||
ringing of bells and tossing of caps, such a shouting, and singing,
|
||
and revelling, as the narrow overhanging streets of old London City
|
||
had not witnessed for many a long day. All the people were merry
|
||
except the poor Jews, who, trembling within their houses, and
|
||
scarcely daring to peep out, began to foresee that they would have
|
||
to find the money for this joviality sooner or later.
|
||
|
||
To dismiss this sad subject of the Jews for the present, I am sorry
|
||
to add that in this reign they were most unmercifully pillaged.
|
||
They were hanged in great numbers, on accusations of having clipped
|
||
the King's coin - which all kinds of people had done. They were
|
||
heavily taxed; they were disgracefully badged; they were, on one
|
||
day, thirteen years after the coronation, taken up with their wives
|
||
and children and thrown into beastly prisons, until they purchased
|
||
their release by paying to the King twelve thousand pounds.
|
||
Finally, every kind of property belonging to them was seized by the
|
||
King, except so little as would defray the charge of their taking
|
||
themselves away into foreign countries. Many years elapsed before
|
||
the hope of gain induced any of their race to return to England,
|
||
where they had been treated so heartlessly and had suffered so
|
||
much.
|
||
|
||
If King Edward the First had been as bad a king to Christians as he
|
||
was to Jews, he would have been bad indeed. But he was, in
|
||
general, a wise and great monarch, under whom the country much
|
||
improved. He had no love for the Great Charter - few Kings had,
|
||
through many, many years - but he had high qualities. The first
|
||
bold object which he conceived when he came home, was, to unite
|
||
under one Sovereign England, Scotland, and Wales; the two last of
|
||
which countries had each a little king of its own, about whom the
|
||
people were always quarrelling and fighting, and making a
|
||
prodigious disturbance - a great deal more than he was worth. In
|
||
the course of King Edward's reign he was engaged, besides, in a war
|
||
with France. To make these quarrels clearer, we will separate
|
||
their histories and take them thus. Wales, first. France, second.
|
||
Scotland, third.
|
||
|
||
LLEWELLYN was the Prince of Wales. He had been on the side of the
|
||
Barons in the reign of the stupid old King, but had afterwards
|
||
sworn allegiance to him. When King Edward came to the throne,
|
||
Llewellyn was required to swear allegiance to him also; which he
|
||
refused to do. The King, being crowned and in his own dominions,
|
||
three times more required Llewellyn to come and do homage; and
|
||
three times more Llewellyn said he would rather not. He was going
|
||
to be married to ELEANOR DE MONTFORT, a young lady of the family
|
||
mentioned in the last reign; and it chanced that this young lady,
|
||
coming from France with her youngest brother, EMERIC, was taken by
|
||
an English ship, and was ordered by the English King to be
|
||
detained. Upon this, the quarrel came to a head. The King went,
|
||
with his fleet, to the coast of Wales, where, so encompassing
|
||
Llewellyn, that he could only take refuge in the bleak mountain
|
||
region of Snowdon in which no provisions could reach him, he was
|
||
soon starved into an apology, and into a treaty of peace, and into
|
||
paying the expenses of the war. The King, however, forgave him
|
||
some of the hardest conditions of the treaty, and consented to his
|
||
marriage. And he now thought he had reduced Wales to obedience.
|
||
|
||
But the Welsh, although they were naturally a gentle, quiet,
|
||
pleasant people, who liked to receive strangers in their cottages
|
||
among the mountains, and to set before them with free hospitality
|
||
whatever they had to eat and drink, and to play to them on their
|
||
harps, and sing their native ballads to them, were a people of
|
||
great spirit when their blood was up. Englishmen, after this
|
||
affair, began to be insolent in Wales, and to assume the air of
|
||
masters; and the Welsh pride could not bear it. Moreover, they
|
||
believed in that unlucky old Merlin, some of whose unlucky old
|
||
prophecies somebody always seemed doomed to remember when there was
|
||
a chance of its doing harm; and just at this time some blind old
|
||
gentleman with a harp and a long white beard, who was an excellent
|
||
person, but had become of an unknown age and tedious, burst out
|
||
with a declaration that Merlin had predicted that when English
|
||
money had become round, a Prince of Wales would be crowned in
|
||
London. Now, King Edward had recently forbidden the English penny
|
||
to be cut into halves and quarters for halfpence and farthings, and
|
||
had actually introduced a round coin; therefore, the Welsh people
|
||
said this was the time Merlin meant, and rose accordingly.
|
||
|
||
King Edward had bought over PRINCE DAVID, Llewellyn's brother, by
|
||
heaping favours upon him; but he was the first to revolt, being
|
||
perhaps troubled in his conscience. One stormy night, he surprised
|
||
the Castle of Hawarden, in possession of which an English nobleman
|
||
had been left; killed the whole garrison, and carried off the
|
||
nobleman a prisoner to Snowdon. Upon this, the Welsh people rose
|
||
like one man. King Edward, with his army, marching from Worcester
|
||
to the Menai Strait, crossed it - near to where the wonderful
|
||
tubular iron bridge now, in days so different, makes a passage for
|
||
railway trains - by a bridge of boats that enabled forty men to
|
||
march abreast. He subdued the Island of Anglesea, and sent his men
|
||
forward to observe the enemy. The sudden appearance of the Welsh
|
||
created a panic among them, and they fell back to the bridge. The
|
||
tide had in the meantime risen and separated the boats; the Welsh
|
||
pursuing them, they were driven into the sea, and there they sunk,
|
||
in their heavy iron armour, by thousands. After this victory
|
||
Llewellyn, helped by the severe winter-weather of Wales, gained
|
||
another battle; but the King ordering a portion of his English army
|
||
to advance through South Wales, and catch him between two foes, and
|
||
Llewellyn bravely turning to meet this new enemy, he was surprised
|
||
and killed - very meanly, for he was unarmed and defenceless. His
|
||
head was struck off and sent to London, where it was fixed upon the
|
||
Tower, encircled with a wreath, some say of ivy, some say of
|
||
willow, some say of silver, to make it look like a ghastly coin in
|
||
ridicule of the prediction.
|
||
|
||
David, however, still held out for six months, though eagerly
|
||
sought after by the King, and hunted by his own countrymen. One of
|
||
them finally betrayed him with his wife and children. He was
|
||
sentenced to be hanged, drawn, and quartered; and from that time
|
||
this became the established punishment of Traitors in England - a
|
||
punishment wholly without excuse, as being revolting, vile, and
|
||
cruel, after its object is dead; and which has no sense in it, as
|
||
its only real degradation (and that nothing can blot out) is to the
|
||
country that permits on any consideration such abominable
|
||
barbarity.
|
||
|
||
Wales was now subdued. The Queen giving birth to a young prince in
|
||
the Castle of Carnarvon, the King showed him to the Welsh people as
|
||
their countryman, and called him Prince of Wales; a title that has
|
||
ever since been borne by the heir-apparent to the English throne -
|
||
which that little Prince soon became, by the death of his elder
|
||
brother. The King did better things for the Welsh than that, by
|
||
improving their laws and encouraging their trade. Disturbances
|
||
still took place, chiefly occasioned by the avarice and pride of
|
||
the English Lords, on whom Welsh lands and castles had been
|
||
bestowed; but they were subdued, and the country never rose again.
|
||
There is a legend that to prevent the people from being incited to
|
||
rebellion by the songs of their bards and harpers, Edward had them
|
||
all put to death. Some of them may have fallen among other men who
|
||
held out against the King; but this general slaughter is, I think,
|
||
a fancy of the harpers themselves, who, I dare say, made a song
|
||
about it many years afterwards, and sang it by the Welsh firesides
|
||
until it came to be believed.
|
||
|
||
The foreign war of the reign of Edward the First arose in this way.
|
||
The crews of two vessels, one a Norman ship, and the other an
|
||
English ship, happened to go to the same place in their boats to
|
||
fill their casks with fresh water. Being rough angry fellows, they
|
||
began to quarrel, and then to fight - the English with their fists;
|
||
the Normans with their knives - and, in the fight, a Norman was
|
||
killed. The Norman crew, instead of revenging themselves upon
|
||
those English sailors with whom they had quarrelled (who were too
|
||
strong for them, I suspect), took to their ship again in a great
|
||
rage, attacked the first English ship they met, laid hold of an
|
||
unoffending merchant who happened to be on board, and brutally
|
||
hanged him in the rigging of their own vessel with a dog at his
|
||
feet. This so enraged the English sailors that there was no
|
||
restraining them; and whenever, and wherever, English sailors met
|
||
Norman sailors, they fell upon each other tooth and nail. The
|
||
Irish and Dutch sailors took part with the English; the French and
|
||
Genoese sailors helped the Normans; and thus the greater part of
|
||
the mariners sailing over the sea became, in their way, as violent
|
||
and raging as the sea itself when it is disturbed.
|
||
|
||
King Edward's fame had been so high abroad that he had been chosen
|
||
to decide a difference between France and another foreign power,
|
||
and had lived upon the Continent three years. At first, neither he
|
||
nor the French King PHILIP (the good Louis had been dead some time)
|
||
interfered in these quarrels; but when a fleet of eighty English
|
||
ships engaged and utterly defeated a Norman fleet of two hundred,
|
||
in a pitched battle fought round a ship at anchor, in which no
|
||
quarter was given, the matter became too serious to be passed over.
|
||
King Edward, as Duke of Guienne, was summoned to present himself
|
||
before the King of France, at Paris, and answer for the damage done
|
||
by his sailor subjects. At first, he sent the Bishop of London as
|
||
his representative, and then his brother EDMUND, who was married to
|
||
the French Queen's mother. I am afraid Edmund was an easy man, and
|
||
allowed himself to be talked over by his charming relations, the
|
||
French court ladies; at all events, he was induced to give up his
|
||
brother's dukedom for forty days - as a mere form, the French King
|
||
said, to satisfy his honour - and he was so very much astonished,
|
||
when the time was out, to find that the French King had no idea of
|
||
giving it up again, that I should not wonder if it hastened his
|
||
death: which soon took place.
|
||
|
||
King Edward was a King to win his foreign dukedom back again, if it
|
||
could be won by energy and valour. He raised a large army,
|
||
renounced his allegiance as Duke of Guienne, and crossed the sea to
|
||
carry war into France. Before any important battle was fought,
|
||
however, a truce was agreed upon for two years; and in the course
|
||
of that time, the Pope effected a reconciliation. King Edward, who
|
||
was now a widower, having lost his affectionate and good wife,
|
||
Eleanor, married the French King's sister, MARGARET; and the Prince
|
||
of Wales was contracted to the French King's daughter ISABELLA.
|
||
|
||
Out of bad things, good things sometimes arise. Out of this
|
||
hanging of the innocent merchant, and the bloodshed and strife it
|
||
caused, there came to be established one of the greatest powers
|
||
that the English people now possess. The preparations for the war
|
||
being very expensive, and King Edward greatly wanting money, and
|
||
being very arbitrary in his ways of raising it, some of the Barons
|
||
began firmly to oppose him. Two of them, in particular, HUMPHREY
|
||
BOHUN, Earl of Hereford, and ROGER BIGOD, Earl of Norfolk, were so
|
||
stout against him, that they maintained he had no right to command
|
||
them to head his forces in Guienne, and flatly refused to go there.
|
||
'By Heaven, Sir Earl,' said the King to the Earl of Hereford, in a
|
||
great passion, 'you shall either go or be hanged!' 'By Heaven, Sir
|
||
King,' replied the Earl, 'I will neither go nor yet will I be
|
||
hanged!' and both he and the other Earl sturdily left the court,
|
||
attended by many Lords. The King tried every means of raising
|
||
money. He taxed the clergy, in spite of all the Pope said to the
|
||
contrary; and when they refused to pay, reduced them to submission,
|
||
by saying Very well, then they had no claim upon the government for
|
||
protection, and any man might plunder them who would - which a good
|
||
many men were very ready to do, and very readily did, and which the
|
||
clergy found too losing a game to be played at long. He seized all
|
||
the wool and leather in the hands of the merchants, promising to
|
||
pay for it some fine day; and he set a tax upon the exportation of
|
||
wool, which was so unpopular among the traders that it was called
|
||
'The evil toll.' But all would not do. The Barons, led by those
|
||
two great Earls, declared any taxes imposed without the consent of
|
||
Parliament, unlawful; and the Parliament refused to impose taxes,
|
||
until the King should confirm afresh the two Great Charters, and
|
||
should solemnly declare in writing, that there was no power in the
|
||
country to raise money from the people, evermore, but the power of
|
||
Parliament representing all ranks of the people. The King was very
|
||
unwilling to diminish his own power by allowing this great
|
||
privilege in the Parliament; but there was no help for it, and he
|
||
at last complied. We shall come to another King by-and-by, who
|
||
might have saved his head from rolling off, if he had profited by
|
||
this example.
|
||
|
||
The people gained other benefits in Parliament from the good sense
|
||
and wisdom of this King. Many of the laws were much improved;
|
||
provision was made for the greater safety of travellers, and the
|
||
apprehension of thieves and murderers; the priests were prevented
|
||
from holding too much land, and so becoming too powerful; and
|
||
Justices of the Peace were first appointed (though not at first
|
||
under that name) in various parts of the country.
|
||
|
||
And now we come to Scotland, which was the great and lasting
|
||
trouble of the reign of King Edward the First.
|
||
|
||
About thirteen years after King Edward's coronation, Alexander the
|
||
Third, the King of Scotland, died of a fall from his horse. He had
|
||
been married to Margaret, King Edward's sister. All their children
|
||
being dead, the Scottish crown became the right of a young Princess
|
||
only eight years old, the daughter of ERIC, King of Norway, who had
|
||
married a daughter of the deceased sovereign. King Edward
|
||
proposed, that the Maiden of Norway, as this Princess was called,
|
||
should be engaged to be married to his eldest son; but,
|
||
unfortunately, as she was coming over to England she fell sick, and
|
||
landing on one of the Orkney Islands, died there. A great
|
||
commotion immediately began in Scotland, where as many as thirteen
|
||
noisy claimants to the vacant throne started up and made a general
|
||
confusion.
|
||
|
||
King Edward being much renowned for his sagacity and justice, it
|
||
seems to have been agreed to refer the dispute to him. He accepted
|
||
the trust, and went, with an army, to the Border-land where England
|
||
and Scotland joined. There, he called upon the Scottish gentlemen
|
||
to meet him at the Castle of Norham, on the English side of the
|
||
river Tweed; and to that Castle they came. But, before he would
|
||
take any step in the business, he required those Scottish
|
||
gentlemen, one and all, to do homage to him as their superior Lord;
|
||
and when they hesitated, he said, 'By holy Edward, whose crown I
|
||
wear, I will have my rights, or I will die in maintaining them!'
|
||
The Scottish gentlemen, who had not expected this, were
|
||
disconcerted, and asked for three weeks to think about it.
|
||
|
||
At the end of the three weeks, another meeting took place, on a
|
||
green plain on the Scottish side of the river. Of all the
|
||
competitors for the Scottish throne, there were only two who had
|
||
any real claim, in right of their near kindred to the Royal Family.
|
||
These were JOHN BALIOL and ROBERT BRUCE: and the right was, I have
|
||
no doubt, on the side of John Baliol. At this particular meeting
|
||
John Baliol was not present, but Robert Bruce was; and on Robert
|
||
Bruce being formally asked whether he acknowledged the King of
|
||
England for his superior lord, he answered, plainly and distinctly,
|
||
Yes, he did. Next day, John Baliol appeared, and said the same.
|
||
This point settled, some arrangements were made for inquiring into
|
||
their titles.
|
||
|
||
The inquiry occupied a pretty long time - more than a year. While
|
||
it was going on, King Edward took the opportunity of making a
|
||
journey through Scotland, and calling upon the Scottish people of
|
||
all degrees to acknowledge themselves his vassals, or be imprisoned
|
||
until they did. In the meanwhile, Commissioners were appointed to
|
||
conduct the inquiry, a Parliament was held at Berwick about it, the
|
||
two claimants were heard at full length, and there was a vast
|
||
amount of talking. At last, in the great hall of the Castle of
|
||
Berwick, the King gave judgment in favour of John Baliol: who,
|
||
consenting to receive his crown by the King of England's favour and
|
||
permission, was crowned at Scone, in an old stone chair which had
|
||
been used for ages in the abbey there, at the coronations of
|
||
Scottish Kings. Then, King Edward caused the great seal of
|
||
Scotland, used since the late King's death, to be broken in four
|
||
pieces, and placed in the English Treasury; and considered that he
|
||
now had Scotland (according to the common saying) under his thumb.
|
||
|
||
Scotland had a strong will of its own yet, however. King Edward,
|
||
determined that the Scottish King should not forget he was his
|
||
vassal, summoned him repeatedly to come and defend himself and his
|
||
judges before the English Parliament when appeals from the
|
||
decisions of Scottish courts of justice were being heard. At
|
||
length, John Baliol, who had no great heart of his own, had so much
|
||
heart put into him by the brave spirit of the Scottish people, who
|
||
took this as a national insult, that he refused to come any more.
|
||
Thereupon, the King further required him to help him in his war
|
||
abroad (which was then in progress), and to give up, as security
|
||
for his good behaviour in future, the three strong Scottish Castles
|
||
of Jedburgh, Roxburgh, and Berwick. Nothing of this being done; on
|
||
the contrary, the Scottish people concealing their King among their
|
||
mountains in the Highlands and showing a determination to resist;
|
||
Edward marched to Berwick with an army of thirty thousand foot, and
|
||
four thousand horse; took the Castle, and slew its whole garrison,
|
||
and the inhabitants of the town as well - men, women, and children.
|
||
LORD WARRENNE, Earl of Surrey, then went on to the Castle of
|
||
Dunbar, before which a battle was fought, and the whole Scottish
|
||
army defeated with great slaughter. The victory being complete,
|
||
the Earl of Surrey was left as guardian of Scotland; the principal
|
||
offices in that kingdom were given to Englishmen; the more powerful
|
||
Scottish Nobles were obliged to come and live in England; the
|
||
Scottish crown and sceptre were brought away; and even the old
|
||
stone chair was carried off and placed in Westminster Abbey, where
|
||
you may see it now. Baliol had the Tower of London lent him for a
|
||
residence, with permission to range about within a circle of twenty
|
||
miles. Three years afterwards he was allowed to go to Normandy,
|
||
where he had estates, and where he passed the remaining six years
|
||
of his life: far more happily, I dare say, than he had lived for a
|
||
long while in angry Scotland.
|
||
|
||
Now, there was, in the West of Scotland, a gentleman of small
|
||
fortune, named WILLIAM WALLACE, the second son of a Scottish
|
||
knight. He was a man of great size and great strength; he was very
|
||
brave and daring; when he spoke to a body of his countrymen, he
|
||
could rouse them in a wonderful manner by the power of his burning
|
||
words; he loved Scotland dearly, and he hated England with his
|
||
utmost might. The domineering conduct of the English who now held
|
||
the places of trust in Scotland made them as intolerable to the
|
||
proud Scottish people as they had been, under similar
|
||
circumstances, to the Welsh; and no man in all Scotland regarded
|
||
them with so much smothered rage as William Wallace. One day, an
|
||
Englishman in office, little knowing what he was, affronted HIM.
|
||
Wallace instantly struck him dead, and taking refuge among the
|
||
rocks and hills, and there joining with his countryman, SIR WILLIAM
|
||
DOUGLAS, who was also in arms against King Edward, became the most
|
||
resolute and undaunted champion of a people struggling for their
|
||
independence that ever lived upon the earth.
|
||
|
||
The English Guardian of the Kingdom fled before him, and, thus
|
||
encouraged, the Scottish people revolted everywhere, and fell upon
|
||
the English without mercy. The Earl of Surrey, by the King's
|
||
commands, raised all the power of the Border-counties, and two
|
||
English armies poured into Scotland. Only one Chief, in the face
|
||
of those armies, stood by Wallace, who, with a force of forty
|
||
thousand men, awaited the invaders at a place on the river Forth,
|
||
within two miles of Stirling. Across the river there was only one
|
||
poor wooden bridge, called the bridge of Kildean - so narrow, that
|
||
but two men could cross it abreast. With his eyes upon this
|
||
bridge, Wallace posted the greater part of his men among some
|
||
rising grounds, and waited calmly. When the English army came up
|
||
on the opposite bank of the river, messengers were sent forward to
|
||
offer terms. Wallace sent them back with a defiance, in the name
|
||
of the freedom of Scotland. Some of the officers of the Earl of
|
||
Surrey in command of the English, with THEIR eyes also on the
|
||
bridge, advised him to be discreet and not hasty. He, however,
|
||
urged to immediate battle by some other officers, and particularly
|
||
by CRESSINGHAM, King Edward's treasurer, and a rash man, gave the
|
||
word of command to advance. One thousand English crossed the
|
||
bridge, two abreast; the Scottish troops were as motionless as
|
||
stone images. Two thousand English crossed; three thousand, four
|
||
thousand, five. Not a feather, all this time, had been seen to
|
||
stir among the Scottish bonnets. Now, they all fluttered.
|
||
'Forward, one party, to the foot of the Bridge!' cried Wallace,
|
||
'and let no more English cross! The rest, down with me on the five
|
||
thousand who have come over, and cut them all to pieces!' It was
|
||
done, in the sight of the whole remainder of the English army, who
|
||
could give no help. Cressingham himself was killed, and the Scotch
|
||
made whips for their horses of his skin.
|
||
|
||
King Edward was abroad at this time, and during the successes on
|
||
the Scottish side which followed, and which enabled bold Wallace to
|
||
win the whole country back again, and even to ravage the English
|
||
borders. But, after a few winter months, the King returned, and
|
||
took the field with more than his usual energy. One night, when a
|
||
kick from his horse as they both lay on the ground together broke
|
||
two of his ribs, and a cry arose that he was killed, he leaped into
|
||
his saddle, regardless of the pain he suffered, and rode through
|
||
the camp. Day then appearing, he gave the word (still, of course,
|
||
in that bruised and aching state) Forward! and led his army on to
|
||
near Falkirk, where the Scottish forces were seen drawn up on some
|
||
stony ground, behind a morass. Here, he defeated Wallace, and
|
||
killed fifteen thousand of his men. With the shattered remainder,
|
||
Wallace drew back to Stirling; but, being pursued, set fire to the
|
||
town that it might give no help to the English, and escaped. The
|
||
inhabitants of Perth afterwards set fire to their houses for the
|
||
same reason, and the King, unable to find provisions, was forced to
|
||
withdraw his army.
|
||
|
||
Another ROBERT BRUCE, the grandson of him who had disputed the
|
||
Scottish crown with Baliol, was now in arms against the King (that
|
||
elder Bruce being dead), and also JOHN COMYN, Baliol's nephew.
|
||
These two young men might agree in opposing Edward, but could agree
|
||
in nothing else, as they were rivals for the throne of Scotland.
|
||
Probably it was because they knew this, and knew what troubles must
|
||
arise even if they could hope to get the better of the great
|
||
English King, that the principal Scottish people applied to the
|
||
Pope for his interference. The Pope, on the principle of losing
|
||
nothing for want of trying to get it, very coolly claimed that
|
||
Scotland belonged to him; but this was a little too much, and the
|
||
Parliament in a friendly manner told him so.
|
||
|
||
In the spring time of the year one thousand three hundred and
|
||
three, the King sent SIR JOHN SEGRAVE, whom he made Governor of
|
||
Scotland, with twenty thousand men, to reduce the rebels. Sir John
|
||
was not as careful as he should have been, but encamped at Rosslyn,
|
||
near Edinburgh, with his army divided into three parts. The
|
||
Scottish forces saw their advantage; fell on each part separately;
|
||
defeated each; and killed all the prisoners. Then, came the King
|
||
himself once more, as soon as a great army could be raised; he
|
||
passed through the whole north of Scotland, laying waste whatsoever
|
||
came in his way; and he took up his winter quarters at Dunfermline.
|
||
The Scottish cause now looked so hopeless, that Comyn and the other
|
||
nobles made submission and received their pardons. Wallace alone
|
||
stood out. He was invited to surrender, though on no distinct
|
||
pledge that his life should be spared; but he still defied the
|
||
ireful King, and lived among the steep crags of the Highland glens,
|
||
where the eagles made their nests, and where the mountain torrents
|
||
roared, and the white snow was deep, and the bitter winds blew
|
||
round his unsheltered head, as he lay through many a pitch-dark
|
||
night wrapped up in his plaid. Nothing could break his spirit;
|
||
nothing could lower his courage; nothing could induce him to forget
|
||
or to forgive his country's wrongs. Even when the Castle of
|
||
Stirling, which had long held out, was besieged by the King with
|
||
every kind of military engine then in use; even when the lead upon
|
||
cathedral roofs was taken down to help to make them; even when the
|
||
King, though an old man, commanded in the siege as if he were a
|
||
youth, being so resolved to conquer; even when the brave garrison
|
||
(then found with amazement to be not two hundred people, including
|
||
several ladies) were starved and beaten out and were made to submit
|
||
on their knees, and with every form of disgrace that could
|
||
aggravate their sufferings; even then, when there was not a ray of
|
||
hope in Scotland, William Wallace was as proud and firm as if he
|
||
had beheld the powerful and relentless Edward lying dead at his
|
||
feet.
|
||
|
||
Who betrayed William Wallace in the end, is not quite certain.
|
||
That he was betrayed - probably by an attendant - is too true. He
|
||
was taken to the Castle of Dumbarton, under SIR JOHN MENTEITH, and
|
||
thence to London, where the great fame of his bravery and
|
||
resolution attracted immense concourses of people to behold him.
|
||
He was tried in Westminster Hall, with a crown of laurel on his
|
||
head - it is supposed because he was reported to have said that he
|
||
ought to wear, or that he would wear, a crown there and was found
|
||
guilty as a robber, a murderer, and a traitor. What they called a
|
||
robber (he said to those who tried him) he was, because he had
|
||
taken spoil from the King's men. What they called a murderer, he
|
||
was, because he had slain an insolent Englishman. What they called
|
||
a traitor, he was not, for he had never sworn allegiance to the
|
||
King, and had ever scorned to do it. He was dragged at the tails
|
||
of horses to West Smithfield, and there hanged on a high gallows,
|
||
torn open before he was dead, beheaded, and quartered. His head
|
||
was set upon a pole on London Bridge, his right arm was sent to
|
||
Newcastle, his left arm to Berwick, his legs to Perth and Aberdeen.
|
||
But, if King Edward had had his body cut into inches, and had sent
|
||
every separate inch into a separate town, he could not have
|
||
dispersed it half so far and wide as his fame. Wallace will be
|
||
remembered in songs and stories, while there are songs and stories
|
||
in the English tongue, and Scotland will hold him dear while her
|
||
lakes and mountains last.
|
||
|
||
Released from this dreaded enemy, the King made a fairer plan of
|
||
Government for Scotland, divided the offices of honour among
|
||
Scottish gentlemen and English gentlemen, forgave past offences,
|
||
and thought, in his old age, that his work was done.
|
||
|
||
But he deceived himself. Comyn and Bruce conspired, and made an
|
||
appointment to meet at Dumfries, in the church of the Minorites.
|
||
There is a story that Comyn was false to Bruce, and had informed
|
||
against him to the King; that Bruce was warned of his danger and
|
||
the necessity of flight, by receiving, one night as he sat at
|
||
supper, from his friend the Earl of Gloucester, twelve pennies and
|
||
a pair of spurs; that as he was riding angrily to keep his
|
||
appointment (through a snow-storm, with his horse's shoes reversed
|
||
that he might not be tracked), he met an evil-looking serving man,
|
||
a messenger of Comyn, whom he killed, and concealed in whose dress
|
||
he found letters that proved Comyn's treachery. However this may
|
||
be, they were likely enough to quarrel in any case, being hot-
|
||
headed rivals; and, whatever they quarrelled about, they certainly
|
||
did quarrel in the church where they met, and Bruce drew his dagger
|
||
and stabbed Comyn, who fell upon the pavement. When Bruce came
|
||
out, pale and disturbed, the friends who were waiting for him asked
|
||
what was the matter? 'I think I have killed Comyn,' said he. 'You
|
||
only think so?' returned one of them; 'I will make sure!' and going
|
||
into the church, and finding him alive, stabbed him again and
|
||
again. Knowing that the King would never forgive this new deed of
|
||
violence, the party then declared Bruce King of Scotland: got him
|
||
crowned at Scone - without the chair; and set up the rebellious
|
||
standard once again.
|
||
|
||
When the King heard of it he kindled with fiercer anger than he had
|
||
ever shown yet. He caused the Prince of Wales and two hundred and
|
||
seventy of the young nobility to be knighted - the trees in the
|
||
Temple Gardens were cut down to make room for their tents, and they
|
||
watched their armour all night, according to the old usage: some
|
||
in the Temple Church: some in Westminster Abbey - and at the
|
||
public Feast which then took place, he swore, by Heaven, and by two
|
||
swans covered with gold network which his minstrels placed upon the
|
||
table, that he would avenge the death of Comyn, and would punish
|
||
the false Bruce. And before all the company, he charged the Prince
|
||
his son, in case that he should die before accomplishing his vow,
|
||
not to bury him until it was fulfilled. Next morning the Prince
|
||
and the rest of the young Knights rode away to the Border-country
|
||
to join the English army; and the King, now weak and sick, followed
|
||
in a horse-litter.
|
||
|
||
Bruce, after losing a battle and undergoing many dangers and much
|
||
misery, fled to Ireland, where he lay concealed through the winter.
|
||
That winter, Edward passed in hunting down and executing Bruce's
|
||
relations and adherents, sparing neither youth nor age, and showing
|
||
no touch of pity or sign of mercy. In the following spring, Bruce
|
||
reappeared and gained some victories. In these frays, both sides
|
||
were grievously cruel. For instance - Bruce's two brothers, being
|
||
taken captives desperately wounded, were ordered by the King to
|
||
instant execution. Bruce's friend Sir John Douglas, taking his own
|
||
Castle of Douglas out of the hands of an English Lord, roasted the
|
||
dead bodies of the slaughtered garrison in a great fire made of
|
||
every movable within it; which dreadful cookery his men called the
|
||
Douglas Larder. Bruce, still successful, however, drove the Earl
|
||
of Pembroke and the Earl of Gloucester into the Castle of Ayr and
|
||
laid siege to it.
|
||
|
||
The King, who had been laid up all the winter, but had directed the
|
||
army from his sick-bed, now advanced to Carlisle, and there,
|
||
causing the litter in which he had travelled to be placed in the
|
||
Cathedral as an offering to Heaven, mounted his horse once more,
|
||
and for the last time. He was now sixty-nine years old, and had
|
||
reigned thirty-five years. He was so ill, that in four days he
|
||
could go no more than six miles; still, even at that pace, he went
|
||
on and resolutely kept his face towards the Border. At length, he
|
||
lay down at the village of Burgh-upon-Sands; and there, telling
|
||
those around him to impress upon the Prince that he was to remember
|
||
his father's vow, and was never to rest until he had thoroughly
|
||
subdued Scotland, he yielded up his last breath.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVII - ENGLAND UNDER EDWARD THE SECOND
|
||
|
||
KING Edward the Second, the first Prince of Wales, was twenty-three
|
||
years old when his father died. There was a certain favourite of
|
||
his, a young man from Gascony, named PIERS GAVESTON, of whom his
|
||
father had so much disapproved that he had ordered him out of
|
||
England, and had made his son swear by the side of his sick-bed,
|
||
never to bring him back. But, the Prince no sooner found himself
|
||
King, than he broke his oath, as so many other Princes and Kings
|
||
did (they were far too ready to take oaths), and sent for his dear
|
||
friend immediately.
|
||
|
||
Now, this same Gaveston was handsome enough, but was a reckless,
|
||
insolent, audacious fellow. He was detested by the proud English
|
||
Lords: not only because he had such power over the King, and made
|
||
the Court such a dissipated place, but, also, because he could ride
|
||
better than they at tournaments, and was used, in his impudence, to
|
||
cut very bad jokes on them; calling one, the old hog; another, the
|
||
stage-player; another, the Jew; another, the black dog of Ardenne.
|
||
This was as poor wit as need be, but it made those Lords very
|
||
wroth; and the surly Earl of Warwick, who was the black dog, swore
|
||
that the time should come when Piers Gaveston should feel the black
|
||
dog's teeth.
|
||
|
||
It was not come yet, however, nor did it seem to be coming. The
|
||
King made him Earl of Cornwall, and gave him vast riches; and, when
|
||
the King went over to France to marry the French Princess,
|
||
ISABELLA, daughter of PHILIP LE BEL: who was said to be the most
|
||
beautiful woman in the world: he made Gaveston, Regent of the
|
||
Kingdom. His splendid marriage-ceremony in the Church of Our Lady
|
||
at Boulogne, where there were four Kings and three Queens present
|
||
(quite a pack of Court Cards, for I dare say the Knaves were not
|
||
wanting), being over, he seemed to care little or nothing for his
|
||
beautiful wife; but was wild with impatience to meet Gaveston
|
||
again.
|
||
|
||
When he landed at home, he paid no attention to anybody else, but
|
||
ran into the favourite's arms before a great concourse of people,
|
||
and hugged him, and kissed him, and called him his brother. At the
|
||
coronation which soon followed, Gaveston was the richest and
|
||
brightest of all the glittering company there, and had the honour
|
||
of carrying the crown. This made the proud Lords fiercer than
|
||
ever; the people, too, despised the favourite, and would never call
|
||
him Earl of Cornwall, however much he complained to the King and
|
||
asked him to punish them for not doing so, but persisted in styling
|
||
him plain Piers Gaveston.
|
||
|
||
The Barons were so unceremonious with the King in giving him to
|
||
understand that they would not bear this favourite, that the King
|
||
was obliged to send him out of the country. The favourite himself
|
||
was made to take an oath (more oaths!) that he would never come
|
||
back, and the Barons supposed him to be banished in disgrace, until
|
||
they heard that he was appointed Governor of Ireland. Even this
|
||
was not enough for the besotted King, who brought him home again in
|
||
a year's time, and not only disgusted the Court and the people by
|
||
his doting folly, but offended his beautiful wife too, who never
|
||
liked him afterwards.
|
||
|
||
He had now the old Royal want - of money - and the Barons had the
|
||
new power of positively refusing to let him raise any. He summoned
|
||
a Parliament at York; the Barons refused to make one, while the
|
||
favourite was near him. He summoned another Parliament at
|
||
Westminster, and sent Gaveston away. Then, the Barons came,
|
||
completely armed, and appointed a committee of themselves to
|
||
correct abuses in the state and in the King's household. He got
|
||
some money on these conditions, and directly set off with Gaveston
|
||
to the Border-country, where they spent it in idling away the time,
|
||
and feasting, while Bruce made ready to drive the English out of
|
||
Scotland. For, though the old King had even made this poor weak
|
||
son of his swear (as some say) that he would not bury his bones,
|
||
but would have them boiled clean in a caldron, and carried before
|
||
the English army until Scotland was entirely subdued, the second
|
||
Edward was so unlike the first that Bruce gained strength and power
|
||
every day.
|
||
|
||
The committee of Nobles, after some months of deliberation,
|
||
ordained that the King should henceforth call a Parliament
|
||
together, once every year, and even twice if necessary, instead of
|
||
summoning it only when he chose. Further, that Gaveston should
|
||
once more be banished, and, this time, on pain of death if he ever
|
||
came back. The King's tears were of no avail; he was obliged to
|
||
send his favourite to Flanders. As soon as he had done so,
|
||
however, he dissolved the Parliament, with the low cunning of a
|
||
mere fool, and set off to the North of England, thinking to get an
|
||
army about him to oppose the Nobles. And once again he brought
|
||
Gaveston home, and heaped upon him all the riches and titles of
|
||
which the Barons had deprived him.
|
||
|
||
The Lords saw, now, that there was nothing for it but to put the
|
||
favourite to death. They could have done so, legally, according to
|
||
the terms of his banishment; but they did so, I am sorry to say, in
|
||
a shabby manner. Led by the Earl of Lancaster, the King's cousin,
|
||
they first of all attacked the King and Gaveston at Newcastle.
|
||
They had time to escape by sea, and the mean King, having his
|
||
precious Gaveston with him, was quite content to leave his lovely
|
||
wife behind. When they were comparatively safe, they separated;
|
||
the King went to York to collect a force of soldiers; and the
|
||
favourite shut himself up, in the meantime, in Scarborough Castle
|
||
overlooking the sea. This was what the Barons wanted. They knew
|
||
that the Castle could not hold out; they attacked it, and made
|
||
Gaveston surrender. He delivered himself up to the Earl of
|
||
Pembroke - that Lord whom he had called the Jew - on the Earl's
|
||
pledging his faith and knightly word, that no harm should happen to
|
||
him and no violence be done him.
|
||
|
||
Now, it was agreed with Gaveston that he should be taken to the
|
||
Castle of Wallingford, and there kept in honourable custody. They
|
||
travelled as far as Dedington, near Banbury, where, in the Castle
|
||
of that place, they stopped for a night to rest. Whether the Earl
|
||
of Pembroke left his prisoner there, knowing what would happen, or
|
||
really left him thinking no harm, and only going (as he pretended)
|
||
to visit his wife, the Countess, who was in the neighbourhood, is
|
||
no great matter now; in any case, he was bound as an honourable
|
||
gentleman to protect his prisoner, and he did not do it. In the
|
||
morning, while the favourite was yet in bed, he was required to
|
||
dress himself and come down into the court-yard. He did so without
|
||
any mistrust, but started and turned pale when he found it full of
|
||
strange armed men. 'I think you know me?' said their leader, also
|
||
armed from head to foot. 'I am the black dog of Ardenne!' The
|
||
time was come when Piers Gaveston was to feel the black dog's teeth
|
||
indeed. They set him on a mule, and carried him, in mock state and
|
||
with military music, to the black dog's kennel - Warwick Castle -
|
||
where a hasty council, composed of some great noblemen, considered
|
||
what should be done with him. Some were for sparing him, but one
|
||
loud voice - it was the black dog's bark, I dare say - sounded
|
||
through the Castle Hall, uttering these words: 'You have the fox
|
||
in your power. Let him go now, and you must hunt him again.'
|
||
|
||
They sentenced him to death. He threw himself at the feet of the
|
||
Earl of Lancaster - the old hog - but the old hog was as savage as
|
||
the dog. He was taken out upon the pleasant road, leading from
|
||
Warwick to Coventry, where the beautiful river Avon, by which, long
|
||
afterwards, WILLIAM SHAKESPEARE was born and now lies buried,
|
||
sparkled in the bright landscape of the beautiful May-day; and
|
||
there they struck off his wretched head, and stained the dust with
|
||
his blood.
|
||
|
||
When the King heard of this black deed, in his grief and rage he
|
||
denounced relentless war against his Barons, and both sides were in
|
||
arms for half a year. But, it then became necessary for them to
|
||
join their forces against Bruce, who had used the time well while
|
||
they were divided, and had now a great power in Scotland.
|
||
|
||
Intelligence was brought that Bruce was then besieging Stirling
|
||
Castle, and that the Governor had been obliged to pledge himself to
|
||
surrender it, unless he should be relieved before a certain day.
|
||
Hereupon, the King ordered the nobles and their fighting-men to
|
||
meet him at Berwick; but, the nobles cared so little for the King,
|
||
and so neglected the summons, and lost time, that only on the day
|
||
before that appointed for the surrender, did the King find himself
|
||
at Stirling, and even then with a smaller force than he had
|
||
expected. However, he had, altogether, a hundred thousand men, and
|
||
Bruce had not more than forty thousand; but, Bruce's army was
|
||
strongly posted in three square columns, on the ground lying
|
||
between the Burn or Brook of Bannock and the walls of Stirling
|
||
Castle.
|
||
|
||
On the very evening, when the King came up, Bruce did a brave act
|
||
that encouraged his men. He was seen by a certain HENRY DE BOHUN,
|
||
an English Knight, riding about before his army on a little horse,
|
||
with a light battle-axe in his hand, and a crown of gold on his
|
||
head. This English Knight, who was mounted on a strong war-horse,
|
||
cased in steel, strongly armed, and able (as he thought) to
|
||
overthrow Bruce by crushing him with his mere weight, set spurs to
|
||
his great charger, rode on him, and made a thrust at him with his
|
||
heavy spear. Bruce parried the thrust, and with one blow of his
|
||
battle-axe split his skull.
|
||
|
||
The Scottish men did not forget this, next day when the battle
|
||
raged. RANDOLPH, Bruce's valiant Nephew, rode, with the small body
|
||
of men he commanded, into such a host of the English, all shining
|
||
in polished armour in the sunlight, that they seemed to be
|
||
swallowed up and lost, as if they had plunged into the sea. But,
|
||
they fought so well, and did such dreadful execution, that the
|
||
English staggered. Then came Bruce himself upon them, with all the
|
||
rest of his army. While they were thus hard pressed and amazed,
|
||
there appeared upon the hills what they supposed to be a new
|
||
Scottish army, but what were really only the camp followers, in
|
||
number fifteen thousand: whom Bruce had taught to show themselves
|
||
at that place and time. The Earl of Gloucester, commanding the
|
||
English horse, made a last rush to change the fortune of the day;
|
||
but Bruce (like Jack the Giant-killer in the story) had had pits
|
||
dug in the ground, and covered over with turfs and stakes. Into
|
||
these, as they gave way beneath the weight of the horses, riders
|
||
and horses rolled by hundreds. The English were completely routed;
|
||
all their treasure, stores, and engines, were taken by the Scottish
|
||
men; so many waggons and other wheeled vehicles were seized, that
|
||
it is related that they would have reached, if they had been drawn
|
||
out in a line, one hundred and eighty miles. The fortunes of
|
||
Scotland were, for the time, completely changed; and never was a
|
||
battle won, more famous upon Scottish ground, than this great
|
||
battle of BANNOCKBURN.
|
||
|
||
Plague and famine succeeded in England; and still the powerless
|
||
King and his disdainful Lords were always in contention. Some of
|
||
the turbulent chiefs of Ireland made proposals to Bruce, to accept
|
||
the rule of that country. He sent his brother Edward to them, who
|
||
was crowned King of Ireland. He afterwards went himself to help
|
||
his brother in his Irish wars, but his brother was defeated in the
|
||
end and killed. Robert Bruce, returning to Scotland, still
|
||
increased his strength there.
|
||
|
||
As the King's ruin had begun in a favourite, so it seemed likely to
|
||
end in one. He was too poor a creature to rely at all upon
|
||
himself; and his new favourite was one HUGH LE DESPENSER, the son
|
||
of a gentleman of ancient family. Hugh was handsome and brave, but
|
||
he was the favourite of a weak King, whom no man cared a rush for,
|
||
and that was a dangerous place to hold. The Nobles leagued against
|
||
him, because the King liked him; and they lay in wait, both for his
|
||
ruin and his father's. Now, the King had married him to the
|
||
daughter of the late Earl of Gloucester, and had given both him and
|
||
his father great possessions in Wales. In their endeavours to
|
||
extend these, they gave violent offence to an angry Welsh
|
||
gentleman, named JOHN DE MOWBRAY, and to divers other angry Welsh
|
||
gentlemen, who resorted to arms, took their castles, and seized
|
||
their estates. The Earl of Lancaster had first placed the
|
||
favourite (who was a poor relation of his own) at Court, and he
|
||
considered his own dignity offended by the preference he received
|
||
and the honours he acquired; so he, and the Barons who were his
|
||
friends, joined the Welshmen, marched on London, and sent a message
|
||
to the King demanding to have the favourite and his father
|
||
banished. At first, the King unaccountably took it into his head
|
||
to be spirited, and to send them a bold reply; but when they
|
||
quartered themselves around Holborn and Clerkenwell, and went down,
|
||
armed, to the Parliament at Westminster, he gave way, and complied
|
||
with their demands.
|
||
|
||
His turn of triumph came sooner than he expected. It arose out of
|
||
an accidental circumstance. The beautiful Queen happening to be
|
||
travelling, came one night to one of the royal castles, and
|
||
demanded to be lodged and entertained there until morning. The
|
||
governor of this castle, who was one of the enraged lords, was
|
||
away, and in his absence, his wife refused admission to the Queen;
|
||
a scuffle took place among the common men on either side, and some
|
||
of the royal attendants were killed. The people, who cared nothing
|
||
for the King, were very angry that their beautiful Queen should be
|
||
thus rudely treated in her own dominions; and the King, taking
|
||
advantage of this feeling, besieged the castle, took it, and then
|
||
called the two Despensers home. Upon this, the confederate lords
|
||
and the Welshmen went over to Bruce. The King encountered them at
|
||
Boroughbridge, gained the victory, and took a number of
|
||
distinguished prisoners; among them, the Earl of Lancaster, now an
|
||
old man, upon whose destruction he was resolved. This Earl was
|
||
taken to his own castle of Pontefract, and there tried and found
|
||
guilty by an unfair court appointed for the purpose; he was not
|
||
even allowed to speak in his own defence. He was insulted, pelted,
|
||
mounted on a starved pony without saddle or bridle, carried out,
|
||
and beheaded. Eight-and-twenty knights were hanged, drawn, and
|
||
quartered. When the King had despatched this bloody work, and had
|
||
made a fresh and a long truce with Bruce, he took the Despensers
|
||
into greater favour than ever, and made the father Earl of
|
||
Winchester.
|
||
|
||
One prisoner, and an important one, who was taken at Boroughbridge,
|
||
made his escape, however, and turned the tide against the King.
|
||
This was ROGER MORTIMER, always resolutely opposed to him, who was
|
||
sentenced to death, and placed for safe custody in the Tower of
|
||
London. He treated his guards to a quantity of wine into which he
|
||
had put a sleeping potion; and, when they were insensible, broke
|
||
out of his dungeon, got into a kitchen, climbed up the chimney, let
|
||
himself down from the roof of the building with a rope-ladder,
|
||
passed the sentries, got down to the river, and made away in a boat
|
||
to where servants and horses were waiting for him. He finally
|
||
escaped to France, where CHARLES LE BEL, the brother of the
|
||
beautiful Queen, was King. Charles sought to quarrel with the King
|
||
of England, on pretence of his not having come to do him homage at
|
||
his coronation. It was proposed that the beautiful Queen should go
|
||
over to arrange the dispute; she went, and wrote home to the King,
|
||
that as he was sick and could not come to France himself, perhaps
|
||
it would be better to send over the young Prince, their son, who
|
||
was only twelve years old, who could do homage to her brother in
|
||
his stead, and in whose company she would immediately return. The
|
||
King sent him: but, both he and the Queen remained at the French
|
||
Court, and Roger Mortimer became the Queen's lover.
|
||
|
||
When the King wrote, again and again, to the Queen to come home,
|
||
she did not reply that she despised him too much to live with him
|
||
any more (which was the truth), but said she was afraid of the two
|
||
Despensers. In short, her design was to overthrow the favourites'
|
||
power, and the King's power, such as it was, and invade England.
|
||
Having obtained a French force of two thousand men, and being
|
||
joined by all the English exiles then in France, she landed, within
|
||
a year, at Orewell, in Suffolk, where she was immediately joined by
|
||
the Earls of Kent and Norfolk, the King's two brothers; by other
|
||
powerful noblemen; and lastly, by the first English general who was
|
||
despatched to check her: who went over to her with all his men.
|
||
The people of London, receiving these tidings, would do nothing for
|
||
the King, but broke open the Tower, let out all his prisoners, and
|
||
threw up their caps and hurrahed for the beautiful Queen.
|
||
|
||
The King, with his two favourites, fled to Bristol, where he left
|
||
old Despenser in charge of the town and castle, while he went on
|
||
with the son to Wales. The Bristol men being opposed to the King,
|
||
and it being impossible to hold the town with enemies everywhere
|
||
within the walls, Despenser yielded it up on the third day, and was
|
||
instantly brought to trial for having traitorously influenced what
|
||
was called 'the King's mind' - though I doubt if the King ever had
|
||
any. He was a venerable old man, upwards of ninety years of age,
|
||
but his age gained no respect or mercy. He was hanged, torn open
|
||
while he was yet alive, cut up into pieces, and thrown to the dogs.
|
||
His son was soon taken, tried at Hereford before the same judge on
|
||
a long series of foolish charges, found guilty, and hanged upon a
|
||
gallows fifty feet high, with a chaplet of nettles round his head.
|
||
His poor old father and he were innocent enough of any worse crimes
|
||
than the crime of having been friends of a King, on whom, as a mere
|
||
man, they would never have deigned to cast a favourable look. It
|
||
is a bad crime, I know, and leads to worse; but, many lords and
|
||
gentlemen - I even think some ladies, too, if I recollect right -
|
||
have committed it in England, who have neither been given to the
|
||
dogs, nor hanged up fifty feet high.
|
||
|
||
The wretched King was running here and there, all this time, and
|
||
never getting anywhere in particular, until he gave himself up, and
|
||
was taken off to Kenilworth Castle. When he was safely lodged
|
||
there, the Queen went to London and met the Parliament. And the
|
||
Bishop of Hereford, who was the most skilful of her friends, said,
|
||
What was to be done now? Here was an imbecile, indolent, miserable
|
||
King upon the throne; wouldn't it be better to take him off, and
|
||
put his son there instead? I don't know whether the Queen really
|
||
pitied him at this pass, but she began to cry; so, the Bishop said,
|
||
Well, my Lords and Gentlemen, what do you think, upon the whole, of
|
||
sending down to Kenilworth, and seeing if His Majesty (God bless
|
||
him, and forbid we should depose him!) won't resign?
|
||
|
||
My Lords and Gentlemen thought it a good notion, so a deputation of
|
||
them went down to Kenilworth; and there the King came into the
|
||
great hall of the Castle, commonly dressed in a poor black gown;
|
||
and when he saw a certain bishop among them, fell down, poor
|
||
feeble-headed man, and made a wretched spectacle of himself.
|
||
Somebody lifted him up, and then SIR WILLIAM TRUSSEL, the Speaker
|
||
of the House of Commons, almost frightened him to death by making
|
||
him a tremendous speech to the effect that he was no longer a King,
|
||
and that everybody renounced allegiance to him. After which, SIR
|
||
THOMAS BLOUNT, the Steward of the Household, nearly finished him,
|
||
by coming forward and breaking his white wand - which was a
|
||
ceremony only performed at a King's death. Being asked in this
|
||
pressing manner what he thought of resigning, the King said he
|
||
thought it was the best thing he could do. So, he did it, and they
|
||
proclaimed his son next day.
|
||
|
||
I wish I could close his history by saying that he lived a harmless
|
||
life in the Castle and the Castle gardens at Kenilworth, many years
|
||
- that he had a favourite, and plenty to eat and drink - and,
|
||
having that, wanted nothing. But he was shamefully humiliated. He
|
||
was outraged, and slighted, and had dirty water from ditches given
|
||
him to shave with, and wept and said he would have clean warm
|
||
water, and was altogether very miserable. He was moved from this
|
||
castle to that castle, and from that castle to the other castle,
|
||
because this lord or that lord, or the other lord, was too kind to
|
||
him: until at last he came to Berkeley Castle, near the River
|
||
Severn, where (the Lord Berkeley being then ill and absent) he fell
|
||
into the hands of two black ruffians, called THOMAS GOURNAY and
|
||
WILLIAM OGLE.
|
||
|
||
One night - it was the night of September the twenty-first, one
|
||
thousand three hundred and twenty-seven - dreadful screams were
|
||
heard, by the startled people in the neighbouring town, ringing
|
||
through the thick walls of the Castle, and the dark, deep night;
|
||
and they said, as they were thus horribly awakened from their
|
||
sleep, 'May Heaven be merciful to the King; for those cries forbode
|
||
that no good is being done to him in his dismal prison!' Next
|
||
morning he was dead - not bruised, or stabbed, or marked upon the
|
||
body, but much distorted in the face; and it was whispered
|
||
afterwards, that those two villains, Gournay and Ogle, had burnt up
|
||
his inside with a red-hot iron.
|
||
|
||
If you ever come near Gloucester, and see the centre tower of its
|
||
beautiful Cathedral, with its four rich pinnacles, rising lightly
|
||
in the air; you may remember that the wretched Edward the Second
|
||
was buried in the old abbey of that ancient city, at forty-three
|
||
years old, after being for nineteen years and a half a perfectly
|
||
incapable King.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XVIII - ENGLAND UNDER EDWARD THE THIRD
|
||
|
||
ROGER MORTIMER, the Queen's lover (who escaped to France in the
|
||
last chapter), was far from profiting by the examples he had had of
|
||
the fate of favourites. Having, through the Queen's influence,
|
||
come into possession of the estates of the two Despensers, he
|
||
became extremely proud and ambitious, and sought to be the real
|
||
ruler of England. The young King, who was crowned at fourteen
|
||
years of age with all the usual solemnities, resolved not to bear
|
||
this, and soon pursued Mortimer to his ruin.
|
||
|
||
The people themselves were not fond of Mortimer - first, because he
|
||
was a Royal favourite; secondly, because he was supposed to have
|
||
helped to make a peace with Scotland which now took place, and in
|
||
virtue of which the young King's sister Joan, only seven years old,
|
||
was promised in marriage to David, the son and heir of Robert
|
||
Bruce, who was only five years old. The nobles hated Mortimer
|
||
because of his pride, riches, and power. They went so far as to
|
||
take up arms against him; but were obliged to submit. The Earl of
|
||
Kent, one of those who did so, but who afterwards went over to
|
||
Mortimer and the Queen, was made an example of in the following
|
||
cruel manner:
|
||
|
||
He seems to have been anything but a wise old earl; and he was
|
||
persuaded by the agents of the favourite and the Queen, that poor
|
||
King Edward the Second was not really dead; and thus was betrayed
|
||
into writing letters favouring his rightful claim to the throne.
|
||
This was made out to be high treason, and he was tried, found
|
||
guilty, and sentenced to be executed. They took the poor old lord
|
||
outside the town of Winchester, and there kept him waiting some
|
||
three or four hours until they could find somebody to cut off his
|
||
head. At last, a convict said he would do it, if the government
|
||
would pardon him in return; and they gave him the pardon; and at
|
||
one blow he put the Earl of Kent out of his last suspense.
|
||
|
||
While the Queen was in France, she had found a lovely and good
|
||
young lady, named Philippa, who she thought would make an excellent
|
||
wife for her son. The young King married this lady, soon after he
|
||
came to the throne; and her first child, Edward, Prince of Wales,
|
||
afterwards became celebrated, as we shall presently see, under the
|
||
famous title of EDWARD THE BLACK PRINCE.
|
||
|
||
The young King, thinking the time ripe for the downfall of
|
||
Mortimer, took counsel with Lord Montacute how he should proceed.
|
||
A Parliament was going to be held at Nottingham, and that lord
|
||
recommended that the favourite should be seized by night in
|
||
Nottingham Castle, where he was sure to be. Now, this, like many
|
||
other things, was more easily said than done; because, to guard
|
||
against treachery, the great gates of the Castle were locked every
|
||
night, and the great keys were carried up-stairs to the Queen, who
|
||
laid them under her own pillow. But the Castle had a governor, and
|
||
the governor being Lord Montacute's friend, confided to him how he
|
||
knew of a secret passage underground, hidden from observation by
|
||
the weeds and brambles with which it was overgrown; and how,
|
||
through that passage, the conspirators might enter in the dead of
|
||
the night, and go straight to Mortimer's room. Accordingly, upon a
|
||
certain dark night, at midnight, they made their way through this
|
||
dismal place: startling the rats, and frightening the owls and
|
||
bats: and came safely to the bottom of the main tower of the
|
||
Castle, where the King met them, and took them up a profoundly-dark
|
||
staircase in a deep silence. They soon heard the voice of Mortimer
|
||
in council with some friends; and bursting into the room with a
|
||
sudden noise, took him prisoner. The Queen cried out from her bed-
|
||
chamber, 'Oh, my sweet son, my dear son, spare my gentle Mortimer!'
|
||
They carried him off, however; and, before the next Parliament,
|
||
accused him of having made differences between the young King and
|
||
his mother, and of having brought about the death of the Earl of
|
||
Kent, and even of the late King; for, as you know by this time,
|
||
when they wanted to get rid of a man in those old days, they were
|
||
not very particular of what they accused him. Mortimer was found
|
||
guilty of all this, and was sentenced to be hanged at Tyburn. The
|
||
King shut his mother up in genteel confinement, where she passed
|
||
the rest of her life; and now he became King in earnest.
|
||
|
||
The first effort he made was to conquer Scotland. The English
|
||
lords who had lands in Scotland, finding that their rights were not
|
||
respected under the late peace, made war on their own account:
|
||
choosing for their general, Edward, the son of John Baliol, who
|
||
made such a vigorous fight, that in less than two months he won the
|
||
whole Scottish Kingdom. He was joined, when thus triumphant, by
|
||
the King and Parliament; and he and the King in person besieged the
|
||
Scottish forces in Berwick. The whole Scottish army coming to the
|
||
assistance of their countrymen, such a furious battle ensued, that
|
||
thirty thousand men are said to have been killed in it. Baliol was
|
||
then crowned King of Scotland, doing homage to the King of England;
|
||
but little came of his successes after all, for the Scottish men
|
||
rose against him, within no very long time, and David Bruce came
|
||
back within ten years and took his kingdom.
|
||
|
||
France was a far richer country than Scotland, and the King had a
|
||
much greater mind to conquer it. So, he let Scotland alone, and
|
||
pretended that he had a claim to the French throne in right of his
|
||
mother. He had, in reality, no claim at all; but that mattered
|
||
little in those times. He brought over to his cause many little
|
||
princes and sovereigns, and even courted the alliance of the people
|
||
of Flanders - a busy, working community, who had very small respect
|
||
for kings, and whose head man was a brewer. With such forces as he
|
||
raised by these means, Edward invaded France; but he did little by
|
||
that, except run into debt in carrying on the war to the extent of
|
||
three hundred thousand pounds. The next year he did better;
|
||
gaining a great sea-fight in the harbour of Sluys. This success,
|
||
however, was very shortlived, for the Flemings took fright at the
|
||
siege of Saint Omer and ran away, leaving their weapons and baggage
|
||
behind them. Philip, the French King, coming up with his army, and
|
||
Edward being very anxious to decide the war, proposed to settle the
|
||
difference by single combat with him, or by a fight of one hundred
|
||
knights on each side. The French King said, he thanked him; but
|
||
being very well as he was, he would rather not. So, after some
|
||
skirmishing and talking, a short peace was made.
|
||
|
||
It was soon broken by King Edward's favouring the cause of John,
|
||
Earl of Montford; a French nobleman, who asserted a claim of his
|
||
own against the French King, and offered to do homage to England
|
||
for the Crown of France, if he could obtain it through England's
|
||
help. This French lord, himself, was soon defeated by the French
|
||
King's son, and shut up in a tower in Paris; but his wife, a
|
||
courageous and beautiful woman, who is said to have had the courage
|
||
of a man, and the heart of a lion, assembled the people of
|
||
Brittany, where she then was; and, showing them her infant son,
|
||
made many pathetic entreaties to them not to desert her and their
|
||
young Lord. They took fire at this appeal, and rallied round her
|
||
in the strong castle of Hennebon. Here she was not only besieged
|
||
without by the French under Charles de Blois, but was endangered
|
||
within by a dreary old bishop, who was always representing to the
|
||
people what horrors they must undergo if they were faithful - first
|
||
from famine, and afterwards from fire and sword. But this noble
|
||
lady, whose heart never failed her, encouraged her soldiers by her
|
||
own example; went from post to post like a great general; even
|
||
mounted on horseback fully armed, and, issuing from the castle by a
|
||
by-path, fell upon the French camp, set fire to the tents, and
|
||
threw the whole force into disorder. This done, she got safely
|
||
back to Hennebon again, and was received with loud shouts of joy by
|
||
the defenders of the castle, who had given her up for lost. As
|
||
they were now very short of provisions, however, and as they could
|
||
not dine off enthusiasm, and as the old bishop was always saying,
|
||
'I told you what it would come to!' they began to lose heart, and
|
||
to talk of yielding the castle up. The brave Countess retiring to
|
||
an upper room and looking with great grief out to sea, where she
|
||
expected relief from England, saw, at this very time, the English
|
||
ships in the distance, and was relieved and rescued! Sir Walter
|
||
Manning, the English commander, so admired her courage, that, being
|
||
come into the castle with the English knights, and having made a
|
||
feast there, he assaulted the French by way of dessert, and beat
|
||
them off triumphantly. Then he and the knights came back to the
|
||
castle with great joy; and the Countess who had watched them from a
|
||
high tower, thanked them with all her heart, and kissed them every
|
||
one.
|
||
|
||
This noble lady distinguished herself afterwards in a sea-fight
|
||
with the French off Guernsey, when she was on her way to England to
|
||
ask for more troops. Her great spirit roused another lady, the
|
||
wife of another French lord (whom the French King very barbarously
|
||
murdered), to distinguish herself scarcely less. The time was fast
|
||
coming, however, when Edward, Prince of Wales, was to be the great
|
||
star of this French and English war.
|
||
|
||
It was in the month of July, in the year one thousand three hundred
|
||
and forty-six, when the King embarked at Southampton for France,
|
||
with an army of about thirty thousand men in all, attended by the
|
||
Prince of Wales and by several of the chief nobles. He landed at
|
||
La Hogue in Normandy; and, burning and destroying as he went,
|
||
according to custom, advanced up the left bank of the River Seine,
|
||
and fired the small towns even close to Paris; but, being watched
|
||
from the right bank of the river by the French King and all his
|
||
army, it came to this at last, that Edward found himself, on
|
||
Saturday the twenty-sixth of August, one thousand three hundred and
|
||
forty-six, on a rising ground behind the little French village of
|
||
Crecy, face to face with the French King's force. And, although
|
||
the French King had an enormous army - in number more than eight
|
||
times his - he there resolved to beat him or be beaten.
|
||
|
||
The young Prince, assisted by the Earl of Oxford and the Earl of
|
||
Warwick, led the first division of the English army; two other
|
||
great Earls led the second; and the King, the third. When the
|
||
morning dawned, the King received the sacrament, and heard prayers,
|
||
and then, mounted on horseback with a white wand in his hand, rode
|
||
from company to company, and rank to rank, cheering and encouraging
|
||
both officers and men. Then the whole army breakfasted, each man
|
||
sitting on the ground where he had stood; and then they remained
|
||
quietly on the ground with their weapons ready.
|
||
|
||
Up came the French King with all his great force. It was dark and
|
||
angry weather; there was an eclipse of the sun; there was a
|
||
thunder-storm, accompanied with tremendous rain; the frightened
|
||
birds flew screaming above the soldiers' heads. A certain captain
|
||
in the French army advised the French King, who was by no means
|
||
cheerful, not to begin the battle until the morrow. The King,
|
||
taking this advice, gave the word to halt. But, those behind not
|
||
understanding it, or desiring to be foremost with the rest, came
|
||
pressing on. The roads for a great distance were covered with this
|
||
immense army, and with the common people from the villages, who
|
||
were flourishing their rude weapons, and making a great noise.
|
||
Owing to these circumstances, the French army advanced in the
|
||
greatest confusion; every French lord doing what he liked with his
|
||
own men, and putting out the men of every other French lord.
|
||
|
||
Now, their King relied strongly upon a great body of cross-bowmen
|
||
from Genoa; and these he ordered to the front to begin the battle,
|
||
on finding that he could not stop it. They shouted once, they
|
||
shouted twice, they shouted three times, to alarm the English
|
||
archers; but, the English would have heard them shout three
|
||
thousand times and would have never moved. At last the cross-
|
||
bowmen went forward a little, and began to discharge their bolts;
|
||
upon which, the English let fly such a hail of arrows, that the
|
||
Genoese speedily made off - for their cross-bows, besides being
|
||
heavy to carry, required to be wound up with a handle, and
|
||
consequently took time to re-load; the English, on the other hand,
|
||
could discharge their arrows almost as fast as the arrows could
|
||
fly.
|
||
|
||
When the French King saw the Genoese turning, he cried out to his
|
||
men to kill those scoundrels, who were doing harm instead of
|
||
service. This increased the confusion. Meanwhile the English
|
||
archers, continuing to shoot as fast as ever, shot down great
|
||
numbers of the French soldiers and knights; whom certain sly
|
||
Cornish-men and Welshmen, from the English army, creeping along the
|
||
ground, despatched with great knives.
|
||
|
||
The Prince and his division were at this time so hard-pressed, that
|
||
the Earl of Warwick sent a message to the King, who was overlooking
|
||
the battle from a windmill, beseeching him to send more aid.
|
||
|
||
'Is my son killed?' said the King.
|
||
|
||
'No, sire, please God,' returned the messenger.
|
||
|
||
'Is he wounded?' said the King.
|
||
|
||
'No, sire.'
|
||
|
||
'Is he thrown to the ground?' said the King.
|
||
|
||
'No, sire, not so; but, he is very hard-pressed.'
|
||
|
||
'Then,' said the King, 'go back to those who sent you, and tell
|
||
them I shall send no aid; because I set my heart upon my son
|
||
proving himself this day a brave knight, and because I am resolved,
|
||
please God, that the honour of a great victory shall be his!'
|
||
|
||
These bold words, being reported to the Prince and his division, so
|
||
raised their spirits, that they fought better than ever. The King
|
||
of France charged gallantly with his men many times; but it was of
|
||
no use. Night closing in, his horse was killed under him by an
|
||
English arrow, and the knights and nobles who had clustered thick
|
||
about him early in the day, were now completely scattered. At
|
||
last, some of his few remaining followers led him off the field by
|
||
force since he would not retire of himself, and they journeyed away
|
||
to Amiens. The victorious English, lighting their watch-fires,
|
||
made merry on the field, and the King, riding to meet his gallant
|
||
son, took him in his arms, kissed him, and told him that he had
|
||
acted nobly, and proved himself worthy of the day and of the crown.
|
||
While it was yet night, King Edward was hardly aware of the great
|
||
victory he had gained; but, next day, it was discovered that eleven
|
||
princes, twelve hundred knights, and thirty thousand common men lay
|
||
dead upon the French side. Among these was the King of Bohemia, an
|
||
old blind man; who, having been told that his son was wounded in
|
||
the battle, and that no force could stand against the Black Prince,
|
||
called to him two knights, put himself on horse-back between them,
|
||
fastened the three bridles together, and dashed in among the
|
||
English, where he was presently slain. He bore as his crest three
|
||
white ostrich feathers, with the motto ICH DIEN, signifying in
|
||
English 'I serve.' This crest and motto were taken by the Prince
|
||
of Wales in remembrance of that famous day, and have been borne by
|
||
the Prince of Wales ever since.
|
||
|
||
Five days after this great battle, the King laid siege to Calais.
|
||
This siege - ever afterwards memorable - lasted nearly a year. In
|
||
order to starve the inhabitants out, King Edward built so many
|
||
wooden houses for the lodgings of his troops, that it is said their
|
||
quarters looked like a second Calais suddenly sprung around the
|
||
first. Early in the siege, the governor of the town drove out what
|
||
he called the useless mouths, to the number of seventeen hundred
|
||
persons, men and women, young and old. King Edward allowed them to
|
||
pass through his lines, and even fed them, and dismissed them with
|
||
money; but, later in the siege, he was not so merciful - five
|
||
hundred more, who were afterwards driven out, dying of starvation
|
||
and misery. The garrison were so hard-pressed at last, that they
|
||
sent a letter to King Philip, telling him that they had eaten all
|
||
the horses, all the dogs, and all the rats and mice that could be
|
||
found in the place; and, that if he did not relieve them, they must
|
||
either surrender to the English, or eat one another. Philip made
|
||
one effort to give them relief; but they were so hemmed in by the
|
||
English power, that he could not succeed, and was fain to leave the
|
||
place. Upon this they hoisted the English flag, and surrendered to
|
||
King Edward. 'Tell your general,' said he to the humble messengers
|
||
who came out of the town, 'that I require to have sent here, six of
|
||
the most distinguished citizens, bare-legged, and in their shirts,
|
||
with ropes about their necks; and let those six men bring with them
|
||
the keys of the castle and the town.'
|
||
|
||
When the Governor of Calais related this to the people in the
|
||
Market-place, there was great weeping and distress; in the midst of
|
||
which, one worthy citizen, named Eustace de Saint Pierre, rose up
|
||
and said, that if the six men required were not sacrificed, the
|
||
whole population would be; therefore, he offered himself as the
|
||
first. Encouraged by this bright example, five other worthy
|
||
citizens rose up one after another, and offered themselves to save
|
||
the rest. The Governor, who was too badly wounded to be able to
|
||
walk, mounted a poor old horse that had not been eaten, and
|
||
conducted these good men to the gate, while all the people cried
|
||
and mourned.
|
||
|
||
Edward received them wrathfully, and ordered the heads of the whole
|
||
six to be struck off. However, the good Queen fell upon her knees,
|
||
and besought the King to give them up to her. The King replied, 'I
|
||
wish you had been somewhere else; but I cannot refuse you.' So she
|
||
had them properly dressed, made a feast for them, and sent them
|
||
back with a handsome present, to the great rejoicing of the whole
|
||
camp. I hope the people of Calais loved the daughter to whom she
|
||
gave birth soon afterwards, for her gentle mother's sake.
|
||
|
||
Now came that terrible disease, the Plague, into Europe, hurrying
|
||
from the heart of China; and killed the wretched people -
|
||
especially the poor - in such enormous numbers, that one-half of
|
||
the inhabitants of England are related to have died of it. It
|
||
killed the cattle, in great numbers, too; and so few working men
|
||
remained alive, that there were not enough left to till the ground.
|
||
|
||
After eight years of differing and quarrelling, the Prince of Wales
|
||
again invaded France with an army of sixty thousand men. He went
|
||
through the south of the country, burning and plundering
|
||
wheresoever he went; while his father, who had still the Scottish
|
||
war upon his hands, did the like in Scotland, but was harassed and
|
||
worried in his retreat from that country by the Scottish men, who
|
||
repaid his cruelties with interest.
|
||
|
||
The French King, Philip, was now dead, and was succeeded by his son
|
||
John. The Black Prince, called by that name from the colour of the
|
||
armour he wore to set off his fair complexion, continuing to burn
|
||
and destroy in France, roused John into determined opposition; and
|
||
so cruel had the Black Prince been in his campaign, and so severely
|
||
had the French peasants suffered, that he could not find one who,
|
||
for love, or money, or the fear of death, would tell him what the
|
||
French King was doing, or where he was. Thus it happened that he
|
||
came upon the French King's forces, all of a sudden, near the town
|
||
of Poitiers, and found that the whole neighbouring country was
|
||
occupied by a vast French army. 'God help us!' said the Black
|
||
Prince, 'we must make the best of it.'
|
||
|
||
So, on a Sunday morning, the eighteenth of September, the Prince
|
||
whose army was now reduced to ten thousand men in all - prepared to
|
||
give battle to the French King, who had sixty thousand horse alone.
|
||
While he was so engaged, there came riding from the French camp, a
|
||
Cardinal, who had persuaded John to let him offer terms, and try to
|
||
save the shedding of Christian blood. 'Save my honour,' said the
|
||
Prince to this good priest, 'and save the honour of my army, and I
|
||
will make any reasonable terms.' He offered to give up all the
|
||
towns, castles, and prisoners, he had taken, and to swear to make
|
||
no war in France for seven years; but, as John would hear of
|
||
nothing but his surrender, with a hundred of his chief knights, the
|
||
treaty was broken off, and the Prince said quietly - 'God defend
|
||
the right; we shall fight to-morrow.'
|
||
|
||
Therefore, on the Monday morning, at break of day, the two armies
|
||
prepared for battle. The English were posted in a strong place,
|
||
which could only be approached by one narrow lane, skirted by
|
||
hedges on both sides. The French attacked them by this lane; but
|
||
were so galled and slain by English arrows from behind the hedges,
|
||
that they were forced to retreat. Then went six hundred English
|
||
bowmen round about, and, coming upon the rear of the French army,
|
||
rained arrows on them thick and fast. The French knights, thrown
|
||
into confusion, quitted their banners and dispersed in all
|
||
directions. Said Sir John Chandos to the Prince, 'Ride forward,
|
||
noble Prince, and the day is yours. The King of France is so
|
||
valiant a gentleman, that I know he will never fly, and may be
|
||
taken prisoner.' Said the Prince to this, 'Advance, English
|
||
banners, in the name of God and St. George!' and on they pressed
|
||
until they came up with the French King, fighting fiercely with his
|
||
battle-axe, and, when all his nobles had forsaken him, attended
|
||
faithfully to the last by his youngest son Philip, only sixteen
|
||
years of age. Father and son fought well, and the King had already
|
||
two wounds in his face, and had been beaten down, when he at last
|
||
delivered himself to a banished French knight, and gave him his
|
||
right-hand glove in token that he had done so.
|
||
|
||
The Black Prince was generous as well as brave, and he invited his
|
||
royal prisoner to supper in his tent, and waited upon him at table,
|
||
and, when they afterwards rode into London in a gorgeous
|
||
procession, mounted the French King on a fine cream-coloured horse,
|
||
and rode at his side on a little pony. This was all very kind, but
|
||
I think it was, perhaps, a little theatrical too, and has been made
|
||
more meritorious than it deserved to be; especially as I am
|
||
inclined to think that the greatest kindness to the King of France
|
||
would have been not to have shown him to the people at all.
|
||
However, it must be said, for these acts of politeness, that, in
|
||
course of time, they did much to soften the horrors of war and the
|
||
passions of conquerors. It was a long, long time before the common
|
||
soldiers began to have the benefit of such courtly deeds; but they
|
||
did at last; and thus it is possible that a poor soldier who asked
|
||
for quarter at the battle of Waterloo, or any other such great
|
||
fight, may have owed his life indirectly to Edward the Black
|
||
Prince.
|
||
|
||
At this time there stood in the Strand, in London, a palace called
|
||
the Savoy, which was given up to the captive King of France and his
|
||
son for their residence. As the King of Scotland had now been King
|
||
Edward's captive for eleven years too, his success was, at this
|
||
time, tolerably complete. The Scottish business was settled by the
|
||
prisoner being released under the title of Sir David, King of
|
||
Scotland, and by his engaging to pay a large ransom. The state of
|
||
France encouraged England to propose harder terms to that country,
|
||
where the people rose against the unspeakable cruelty and barbarity
|
||
of its nobles; where the nobles rose in turn against the people;
|
||
where the most frightful outrages were committed on all sides; and
|
||
where the insurrection of the peasants, called the insurrection of
|
||
the Jacquerie, from Jacques, a common Christian name among the
|
||
country people of France, awakened terrors and hatreds that have
|
||
scarcely yet passed away. A treaty called the Great Peace, was at
|
||
last signed, under which King Edward agreed to give up the greater
|
||
part of his conquests, and King John to pay, within six years, a
|
||
ransom of three million crowns of gold. He was so beset by his own
|
||
nobles and courtiers for having yielded to these conditions -
|
||
though they could help him to no better - that he came back of his
|
||
own will to his old palace-prison of the Savoy, and there died.
|
||
|
||
There was a Sovereign of Castile at that time, called PEDRO THE
|
||
CRUEL, who deserved the name remarkably well: having committed,
|
||
among other cruelties, a variety of murders. This amiable monarch
|
||
being driven from his throne for his crimes, went to the province
|
||
of Bordeaux, where the Black Prince - now married to his cousin
|
||
JOAN, a pretty widow - was residing, and besought his help. The
|
||
Prince, who took to him much more kindly than a prince of such fame
|
||
ought to have taken to such a ruffian, readily listened to his fair
|
||
promises, and agreeing to help him, sent secret orders to some
|
||
troublesome disbanded soldiers of his and his father's, who called
|
||
themselves the Free Companions, and who had been a pest to the
|
||
French people, for some time, to aid this Pedro. The Prince,
|
||
himself, going into Spain to head the army of relief, soon set
|
||
Pedro on his throne again - where he no sooner found himself, than,
|
||
of course, he behaved like the villain he was, broke his word
|
||
without the least shame, and abandoned all the promises he had made
|
||
to the Black Prince.
|
||
|
||
Now, it had cost the Prince a good deal of money to pay soldiers to
|
||
support this murderous King; and finding himself, when he came back
|
||
disgusted to Bordeaux, not only in bad health, but deeply in debt,
|
||
he began to tax his French subjects to pay his creditors. They
|
||
appealed to the French King, CHARLES; war again broke out; and the
|
||
French town of Limoges, which the Prince had greatly benefited,
|
||
went over to the French King. Upon this he ravaged the province of
|
||
which it was the capital; burnt, and plundered, and killed in the
|
||
old sickening way; and refused mercy to the prisoners, men, women,
|
||
and children taken in the offending town, though he was so ill and
|
||
so much in need of pity himself from Heaven, that he was carried in
|
||
a litter. He lived to come home and make himself popular with the
|
||
people and Parliament, and he died on Trinity Sunday, the eighth of
|
||
June, one thousand three hundred and seventy-six, at forty-six
|
||
years old.
|
||
|
||
The whole nation mourned for him as one of the most renowned and
|
||
beloved princes it had ever had; and he was buried with great
|
||
lamentations in Canterbury Cathedral. Near to the tomb of Edward
|
||
the Confessor, his monument, with his figure, carved in stone, and
|
||
represented in the old black armour, lying on its back, may be seen
|
||
at this day, with an ancient coat of mail, a helmet, and a pair of
|
||
gauntlets hanging from a beam above it, which most people like to
|
||
believe were once worn by the Black Prince.
|
||
|
||
King Edward did not outlive his renowned son, long. He was old,
|
||
and one Alice Perrers, a beautiful lady, had contrived to make him
|
||
so fond of her in his old age, that he could refuse her nothing,
|
||
and made himself ridiculous. She little deserved his love, or -
|
||
what I dare say she valued a great deal more - the jewels of the
|
||
late Queen, which he gave her among other rich presents. She took
|
||
the very ring from his finger on the morning of the day when he
|
||
died, and left him to be pillaged by his faithless servants. Only
|
||
one good priest was true to him, and attended him to the last.
|
||
|
||
Besides being famous for the great victories I have related, the
|
||
reign of King Edward the Third was rendered memorable in better
|
||
ways, by the growth of architecture and the erection of Windsor
|
||
Castle. In better ways still, by the rising up of WICKLIFFE,
|
||
originally a poor parish priest: who devoted himself to exposing,
|
||
with wonderful power and success, the ambition and corruption of
|
||
the Pope, and of the whole church of which he was the head.
|
||
|
||
Some of those Flemings were induced to come to England in this
|
||
reign too, and to settle in Norfolk, where they made better woollen
|
||
cloths than the English had ever had before. The Order of the
|
||
Garter (a very fine thing in its way, but hardly so important as
|
||
good clothes for the nation) also dates from this period. The King
|
||
is said to have picked 'up a lady's garter at a ball, and to have
|
||
said, HONI SOIT QUI MAL Y PENSE - in English, 'Evil be to him who
|
||
evil thinks of it.' The courtiers were usually glad to imitate
|
||
what the King said or did, and hence from a slight incident the
|
||
Order of the Garter was instituted, and became a great dignity. So
|
||
the story goes.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XIX - ENGLAND UNDER RICHARD THE SECOND
|
||
|
||
RICHARD, son of the Black Prince, a boy eleven years of age,
|
||
succeeded to the Crown under the title of King Richard the Second.
|
||
The whole English nation were ready to admire him for the sake of
|
||
his brave father. As to the lords and ladies about the Court, they
|
||
declared him to be the most beautiful, the wisest, and the best -
|
||
even of princes - whom the lords and ladies about the Court,
|
||
generally declare to be the most beautiful, the wisest, and the
|
||
best of mankind. To flatter a poor boy in this base manner was not
|
||
a very likely way to develop whatever good was in him; and it
|
||
brought him to anything but a good or happy end.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Lancaster, the young King's uncle - commonly called
|
||
John of Gaunt, from having been born at Ghent, which the common
|
||
people so pronounced - was supposed to have some thoughts of the
|
||
throne himself; but, as he was not popular, and the memory of the
|
||
Black Prince was, he submitted to his nephew.
|
||
|
||
The war with France being still unsettled, the Government of
|
||
England wanted money to provide for the expenses that might arise
|
||
out of it; accordingly a certain tax, called the Poll-tax, which
|
||
had originated in the last reign, was ordered to be levied on the
|
||
people. This was a tax on every person in the kingdom, male and
|
||
female, above the age of fourteen, of three groats (or three four-
|
||
penny pieces) a year; clergymen were charged more, and only beggars
|
||
were exempt.
|
||
|
||
I have no need to repeat that the common people of England had long
|
||
been suffering under great oppression. They were still the mere
|
||
slaves of the lords of the land on which they lived, and were on
|
||
most occasions harshly and unjustly treated. But, they had begun
|
||
by this time to think very seriously of not bearing quite so much;
|
||
and, probably, were emboldened by that French insurrection I
|
||
mentioned in the last chapter.
|
||
|
||
The people of Essex rose against the Poll-tax, and being severely
|
||
handled by the government officers, killed some of them. At this
|
||
very time one of the tax-collectors, going his rounds from house to
|
||
house, at Dartford in Kent came to the cottage of one WAT, a tiler
|
||
by trade, and claimed the tax upon his daughter. Her mother, who
|
||
was at home, declared that she was under the age of fourteen; upon
|
||
that, the collector (as other collectors had already done in
|
||
different parts of England) behaved in a savage way, and brutally
|
||
insulted Wat Tyler's daughter. The daughter screamed, the mother
|
||
screamed. Wat the Tiler, who was at work not far off, ran to the
|
||
spot, and did what any honest father under such provocation might
|
||
have done - struck the collector dead at a blow.
|
||
|
||
Instantly the people of that town uprose as one man. They made Wat
|
||
Tyler their leader; they joined with the people of Essex, who were
|
||
in arms under a priest called JACK STRAW; they took out of prison
|
||
another priest named JOHN BALL; and gathering in numbers as they
|
||
went along, advanced, in a great confused army of poor men, to
|
||
Blackheath. It is said that they wanted to abolish all property,
|
||
and to declare all men equal. I do not think this very likely;
|
||
because they stopped the travellers on the roads and made them
|
||
swear to be true to King Richard and the people. Nor were they at
|
||
all disposed to injure those who had done them no harm, merely
|
||
because they were of high station; for, the King's mother, who had
|
||
to pass through their camp at Blackheath, on her way to her young
|
||
son, lying for safety in the Tower of London, had merely to kiss a
|
||
few dirty-faced rough-bearded men who were noisily fond of royalty,
|
||
and so got away in perfect safety. Next day the whole mass marched
|
||
on to London Bridge.
|
||
|
||
There was a drawbridge in the middle, which WILLIAM WALWORTH the
|
||
Mayor caused to be raised to prevent their coming into the city;
|
||
but they soon terrified the citizens into lowering it again, and
|
||
spread themselves, with great uproar, over the streets. They broke
|
||
open the prisons; they burned the papers in Lambeth Palace; they
|
||
destroyed the DUKE OF LANCASTER'S Palace, the Savoy, in the Strand,
|
||
said to be the most beautiful and splendid in England; they set
|
||
fire to the books and documents in the Temple; and made a great
|
||
riot. Many of these outrages were committed in drunkenness; since
|
||
those citizens, who had well-filled cellars, were only too glad to
|
||
throw them open to save the rest of their property; but even the
|
||
drunken rioters were very careful to steal nothing. They were so
|
||
angry with one man, who was seen to take a silver cup at the Savoy
|
||
Palace, and put it in his breast, that they drowned him in the
|
||
river, cup and all.
|
||
|
||
The young King had been taken out to treat with them before they
|
||
committed these excesses; but, he and the people about him were so
|
||
frightened by the riotous shouts, that they got back to the Tower
|
||
in the best way they could. This made the insurgents bolder; so
|
||
they went on rioting away, striking off the heads of those who did
|
||
not, at a moment's notice, declare for King Richard and the people;
|
||
and killing as many of the unpopular persons whom they supposed to
|
||
be their enemies as they could by any means lay hold of. In this
|
||
manner they passed one very violent day, and then proclamation was
|
||
made that the King would meet them at Mile-end, and grant their
|
||
requests.
|
||
|
||
The rioters went to Mile-end to the number of sixty thousand, and
|
||
the King met them there, and to the King the rioters peaceably
|
||
proposed four conditions. First, that neither they, nor their
|
||
children, nor any coming after them, should be made slaves any
|
||
more. Secondly, that the rent of land should be fixed at a certain
|
||
price in money, instead of being paid in service. Thirdly, that
|
||
they should have liberty to buy and sell in all markets and public
|
||
places, like other free men. Fourthly, that they should be
|
||
pardoned for past offences. Heaven knows, there was nothing very
|
||
unreasonable in these proposals! The young King deceitfully
|
||
pretended to think so, and kept thirty clerks up, all night,
|
||
writing out a charter accordingly.
|
||
|
||
Now, Wat Tyler himself wanted more than this. He wanted the entire
|
||
abolition of the forest laws. He was not at Mile-end with the
|
||
rest, but, while that meeting was being held, broke into the Tower
|
||
of London and slew the archbishop and the treasurer, for whose
|
||
heads the people had cried out loudly the day before. He and his
|
||
men even thrust their swords into the bed of the Princess of Wales
|
||
while the Princess was in it, to make certain that none of their
|
||
enemies were concealed there.
|
||
|
||
So, Wat and his men still continued armed, and rode about the city.
|
||
Next morning, the King with a small train of some sixty gentlemen -
|
||
among whom was WALWORTH the Mayor - rode into Smithfield, and saw
|
||
Wat and his people at a little distance. Says Wat to his men,
|
||
'There is the King. I will go speak with him, and tell him what we
|
||
want.'
|
||
|
||
Straightway Wat rode up to him, and began to talk. 'King,' says
|
||
Wat, 'dost thou see all my men there?'
|
||
|
||
'Ah,' says the King. 'Why?'
|
||
|
||
'Because,' says Wat, 'they are all at my command, and have sworn to
|
||
do whatever I bid them.'
|
||
|
||
Some declared afterwards that as Wat said this, he laid his hand on
|
||
the King's bridle. Others declared that he was seen to play with
|
||
his own dagger. I think, myself, that he just spoke to the King
|
||
like a rough, angry man as he was, and did nothing more. At any
|
||
rate he was expecting no attack, and preparing for no resistance,
|
||
when Walworth the Mayor did the not very valiant deed of drawing a
|
||
short sword and stabbing him in the throat. He dropped from his
|
||
horse, and one of the King's people speedily finished him. So fell
|
||
Wat Tyler. Fawners and flatterers made a mighty triumph of it, and
|
||
set up a cry which will occasionally find an echo to this day. But
|
||
Wat was a hard-working man, who had suffered much, and had been
|
||
foully outraged; and it is probable that he was a man of a much
|
||
higher nature and a much braver spirit than any of the parasites
|
||
who exulted then, or have exulted since, over his defeat.
|
||
|
||
Seeing Wat down, his men immediately bent their bows to avenge his
|
||
fall. If the young King had not had presence of mind at that
|
||
dangerous moment, both he and the Mayor to boot, might have
|
||
followed Tyler pretty fast. But the King riding up to the crowd,
|
||
cried out that Tyler was a traitor, and that he would be their
|
||
leader. They were so taken by surprise, that they set up a great
|
||
shouting, and followed the boy until he was met at Islington by a
|
||
large body of soldiers.
|
||
|
||
The end of this rising was the then usual end. As soon as the King
|
||
found himself safe, he unsaid all he had said, and undid all he had
|
||
done; some fifteen hundred of the rioters were tried (mostly in
|
||
Essex) with great rigour, and executed with great cruelty. Many of
|
||
them were hanged on gibbets, and left there as a terror to the
|
||
country people; and, because their miserable friends took some of
|
||
the bodies down to bury, the King ordered the rest to be chained up
|
||
- which was the beginning of the barbarous custom of hanging in
|
||
chains. The King's falsehood in this business makes such a pitiful
|
||
figure, that I think Wat Tyler appears in history as beyond
|
||
comparison the truer and more respectable man of the two.
|
||
|
||
Richard was now sixteen years of age, and married Anne of Bohemia,
|
||
an excellent princess, who was called 'the good Queen Anne.' She
|
||
deserved a better husband; for the King had been fawned and
|
||
flattered into a treacherous, wasteful, dissolute, bad young man.
|
||
|
||
There were two Popes at this time (as if one were not enough!), and
|
||
their quarrels involved Europe in a great deal of trouble.
|
||
Scotland was still troublesome too; and at home there was much
|
||
jealousy and distrust, and plotting and counter-plotting, because
|
||
the King feared the ambition of his relations, and particularly of
|
||
his uncle, the Duke of Lancaster, and the duke had his party
|
||
against the King, and the King had his party against the duke. Nor
|
||
were these home troubles lessened when the duke went to Castile to
|
||
urge his claim to the crown of that kingdom; for then the Duke of
|
||
Gloucester, another of Richard's uncles, opposed him, and
|
||
influenced the Parliament to demand the dismissal of the King's
|
||
favourite ministers. The King said in reply, that he would not for
|
||
such men dismiss the meanest servant in his kitchen. But, it had
|
||
begun to signify little what a King said when a Parliament was
|
||
determined; so Richard was at last obliged to give way, and to
|
||
agree to another Government of the kingdom, under a commission of
|
||
fourteen nobles, for a year. His uncle of Gloucester was at the
|
||
head of this commission, and, in fact, appointed everybody
|
||
composing it.
|
||
|
||
Having done all this, the King declared as soon as he saw an
|
||
opportunity that he had never meant to do it, and that it was all
|
||
illegal; and he got the judges secretly to sign a declaration to
|
||
that effect. The secret oozed out directly, and was carried to the
|
||
Duke of Gloucester. The Duke of Gloucester, at the head of forty
|
||
thousand men, met the King on his entering into London to enforce
|
||
his authority; the King was helpless against him; his favourites
|
||
and ministers were impeached and were mercilessly executed. Among
|
||
them were two men whom the people regarded with very different
|
||
feelings; one, Robert Tresilian, Chief Justice, who was hated for
|
||
having made what was called 'the bloody circuit' to try the
|
||
rioters; the other, Sir Simon Burley, an honourable knight, who had
|
||
been the dear friend of the Black Prince, and the governor and
|
||
guardian of the King. For this gentleman's life the good Queen
|
||
even begged of Gloucester on her knees; but Gloucester (with or
|
||
without reason) feared and hated him, and replied, that if she
|
||
valued her husband's crown, she had better beg no more. All this
|
||
was done under what was called by some the wonderful - and by
|
||
others, with better reason, the merciless - Parliament.
|
||
|
||
But Gloucester's power was not to last for ever. He held it for
|
||
only a year longer; in which year the famous battle of Otterbourne,
|
||
sung in the old ballad of Chevy Chase, was fought. When the year
|
||
was out, the King, turning suddenly to Gloucester, in the midst of
|
||
a great council said, 'Uncle, how old am I?' 'Your highness,'
|
||
returned the Duke, 'is in your twenty-second year.' 'Am I so
|
||
much?' said the King; 'then I will manage my own affairs! I am
|
||
much obliged to you, my good lords, for your past services, but I
|
||
need them no more.' He followed this up, by appointing a new
|
||
Chancellor and a new Treasurer, and announced to the people that he
|
||
had resumed the Government. He held it for eight years without
|
||
opposition. Through all that time, he kept his determination to
|
||
revenge himself some day upon his uncle Gloucester, in his own
|
||
breast.
|
||
|
||
At last the good Queen died, and then the King, desiring to take a
|
||
second wife, proposed to his council that he should marry Isabella,
|
||
of France, the daughter of Charles the Sixth: who, the French
|
||
courtiers said (as the English courtiers had said of Richard), was
|
||
a marvel of beauty and wit, and quite a phenomenon - of seven years
|
||
old. The council were divided about this marriage, but it took
|
||
place. It secured peace between England and France for a quarter
|
||
of a century; but it was strongly opposed to the prejudices of the
|
||
English people. The Duke of Gloucester, who was anxious to take
|
||
the occasion of making himself popular, declaimed against it
|
||
loudly, and this at length decided the King to execute the
|
||
vengeance he had been nursing so long.
|
||
|
||
He went with a gay company to the Duke of Gloucester's house,
|
||
Pleshey Castle, in Essex, where the Duke, suspecting nothing, came
|
||
out into the court-yard to receive his royal visitor. While the
|
||
King conversed in a friendly manner with the Duchess, the Duke was
|
||
quietly seized, hurried away, shipped for Calais, and lodged in the
|
||
castle there. His friends, the Earls of Arundel and Warwick, were
|
||
taken in the same treacherous manner, and confined to their
|
||
castles. A few days after, at Nottingham, they were impeached of
|
||
high treason. The Earl of Arundel was condemned and beheaded, and
|
||
the Earl of Warwick was banished. Then, a writ was sent by a
|
||
messenger to the Governor of Calais, requiring him to send the Duke
|
||
of Gloucester over to be tried. In three days he returned an
|
||
answer that he could not do that, because the Duke of Gloucester
|
||
had died in prison. The Duke was declared a traitor, his property
|
||
was confiscated to the King, a real or pretended confession he had
|
||
made in prison to one of the Justices of the Common Pleas was
|
||
produced against him, and there was an end of the matter. How the
|
||
unfortunate duke died, very few cared to know. Whether he really
|
||
died naturally; whether he killed himself; whether, by the King's
|
||
order, he was strangled, or smothered between two beds (as a
|
||
serving-man of the Governor's named Hall, did afterwards declare),
|
||
cannot be discovered. There is not much doubt that he was killed,
|
||
somehow or other, by his nephew's orders. Among the most active
|
||
nobles in these proceedings were the King's cousin, Henry
|
||
Bolingbroke, whom the King had made Duke of Hereford to smooth down
|
||
the old family quarrels, and some others: who had in the family-
|
||
plotting times done just such acts themselves as they now condemned
|
||
in the duke. They seem to have been a corrupt set of men; but such
|
||
men were easily found about the court in such days.
|
||
|
||
The people murmured at all this, and were still very sore about the
|
||
French marriage. The nobles saw how little the King cared for law,
|
||
and how crafty he was, and began to be somewhat afraid for
|
||
themselves. The King's life was a life of continued feasting and
|
||
excess; his retinue, down to the meanest servants, were dressed in
|
||
the most costly manner, and caroused at his tables, it is related,
|
||
to the number of ten thousand persons every day. He himself,
|
||
surrounded by a body of ten thousand archers, and enriched by a
|
||
duty on wool which the Commons had granted him for life, saw no
|
||
danger of ever being otherwise than powerful and absolute, and was
|
||
as fierce and haughty as a King could be.
|
||
|
||
He had two of his old enemies left, in the persons of the Dukes of
|
||
Hereford and Norfolk. Sparing these no more than the others, he
|
||
tampered with the Duke of Hereford until he got him to declare
|
||
before the Council that the Duke of Norfolk had lately held some
|
||
treasonable talk with him, as he was riding near Brentford; and
|
||
that he had told him, among other things, that he could not believe
|
||
the King's oath - which nobody could, I should think. For this
|
||
treachery he obtained a pardon, and the Duke of Norfolk was
|
||
summoned to appear and defend himself. As he denied the charge and
|
||
said his accuser was a liar and a traitor, both noblemen, according
|
||
to the manner of those times, were held in custody, and the truth
|
||
was ordered to be decided by wager of battle at Coventry. This
|
||
wager of battle meant that whosoever won the combat was to be
|
||
considered in the right; which nonsense meant in effect, that no
|
||
strong man could ever be wrong. A great holiday was made; a great
|
||
crowd assembled, with much parade and show; and the two combatants
|
||
were about to rush at each other with their lances, when the King,
|
||
sitting in a pavilion to see fair, threw down the truncheon he
|
||
carried in his hand, and forbade the battle. The Duke of Hereford
|
||
was to be banished for ten years, and the Duke of Norfolk was to be
|
||
banished for life. So said the King. The Duke of Hereford went to
|
||
France, and went no farther. The Duke of Norfolk made a pilgrimage
|
||
to the Holy Land, and afterwards died at Venice of a broken heart.
|
||
|
||
Faster and fiercer, after this, the King went on in his career.
|
||
The Duke of Lancaster, who was the father of the Duke of Hereford,
|
||
died soon after the departure of his son; and, the King, although
|
||
he had solemnly granted to that son leave to inherit his father's
|
||
property, if it should come to him during his banishment,
|
||
immediately seized it all, like a robber. The judges were so
|
||
afraid of him, that they disgraced themselves by declaring this
|
||
theft to be just and lawful. His avarice knew no bounds. He
|
||
outlawed seventeen counties at once, on a frivolous pretence,
|
||
merely to raise money by way of fines for misconduct. In short, he
|
||
did as many dishonest things as he could; and cared so little for
|
||
the discontent of his subjects - though even the spaniel favourites
|
||
began to whisper to him that there was such a thing as discontent
|
||
afloat - that he took that time, of all others, for leaving England
|
||
and making an expedition against the Irish.
|
||
|
||
He was scarcely gone, leaving the DUKE OF YORK Regent in his
|
||
absence, when his cousin, Henry of Hereford, came over from France
|
||
to claim the rights of which he had been so monstrously deprived.
|
||
He was immediately joined by the two great Earls of Northumberland
|
||
and Westmoreland; and his uncle, the Regent, finding the King's
|
||
cause unpopular, and the disinclination of the army to act against
|
||
Henry, very strong, withdrew with the Royal forces towards Bristol.
|
||
Henry, at the head of an army, came from Yorkshire (where he had
|
||
landed) to London and followed him. They joined their forces - how
|
||
they brought that about, is not distinctly understood - and
|
||
proceeded to Bristol Castle, whither three noblemen had taken the
|
||
young Queen. The castle surrendering, they presently put those
|
||
three noblemen to death. The Regent then remained there, and Henry
|
||
went on to Chester.
|
||
|
||
All this time, the boisterous weather had prevented the King from
|
||
receiving intelligence of what had occurred. At length it was
|
||
conveyed to him in Ireland, and he sent over the EARL OF SALISBURY,
|
||
who, landing at Conway, rallied the Welshmen, and waited for the
|
||
King a whole fortnight; at the end of that time the Welshmen, who
|
||
were perhaps not very warm for him in the beginning, quite cooled
|
||
down and went home. When the King did land on the coast at last,
|
||
he came with a pretty good power, but his men cared nothing for
|
||
him, and quickly deserted. Supposing the Welshmen to be still at
|
||
Conway, he disguised himself as a priest, and made for that place
|
||
in company with his two brothers and some few of their adherents.
|
||
But, there were no Welshmen left - only Salisbury and a hundred
|
||
soldiers. In this distress, the King's two brothers, Exeter and
|
||
Surrey, offered to go to Henry to learn what his intentions were.
|
||
Surrey, who was true to Richard, was put into prison. Exeter, who
|
||
was false, took the royal badge, which was a hart, off his shield,
|
||
and assumed the rose, the badge of Henry. After this, it was
|
||
pretty plain to the King what Henry's intentions were, without
|
||
sending any more messengers to ask.
|
||
|
||
The fallen King, thus deserted - hemmed in on all sides, and
|
||
pressed with hunger - rode here and rode there, and went to this
|
||
castle, and went to that castle, endeavouring to obtain some
|
||
provisions, but could find none. He rode wretchedly back to
|
||
Conway, and there surrendered himself to the Earl of
|
||
Northumberland, who came from Henry, in reality to take him
|
||
prisoner, but in appearance to offer terms; and whose men were
|
||
hidden not far off. By this earl he was conducted to the castle of
|
||
Flint, where his cousin Henry met him, and dropped on his knee as
|
||
if he were still respectful to his sovereign.
|
||
|
||
'Fair cousin of Lancaster,' said the King, 'you are very welcome'
|
||
(very welcome, no doubt; but he would have been more so, in chains
|
||
or without a head).
|
||
|
||
'My lord,' replied Henry, 'I am come a little before my time; but,
|
||
with your good pleasure, I will show you the reason. Your people
|
||
complain with some bitterness, that you have ruled them rigorously
|
||
for two-and-twenty years. Now, if it please God, I will help you
|
||
to govern them better in future.'
|
||
|
||
'Fair cousin,' replied the abject King, 'since it pleaseth you, it
|
||
pleaseth me mightily.'
|
||
|
||
After this, the trumpets sounded, and the King was stuck on a
|
||
wretched horse, and carried prisoner to Chester, where he was made
|
||
to issue a proclamation, calling a Parliament. From Chester he was
|
||
taken on towards London. At Lichfield he tried to escape by
|
||
getting out of a window and letting himself down into a garden; it
|
||
was all in vain, however, and he was carried on and shut up in the
|
||
Tower, where no one pitied him, and where the whole people, whose
|
||
patience he had quite tired out, reproached him without mercy.
|
||
Before he got there, it is related, that his very dog left him and
|
||
departed from his side to lick the hand of Henry.
|
||
|
||
The day before the Parliament met, a deputation went to this
|
||
wrecked King, and told him that he had promised the Earl of
|
||
Northumberland at Conway Castle to resign the crown. He said he
|
||
was quite ready to do it, and signed a paper in which he renounced
|
||
his authority and absolved his people from their allegiance to him.
|
||
He had so little spirit left that he gave his royal ring to his
|
||
triumphant cousin Henry with his own hand, and said, that if he
|
||
could have had leave to appoint a successor, that same Henry was
|
||
the man of all others whom he would have named. Next day, the
|
||
Parliament assembled in Westminster Hall, where Henry sat at the
|
||
side of the throne, which was empty and covered with a cloth of
|
||
gold. The paper just signed by the King was read to the multitude
|
||
amid shouts of joy, which were echoed through all the streets; when
|
||
some of the noise had died away, the King was formally deposed.
|
||
Then Henry arose, and, making the sign of the cross on his forehead
|
||
and breast, challenged the realm of England as his right; the
|
||
archbishops of Canterbury and York seated him on the throne.
|
||
|
||
The multitude shouted again, and the shouts re-echoed throughout
|
||
all the streets. No one remembered, now, that Richard the Second
|
||
had ever been the most beautiful, the wisest, and the best of
|
||
princes; and he now made living (to my thinking) a far more sorry
|
||
spectacle in the Tower of London, than Wat Tyler had made, lying
|
||
dead, among the hoofs of the royal horses in Smithfield.
|
||
|
||
The Poll-tax died with Wat. The Smiths to the King and Royal
|
||
Family, could make no chains in which the King could hang the
|
||
people's recollection of him; so the Poll-tax was never collected.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XX - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE FOURTH, CALLED BOLINGBROKE
|
||
|
||
DURING the last reign, the preaching of Wickliffe against the pride
|
||
and cunning of the Pope and all his men, had made a great noise in
|
||
England. Whether the new King wished to be in favour with the
|
||
priests, or whether he hoped, by pretending to be very religious,
|
||
to cheat Heaven itself into the belief that he was not a usurper, I
|
||
don't know. Both suppositions are likely enough. It is certain
|
||
that he began his reign by making a strong show against the
|
||
followers of Wickliffe, who were called Lollards, or heretics -
|
||
although his father, John of Gaunt, had been of that way of
|
||
thinking, as he himself had been more than suspected of being. It
|
||
is no less certain that he first established in England the
|
||
detestable and atrocious custom, brought from abroad, of burning
|
||
those people as a punishment for their opinions. It was the
|
||
importation into England of one of the practices of what was called
|
||
the Holy Inquisition: which was the most UNholy and the most
|
||
infamous tribunal that ever disgraced mankind, and made men more
|
||
like demons than followers of Our Saviour.
|
||
|
||
No real right to the crown, as you know, was in this King. Edward
|
||
Mortimer, the young Earl of March - who was only eight or nine
|
||
years old, and who was descended from the Duke of Clarence, the
|
||
elder brother of Henry's father - was, by succession, the real heir
|
||
to the throne. However, the King got his son declared Prince of
|
||
Wales; and, obtaining possession of the young Earl of March and his
|
||
little brother, kept them in confinement (but not severely) in
|
||
Windsor Castle. He then required the Parliament to decide what was
|
||
to be done with the deposed King, who was quiet enough, and who
|
||
only said that he hoped his cousin Henry would be 'a good lord' to
|
||
him. The Parliament replied that they would recommend his being
|
||
kept in some secret place where the people could not resort, and
|
||
where his friends could not be admitted to see him. Henry
|
||
accordingly passed this sentence upon him, and it now began to be
|
||
pretty clear to the nation that Richard the Second would not live
|
||
very long.
|
||
|
||
It was a noisy Parliament, as it was an unprincipled one, and the
|
||
Lords quarrelled so violently among themselves as to which of them
|
||
had been loyal and which disloyal, and which consistent and which
|
||
inconsistent, that forty gauntlets are said to have been thrown
|
||
upon the floor at one time as challenges to as many battles: the
|
||
truth being that they were all false and base together, and had
|
||
been, at one time with the old King, and at another time with the
|
||
new one, and seldom true for any length of time to any one. They
|
||
soon began to plot again. A conspiracy was formed to invite the
|
||
King to a tournament at Oxford, and then to take him by surprise
|
||
and kill him. This murderous enterprise, which was agreed upon at
|
||
secret meetings in the house of the Abbot of Westminster, was
|
||
betrayed by the Earl of Rutland - one of the conspirators. The
|
||
King, instead of going to the tournament or staying at Windsor
|
||
(where the conspirators suddenly went, on finding themselves
|
||
discovered, with the hope of seizing him), retired to London,
|
||
proclaimed them all traitors, and advanced upon them with a great
|
||
force. They retired into the west of England, proclaiming Richard
|
||
King; but, the people rose against them, and they were all slain.
|
||
Their treason hastened the death of the deposed monarch. Whether
|
||
he was killed by hired assassins, or whether he was starved to
|
||
death, or whether he refused food on hearing of his brothers being
|
||
killed (who were in that plot), is very doubtful. He met his death
|
||
somehow; and his body was publicly shown at St. Paul's Cathedral
|
||
with only the lower part of the face uncovered. I can scarcely
|
||
doubt that he was killed by the King's orders.
|
||
|
||
The French wife of the miserable Richard was now only ten years
|
||
old; and, when her father, Charles of France, heard of her
|
||
misfortunes and of her lonely condition in England, he went mad:
|
||
as he had several times done before, during the last five or six
|
||
years. The French Dukes of Burgundy and Bourbon took up the poor
|
||
girl's cause, without caring much about it, but on the chance of
|
||
getting something out of England. The people of Bordeaux, who had
|
||
a sort of superstitious attachment to the memory of Richard,
|
||
because he was born there, swore by the Lord that he had been the
|
||
best man in all his kingdom - which was going rather far - and
|
||
promised to do great things against the English. Nevertheless,
|
||
when they came to consider that they, and the whole people of
|
||
France, were ruined by their own nobles, and that the English rule
|
||
was much the better of the two, they cooled down again; and the two
|
||
dukes, although they were very great men, could do nothing without
|
||
them. Then, began negotiations between France and England for the
|
||
sending home to Paris of the poor little Queen with all her jewels
|
||
and her fortune of two hundred thousand francs in gold. The King
|
||
was quite willing to restore the young lady, and even the jewels;
|
||
but he said he really could not part with the money. So, at last
|
||
she was safely deposited at Paris without her fortune, and then the
|
||
Duke of Burgundy (who was cousin to the French King) began to
|
||
quarrel with the Duke of Orleans (who was brother to the French
|
||
King) about the whole matter; and those two dukes made France even
|
||
more wretched than ever.
|
||
|
||
As the idea of conquering Scotland was still popular at home, the
|
||
King marched to the river Tyne and demanded homage of the King of
|
||
that country. This being refused, he advanced to Edinburgh, but
|
||
did little there; for, his army being in want of provisions, and
|
||
the Scotch being very careful to hold him in check without giving
|
||
battle, he was obliged to retire. It is to his immortal honour
|
||
that in this sally he burnt no villages and slaughtered no people,
|
||
but was particularly careful that his army should be merciful and
|
||
harmless. It was a great example in those ruthless times.
|
||
|
||
A war among the border people of England and Scotland went on for
|
||
twelve months, and then the Earl of Northumberland, the nobleman
|
||
who had helped Henry to the crown, began to rebel against him -
|
||
probably because nothing that Henry could do for him would satisfy
|
||
his extravagant expectations. There was a certain Welsh gentleman,
|
||
named OWEN GLENDOWER, who had been a student in one of the Inns of
|
||
Court, and had afterwards been in the service of the late King,
|
||
whose Welsh property was taken from him by a powerful lord related
|
||
to the present King, who was his neighbour. Appealing for redress,
|
||
and getting none, he took up arms, was made an outlaw, and declared
|
||
himself sovereign of Wales. He pretended to be a magician; and not
|
||
only were the Welsh people stupid enough to believe him, but, even
|
||
Henry believed him too; for, making three expeditions into Wales,
|
||
and being three times driven back by the wildness of the country,
|
||
the bad weather, and the skill of Glendower, he thought he was
|
||
defeated by the Welshman's magic arts. However, he took Lord Grey
|
||
and Sir Edmund Mortimer, prisoners, and allowed the relatives of
|
||
Lord Grey to ransom him, but would not extend such favour to Sir
|
||
Edmund Mortimer. Now, Henry Percy, called HOTSPUR, son of the Earl
|
||
of Northumberland, who was married to Mortimer's sister, is
|
||
supposed to have taken offence at this; and, therefore, in
|
||
conjunction with his father and some others, to have joined Owen
|
||
Glendower, and risen against Henry. It is by no means clear that
|
||
this was the real cause of the conspiracy; but perhaps it was made
|
||
the pretext. It was formed, and was very powerful; including
|
||
SCROOP, Archbishop of York, and the EARL OF DOUGLAS, a powerful and
|
||
brave Scottish nobleman. The King was prompt and active, and the
|
||
two armies met at Shrewsbury.
|
||
|
||
There were about fourteen thousand men in each. The old Earl of
|
||
Northumberland being sick, the rebel forces were led by his son.
|
||
The King wore plain armour to deceive the enemy; and four noblemen,
|
||
with the same object, wore the royal arms. The rebel charge was so
|
||
furious, that every one of those gentlemen was killed, the royal
|
||
standard was beaten down, and the young Prince of Wales was
|
||
severely wounded in the face. But he was one of the bravest and
|
||
best soldiers that ever lived, and he fought so well, and the
|
||
King's troops were so encouraged by his bold example, that they
|
||
rallied immediately, and cut the enemy's forces all to pieces.
|
||
Hotspur was killed by an arrow in the brain, and the rout was so
|
||
complete that the whole rebellion was struck down by this one blow.
|
||
The Earl of Northumberland surrendered himself soon after hearing
|
||
of the death of his son, and received a pardon for all his
|
||
offences.
|
||
|
||
There were some lingerings of rebellion yet: Owen Glendower being
|
||
retired to Wales, and a preposterous story being spread among the
|
||
ignorant people that King Richard was still alive. How they could
|
||
have believed such nonsense it is difficult to imagine; but they
|
||
certainly did suppose that the Court fool of the late King, who was
|
||
something like him, was he, himself; so that it seemed as if, after
|
||
giving so much trouble to the country in his life, he was still to
|
||
trouble it after his death. This was not the worst. The young
|
||
Earl of March and his brother were stolen out of Windsor Castle.
|
||
Being retaken, and being found to have been spirited away by one
|
||
Lady Spencer, she accused her own brother, that Earl of Rutland who
|
||
was in the former conspiracy and was now Duke of York, of being in
|
||
the plot. For this he was ruined in fortune, though not put to
|
||
death; and then another plot arose among the old Earl of
|
||
Northumberland, some other lords, and that same Scroop, Archbishop
|
||
of York, who was with the rebels before. These conspirators caused
|
||
a writing to be posted on the church doors, accusing the King of a
|
||
variety of crimes; but, the King being eager and vigilant to oppose
|
||
them, they were all taken, and the Archbishop was executed. This
|
||
was the first time that a great churchman had been slain by the law
|
||
in England; but the King was resolved that it should be done, and
|
||
done it was.
|
||
|
||
The next most remarkable event of this time was the seizure, by
|
||
Henry, of the heir to the Scottish throne - James, a boy of nine
|
||
years old. He had been put aboard-ship by his father, the Scottish
|
||
King Robert, to save him from the designs of his uncle, when, on
|
||
his way to France, he was accidentally taken by some English
|
||
cruisers. He remained a prisoner in England for nineteen years,
|
||
and became in his prison a student and a famous poet.
|
||
|
||
With the exception of occasional troubles with the Welsh and with
|
||
the French, the rest of King Henry's reign was quiet enough. But,
|
||
the King was far from happy, and probably was troubled in his
|
||
conscience by knowing that he had usurped the crown, and had
|
||
occasioned the death of his miserable cousin. The Prince of Wales,
|
||
though brave and generous, is said to have been wild and
|
||
dissipated, and even to have drawn his sword on GASCOIGNE, the
|
||
Chief Justice of the King's Bench, because he was firm in dealing
|
||
impartially with one of his dissolute companions. Upon this the
|
||
Chief Justice is said to have ordered him immediately to prison;
|
||
the Prince of Wales is said to have submitted with a good grace;
|
||
and the King is said to have exclaimed, 'Happy is the monarch who
|
||
has so just a judge, and a son so willing to obey the laws.' This
|
||
is all very doubtful, and so is another story (of which Shakespeare
|
||
has made beautiful use), that the Prince once took the crown out of
|
||
his father's chamber as he was sleeping, and tried it on his own
|
||
head.
|
||
|
||
The King's health sank more and more, and he became subject to
|
||
violent eruptions on the face and to bad epileptic fits, and his
|
||
spirits sank every day. At last, as he was praying before the
|
||
shrine of St. Edward at Westminster Abbey, he was seized with a
|
||
terrible fit, and was carried into the Abbot's chamber, where he
|
||
presently died. It had been foretold that he would die at
|
||
Jerusalem, which certainly is not, and never was, Westminster.
|
||
But, as the Abbot's room had long been called the Jerusalem
|
||
chamber, people said it was all the same thing, and were quite
|
||
satisfied with the prediction.
|
||
|
||
The King died on the 20th of March, 1413, in the forty-seventh year
|
||
of his age, and the fourteenth of his reign. He was buried in
|
||
Canterbury Cathedral. He had been twice married, and had, by his
|
||
first wife, a family of four sons and two daughters. Considering
|
||
his duplicity before he came to the throne, his unjust seizure of
|
||
it, and above all, his making that monstrous law for the burning of
|
||
what the priests called heretics, he was a reasonably good king, as
|
||
kings went.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXI - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE FIFTH
|
||
|
||
FIRST PART
|
||
|
||
THE Prince of Wales began his reign like a generous and honest man.
|
||
He set the young Earl of March free; he restored their estates and
|
||
their honours to the Percy family, who had lost them by their
|
||
rebellion against his father; he ordered the imbecile and
|
||
unfortunate Richard to be honourably buried among the Kings of
|
||
England; and he dismissed all his wild companions, with assurances
|
||
that they should not want, if they would resolve to be steady,
|
||
faithful, and true.
|
||
|
||
It is much easier to burn men than to burn their opinions; and
|
||
those of the Lollards were spreading every day. The Lollards were
|
||
represented by the priests - probably falsely for the most part -
|
||
to entertain treasonable designs against the new King; and Henry,
|
||
suffering himself to be worked upon by these representations,
|
||
sacrificed his friend Sir John Oldcastle, the Lord Cobham, to them,
|
||
after trying in vain to convert him by arguments. He was declared
|
||
guilty, as the head of the sect, and sentenced to the flames; but
|
||
he escaped from the Tower before the day of execution (postponed
|
||
for fifty days by the King himself), and summoned the Lollards to
|
||
meet him near London on a certain day. So the priests told the
|
||
King, at least. I doubt whether there was any conspiracy beyond
|
||
such as was got up by their agents. On the day appointed, instead
|
||
of five-and-twenty thousand men, under the command of Sir John
|
||
Oldcastle, in the meadows of St. Giles, the King found only eighty
|
||
men, and no Sir John at all. There was, in another place, an
|
||
addle-headed brewer, who had gold trappings to his horses, and a
|
||
pair of gilt spurs in his breast - expecting to be made a knight
|
||
next day by Sir John, and so to gain the right to wear them - but
|
||
there was no Sir John, nor did anybody give information respecting
|
||
him, though the King offered great rewards for such intelligence.
|
||
Thirty of these unfortunate Lollards were hanged and drawn
|
||
immediately, and were then burnt, gallows and all; and the various
|
||
prisons in and around London were crammed full of others. Some of
|
||
these unfortunate men made various confessions of treasonable
|
||
designs; but, such confessions were easily got, under torture and
|
||
the fear of fire, and are very little to be trusted. To finish the
|
||
sad story of Sir John Oldcastle at once, I may mention that he
|
||
escaped into Wales, and remained there safely, for four years.
|
||
When discovered by Lord Powis, it is very doubtful if he would have
|
||
been taken alive - so great was the old soldier's bravery - if a
|
||
miserable old woman had not come behind him and broken his legs
|
||
with a stool. He was carried to London in a horse-litter, was
|
||
fastened by an iron chain to a gibbet, and so roasted to death.
|
||
|
||
To make the state of France as plain as I can in a few words, I
|
||
should tell you that the Duke of Orleans, and the Duke of Burgundy,
|
||
commonly called 'John without fear,' had had a grand reconciliation
|
||
of their quarrel in the last reign, and had appeared to be quite in
|
||
a heavenly state of mind. Immediately after which, on a Sunday, in
|
||
the public streets of Paris, the Duke of Orleans was murdered by a
|
||
party of twenty men, set on by the Duke of Burgundy - according to
|
||
his own deliberate confession. The widow of King Richard had been
|
||
married in France to the eldest son of the Duke of Orleans. The
|
||
poor mad King was quite powerless to help her, and the Duke of
|
||
Burgundy became the real master of France. Isabella dying, her
|
||
husband (Duke of Orleans since the death of his father) married the
|
||
daughter of the Count of Armagnac, who, being a much abler man than
|
||
his young son-in-law, headed his party; thence called after him
|
||
Armagnacs. Thus, France was now in this terrible condition, that
|
||
it had in it the party of the King's son, the Dauphin Louis; the
|
||
party of the Duke of Burgundy, who was the father of the Dauphin's
|
||
ill-used wife; and the party of the Armagnacs; all hating each
|
||
other; all fighting together; all composed of the most depraved
|
||
nobles that the earth has ever known; and all tearing unhappy
|
||
France to pieces.
|
||
|
||
The late King had watched these dissensions from England, sensible
|
||
(like the French people) that no enemy of France could injure her
|
||
more than her own nobility. The present King now advanced a claim
|
||
to the French throne. His demand being, of course, refused, he
|
||
reduced his proposal to a certain large amount of French territory,
|
||
and to demanding the French princess, Catherine, in marriage, with
|
||
a fortune of two millions of golden crowns. He was offered less
|
||
territory and fewer crowns, and no princess; but he called his
|
||
ambassadors home and prepared for war. Then, he proposed to take
|
||
the princess with one million of crowns. The French Court replied
|
||
that he should have the princess with two hundred thousand crowns
|
||
less; he said this would not do (he had never seen the princess in
|
||
his life), and assembled his army at Southampton. There was a
|
||
short plot at home just at that time, for deposing him, and making
|
||
the Earl of March king; but the conspirators were all speedily
|
||
condemned and executed, and the King embarked for France.
|
||
|
||
It is dreadful to observe how long a bad example will be followed;
|
||
but, it is encouraging to know that a good example is never thrown
|
||
away. The King's first act on disembarking at the mouth of the
|
||
river Seine, three miles from Harfleur, was to imitate his father,
|
||
and to proclaim his solemn orders that the lives and property of
|
||
the peaceable inhabitants should be respected on pain of death. It
|
||
is agreed by French writers, to his lasting renown, that even while
|
||
his soldiers were suffering the greatest distress from want of
|
||
food, these commands were rigidly obeyed.
|
||
|
||
With an army in all of thirty thousand men, he besieged the town of
|
||
Harfleur both by sea and land for five weeks; at the end of which
|
||
time the town surrendered, and the inhabitants were allowed to
|
||
depart with only fivepence each, and a part of their clothes. All
|
||
the rest of their possessions was divided amongst the English army.
|
||
But, that army suffered so much, in spite of its successes, from
|
||
disease and privation, that it was already reduced one half.
|
||
Still, the King was determined not to retire until he had struck a
|
||
greater blow. Therefore, against the advice of all his
|
||
counsellors, he moved on with his little force towards Calais.
|
||
When he came up to the river Somme he was unable to cross, in
|
||
consequence of the fort being fortified; and, as the English moved
|
||
up the left bank of the river looking for a crossing, the French,
|
||
who had broken all the bridges, moved up the right bank, watching
|
||
them, and waiting to attack them when they should try to pass it.
|
||
At last the English found a crossing and got safely over. The
|
||
French held a council of war at Rouen, resolved to give the English
|
||
battle, and sent heralds to King Henry to know by which road he was
|
||
going. 'By the road that will take me straight to Calais!' said
|
||
the King, and sent them away with a present of a hundred crowns.
|
||
|
||
The English moved on, until they beheld the French, and then the
|
||
King gave orders to form in line of battle. The French not coming
|
||
on, the army broke up after remaining in battle array till night,
|
||
and got good rest and refreshment at a neighbouring village. The
|
||
French were now all lying in another village, through which they
|
||
knew the English must pass. They were resolved that the English
|
||
should begin the battle. The English had no means of retreat, if
|
||
their King had any such intention; and so the two armies passed the
|
||
night, close together.
|
||
|
||
To understand these armies well, you must bear in mind that the
|
||
immense French army had, among its notable persons, almost the
|
||
whole of that wicked nobility, whose debauchery had made France a
|
||
desert; and so besotted were they by pride, and by contempt for the
|
||
common people, that they had scarcely any bowmen (if indeed they
|
||
had any at all) in their whole enormous number: which, compared
|
||
with the English army, was at least as six to one. For these proud
|
||
fools had said that the bow was not a fit weapon for knightly
|
||
hands, and that France must be defended by gentlemen only. We
|
||
shall see, presently, what hand the gentlemen made of it.
|
||
|
||
Now, on the English side, among the little force, there was a good
|
||
proportion of men who were not gentlemen by any means, but who were
|
||
good stout archers for all that. Among them, in the morning -
|
||
having slept little at night, while the French were carousing and
|
||
making sure of victory - the King rode, on a grey horse; wearing on
|
||
his head a helmet of shining steel, surmounted by a crown of gold,
|
||
sparkling with precious stones; and bearing over his armour,
|
||
embroidered together, the arms of England and the arms of France.
|
||
The archers looked at the shining helmet and the crown of gold and
|
||
the sparkling jewels, and admired them all; but, what they admired
|
||
most was the King's cheerful face, and his bright blue eye, as he
|
||
told them that, for himself, he had made up his mind to conquer
|
||
there or to die there, and that England should never have a ransom
|
||
to pay for HIM. There was one brave knight who chanced to say that
|
||
he wished some of the many gallant gentlemen and good soldiers, who
|
||
were then idle at home in England, were there to increase their
|
||
numbers. But the King told him that, for his part, he did not wish
|
||
for one more man. 'The fewer we have,' said he, 'the greater will
|
||
be the honour we shall win!' His men, being now all in good heart,
|
||
were refreshed with bread and wine, and heard prayers, and waited
|
||
quietly for the French. The King waited for the French, because
|
||
they were drawn up thirty deep (the little English force was only
|
||
three deep), on very difficult and heavy ground; and he knew that
|
||
when they moved, there must be confusion among them.
|
||
|
||
As they did not move, he sent off two parties:- one to lie
|
||
concealed in a wood on the left of the French: the other, to set
|
||
fire to some houses behind the French after the battle should be
|
||
begun. This was scarcely done, when three of the proud French
|
||
gentlemen, who were to defend their country without any help from
|
||
the base peasants, came riding out, calling upon the English to
|
||
surrender. The King warned those gentlemen himself to retire with
|
||
all speed if they cared for their lives, and ordered the English
|
||
banners to advance. Upon that, Sir Thomas Erpingham, a great
|
||
English general, who commanded the archers, threw his truncheon
|
||
into the air, joyfully, and all the English men, kneeling down upon
|
||
the ground and biting it as if they took possession of the country,
|
||
rose up with a great shout and fell upon the French.
|
||
|
||
Every archer was furnished with a great stake tipped with iron; and
|
||
his orders were, to thrust this stake into the ground, to discharge
|
||
his arrow, and then to fall back, when the French horsemen came on.
|
||
As the haughty French gentlemen, who were to break the English
|
||
archers and utterly destroy them with their knightly lances, came
|
||
riding up, they were received with such a blinding storm of arrows,
|
||
that they broke and turned. Horses and men rolled over one
|
||
another, and the confusion was terrific. Those who rallied and
|
||
charged the archers got among the stakes on slippery and boggy
|
||
ground, and were so bewildered that the English archers - who wore
|
||
no armour, and even took off their leathern coats to be more active
|
||
- cut them to pieces, root and branch. Only three French horsemen
|
||
got within the stakes, and those were instantly despatched. All
|
||
this time the dense French army, being in armour, were sinking
|
||
knee-deep into the mire; while the light English archers, half-
|
||
naked, were as fresh and active as if they were fighting on a
|
||
marble floor.
|
||
|
||
But now, the second division of the French coming to the relief of
|
||
the first, closed up in a firm mass; the English, headed by the
|
||
King, attacked them; and the deadliest part of the battle began.
|
||
The King's brother, the Duke of Clarence, was struck down, and
|
||
numbers of the French surrounded him; but, King Henry, standing
|
||
over the body, fought like a lion until they were beaten off.
|
||
|
||
Presently, came up a band of eighteen French knights, bearing the
|
||
banner of a certain French lord, who had sworn to kill or take the
|
||
English King. One of them struck him such a blow with a battle-axe
|
||
that he reeled and fell upon his knees; but, his faithful men,
|
||
immediately closing round him, killed every one of those eighteen
|
||
knights, and so that French lord never kept his oath.
|
||
|
||
The French Duke of Alen<65>on, seeing this, made a desperate charge,
|
||
and cut his way close up to the Royal Standard of England. He beat
|
||
down the Duke of York, who was standing near it; and, when the King
|
||
came to his rescue, struck off a piece of the crown he wore. But,
|
||
he never struck another blow in this world; for, even as he was in
|
||
the act of saying who he was, and that he surrendered to the King;
|
||
and even as the King stretched out his hand to give him a safe and
|
||
honourable acceptance of the offer; he fell dead, pierced by
|
||
innumerable wounds.
|
||
|
||
The death of this nobleman decided the battle. The third division
|
||
of the French army, which had never struck a blow yet, and which
|
||
was, in itself, more than double the whole English power, broke and
|
||
fled. At this time of the fight, the English, who as yet had made
|
||
no prisoners, began to take them in immense numbers, and were still
|
||
occupied in doing so, or in killing those who would not surrender,
|
||
when a great noise arose in the rear of the French - their flying
|
||
banners were seen to stop - and King Henry, supposing a great
|
||
reinforcement to have arrived, gave orders that all the prisoners
|
||
should be put to death. As soon, however, as it was found that the
|
||
noise was only occasioned by a body of plundering peasants, the
|
||
terrible massacre was stopped.
|
||
|
||
Then King Henry called to him the French herald, and asked him to
|
||
whom the victory belonged.
|
||
|
||
The herald replied, 'To the King of England.'
|
||
|
||
'WE have not made this havoc and slaughter,' said the King. 'It is
|
||
the wrath of Heaven on the sins of France. What is the name of
|
||
that castle yonder?'
|
||
|
||
The herald answered him, 'My lord, it is the castle of Azincourt.'
|
||
Said the King, 'From henceforth this battle shall be known to
|
||
posterity, by the name of the battle of Azincourt.'
|
||
|
||
Our English historians have made it Agincourt; but, under that
|
||
name, it will ever be famous in English annals.
|
||
|
||
The loss upon the French side was enormous. Three Dukes were
|
||
killed, two more were taken prisoners, seven Counts were killed,
|
||
three more were taken prisoners, and ten thousand knights and
|
||
gentlemen were slain upon the field. The English loss amounted to
|
||
sixteen hundred men, among whom were the Duke of York and the Earl
|
||
of Suffolk.
|
||
|
||
War is a dreadful thing; and it is appalling to know how the
|
||
English were obliged, next morning, to kill those prisoners
|
||
mortally wounded, who yet writhed in agony upon the ground; how the
|
||
dead upon the French side were stripped by their own countrymen and
|
||
countrywomen, and afterwards buried in great pits; how the dead
|
||
upon the English side were piled up in a great barn, and how their
|
||
bodies and the barn were all burned together. It is in such
|
||
things, and in many more much too horrible to relate, that the real
|
||
desolation and wickedness of war consist. Nothing can make war
|
||
otherwise than horrible. But the dark side of it was little
|
||
thought of and soon forgotten; and it cast no shade of trouble on
|
||
the English people, except on those who had lost friends or
|
||
relations in the fight. They welcomed their King home with shouts
|
||
of rejoicing, and plunged into the water to bear him ashore on
|
||
their shoulders, and flocked out in crowds to welcome him in every
|
||
town through which he passed, and hung rich carpets and tapestries
|
||
out of the windows, and strewed the streets with flowers, and made
|
||
the fountains run with wine, as the great field of Agincourt had
|
||
run with blood.
|
||
|
||
SECOND PART
|
||
|
||
THAT proud and wicked French nobility who dragged their country to
|
||
destruction, and who were every day and every year regarded with
|
||
deeper hatred and detestation in the hearts of the French people,
|
||
learnt nothing, even from the defeat of Agincourt. So far from
|
||
uniting against the common enemy, they became, among themselves,
|
||
more violent, more bloody, and more false - if that were possible -
|
||
than they had been before. The Count of Armagnac persuaded the
|
||
French king to plunder of her treasures Queen Isabella of Bavaria,
|
||
and to make her a prisoner. She, who had hitherto been the bitter
|
||
enemy of the Duke of Burgundy, proposed to join him, in revenge.
|
||
He carried her off to Troyes, where she proclaimed herself Regent
|
||
of France, and made him her lieutenant. The Armagnac party were at
|
||
that time possessed of Paris; but, one of the gates of the city
|
||
being secretly opened on a certain night to a party of the duke's
|
||
men, they got into Paris, threw into the prisons all the Armagnacs
|
||
upon whom they could lay their hands, and, a few nights afterwards,
|
||
with the aid of a furious mob of sixty thousand people, broke the
|
||
prisons open, and killed them all. The former Dauphin was now
|
||
dead, and the King's third son bore the title. Him, in the height
|
||
of this murderous scene, a French knight hurried out of bed,
|
||
wrapped in a sheet, and bore away to Poitiers. So, when the
|
||
revengeful Isabella and the Duke of Burgundy entered Paris in
|
||
triumph after the slaughter of their enemies, the Dauphin was
|
||
proclaimed at Poitiers as the real Regent.
|
||
|
||
King Henry had not been idle since his victory of Agincourt, but
|
||
had repulsed a brave attempt of the French to recover Harfleur; had
|
||
gradually conquered a great part of Normandy; and, at this crisis
|
||
of affairs, took the important town of Rouen, after a siege of half
|
||
a year. This great loss so alarmed the French, that the Duke of
|
||
Burgundy proposed that a meeting to treat of peace should be held
|
||
between the French and the English kings in a plain by the river
|
||
Seine. On the appointed day, King Henry appeared there, with his
|
||
two brothers, Clarence and Gloucester, and a thousand men. The
|
||
unfortunate French King, being more mad than usual that day, could
|
||
not come; but the Queen came, and with her the Princess Catherine:
|
||
who was a very lovely creature, and who made a real impression on
|
||
King Henry, now that he saw her for the first time. This was the
|
||
most important circumstance that arose out of the meeting.
|
||
|
||
As if it were impossible for a French nobleman of that time to be
|
||
true to his word of honour in anything, Henry discovered that the
|
||
Duke of Burgundy was, at that very moment, in secret treaty with
|
||
the Dauphin; and he therefore abandoned the negotiation.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Burgundy and the Dauphin, each of whom with the best
|
||
reason distrusted the other as a noble ruffian surrounded by a
|
||
party of noble ruffians, were rather at a loss how to proceed after
|
||
this; but, at length they agreed to meet, on a bridge over the
|
||
river Yonne, where it was arranged that there should be two strong
|
||
gates put up, with an empty space between them; and that the Duke
|
||
of Burgundy should come into that space by one gate, with ten men
|
||
only; and that the Dauphin should come into that space by the other
|
||
gate, also with ten men, and no more.
|
||
|
||
So far the Dauphin kept his word, but no farther. When the Duke of
|
||
Burgundy was on his knee before him in the act of speaking, one of
|
||
the Dauphin's noble ruffians cut the said duke down with a small
|
||
axe, and others speedily finished him.
|
||
|
||
It was in vain for the Dauphin to pretend that this base murder was
|
||
not done with his consent; it was too bad, even for France, and
|
||
caused a general horror. The duke's heir hastened to make a treaty
|
||
with King Henry, and the French Queen engaged that her husband
|
||
should consent to it, whatever it was. Henry made peace, on
|
||
condition of receiving the Princess Catherine in marriage, and
|
||
being made Regent of France during the rest of the King's lifetime,
|
||
and succeeding to the French crown at his death. He was soon
|
||
married to the beautiful Princess, and took her proudly home to
|
||
England, where she was crowned with great honour and glory.
|
||
|
||
This peace was called the Perpetual Peace; we shall soon see how
|
||
long it lasted. It gave great satisfaction to the French people,
|
||
although they were so poor and miserable, that, at the time of the
|
||
celebration of the Royal marriage, numbers of them were dying with
|
||
starvation, on the dunghills in the streets of Paris. There was
|
||
some resistance on the part of the Dauphin in some few parts of
|
||
France, but King Henry beat it all down.
|
||
|
||
And now, with his great possessions in France secured, and his
|
||
beautiful wife to cheer him, and a son born to give him greater
|
||
happiness, all appeared bright before him. But, in the fulness of
|
||
his triumph and the height of his power, Death came upon him, and
|
||
his day was done. When he fell ill at Vincennes, and found that he
|
||
could not recover, he was very calm and quiet, and spoke serenely
|
||
to those who wept around his bed. His wife and child, he said, he
|
||
left to the loving care of his brother the Duke of Bedford, and his
|
||
other faithful nobles. He gave them his advice that England should
|
||
establish a friendship with the new Duke of Burgundy, and offer him
|
||
the regency of France; that it should not set free the royal
|
||
princes who had been taken at Agincourt; and that, whatever quarrel
|
||
might arise with France, England should never make peace without
|
||
holding Normandy. Then, he laid down his head, and asked the
|
||
attendant priests to chant the penitential psalms. Amid which
|
||
solemn sounds, on the thirty-first of August, one thousand four
|
||
hundred and twenty-two, in only the thirty-fourth year of his age
|
||
and the tenth of his reign, King Henry the Fifth passed away.
|
||
|
||
Slowly and mournfully they carried his embalmed body in a
|
||
procession of great state to Paris, and thence to Rouen where his
|
||
Queen was: from whom the sad intelligence of his death was
|
||
concealed until he had been dead some days. Thence, lying on a bed
|
||
of crimson and gold, with a golden crown upon the head, and a
|
||
golden ball and sceptre lying in the nerveless hands, they carried
|
||
it to Calais, with such a great retinue as seemed to dye the road
|
||
black. The King of Scotland acted as chief mourner, all the Royal
|
||
Household followed, the knights wore black armour and black plumes
|
||
of feathers, crowds of men bore torches, making the night as light
|
||
as day; and the widowed Princess followed last of all. At Calais
|
||
there was a fleet of ships to bring the funeral host to Dover. And
|
||
so, by way of London Bridge, where the service for the dead was
|
||
chanted as it passed along, they brought the body to Westminster
|
||
Abbey, and there buried it with great respect.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXII - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE SIXTH
|
||
|
||
PART THE FIRST
|
||
|
||
IT had been the wish of the late King, that while his infant son
|
||
KING HENRY THE SIXTH, at this time only nine months old, was under
|
||
age, the Duke of Gloucester should be appointed Regent. The
|
||
English Parliament, however, preferred to appoint a Council of
|
||
Regency, with the Duke of Bedford at its head: to be represented,
|
||
in his absence only, by the Duke of Gloucester. The Parliament
|
||
would seem to have been wise in this, for Gloucester soon showed
|
||
himself to be ambitious and troublesome, and, in the gratification
|
||
of his own personal schemes, gave dangerous offence to the Duke of
|
||
Burgundy, which was with difficulty adjusted.
|
||
|
||
As that duke declined the Regency of France, it was bestowed by the
|
||
poor French King upon the Duke of Bedford. But, the French King
|
||
dying within two months, the Dauphin instantly asserted his claim
|
||
to the French throne, and was actually crowned under the title of
|
||
CHARLES THE SEVENTH. The Duke of Bedford, to be a match for him,
|
||
entered into a friendly league with the Dukes of Burgundy and
|
||
Brittany, and gave them his two sisters in marriage. War with
|
||
France was immediately renewed, and the Perpetual Peace came to an
|
||
untimely end.
|
||
|
||
In the first campaign, the English, aided by this alliance, were
|
||
speedily successful. As Scotland, however, had sent the French
|
||
five thousand men, and might send more, or attack the North of
|
||
England while England was busy with France, it was considered that
|
||
it would be a good thing to offer the Scottish King, James, who had
|
||
been so long imprisoned, his liberty, on his paying forty thousand
|
||
pounds for his board and lodging during nineteen years, and
|
||
engaging to forbid his subjects from serving under the flag of
|
||
France. It is pleasant to know, not only that the amiable captive
|
||
at last regained his freedom upon these terms, but, that he married
|
||
a noble English lady, with whom he had been long in love, and
|
||
became an excellent King. I am afraid we have met with some Kings
|
||
in this history, and shall meet with some more, who would have been
|
||
very much the better, and would have left the world much happier,
|
||
if they had been imprisoned nineteen years too.
|
||
|
||
In the second campaign, the English gained a considerable victory
|
||
at Verneuil, in a battle which was chiefly remarkable, otherwise,
|
||
for their resorting to the odd expedient of tying their baggage-
|
||
horses together by the heads and tails, and jumbling them up with
|
||
the baggage, so as to convert them into a sort of live
|
||
fortification - which was found useful to the troops, but which I
|
||
should think was not agreeable to the horses. For three years
|
||
afterwards very little was done, owing to both sides being too poor
|
||
for war, which is a very expensive entertainment; but, a council
|
||
was then held in Paris, in which it was decided to lay siege to the
|
||
town of Orleans, which was a place of great importance to the
|
||
Dauphin's cause. An English army of ten thousand men was
|
||
despatched on this service, under the command of the Earl of
|
||
Salisbury, a general of fame. He being unfortunately killed early
|
||
in the siege, the Earl of Suffolk took his place; under whom
|
||
(reinforced by SIR JOHN FALSTAFF, who brought up four hundred
|
||
waggons laden with salt herrings and other provisions for the
|
||
troops, and, beating off the French who tried to intercept him,
|
||
came victorious out of a hot skirmish, which was afterwards called
|
||
in jest the Battle of the Herrings) the town of Orleans was so
|
||
completely hemmed in, that the besieged proposed to yield it up to
|
||
their countryman the Duke of Burgundy. The English general,
|
||
however, replied that his English men had won it, so far, by their
|
||
blood and valour, and that his English men must have it. There
|
||
seemed to be no hope for the town, or for the Dauphin, who was so
|
||
dismayed that he even thought of flying to Scotland or to Spain -
|
||
when a peasant girl rose up and changed the whole state of affairs.
|
||
|
||
The story of this peasant girl I have now to tell.
|
||
|
||
PART THE SECOND: THE STORY OF JOAN OF ARC
|
||
|
||
IN a remote village among some wild hills in the province of
|
||
Lorraine, there lived a countryman whose name was JACQUES D'ARC.
|
||
He had a daughter, JOAN OF ARC, who was at this time in her
|
||
twentieth year. She had been a solitary girl from her childhood;
|
||
she had often tended sheep and cattle for whole days where no human
|
||
figure was seen or human voice heard; and she had often knelt, for
|
||
hours together, in the gloomy, empty, little village chapel,
|
||
looking up at the altar and at the dim lamp burning before it,
|
||
until she fancied that she saw shadowy figures standing there, and
|
||
even that she heard them speak to her. The people in that part of
|
||
France were very ignorant and superstitious, and they had many
|
||
ghostly tales to tell about what they had dreamed, and what they
|
||
saw among the lonely hills when the clouds and the mists were
|
||
resting on them. So, they easily believed that Joan saw strange
|
||
sights, and they whispered among themselves that angels and spirits
|
||
talked to her.
|
||
|
||
At last, Joan told her father that she had one day been surprised
|
||
by a great unearthly light, and had afterwards heard a solemn
|
||
voice, which said it was Saint Michael's voice, telling her that
|
||
she was to go and help the Dauphin. Soon after this (she said),
|
||
Saint Catherine and Saint Margaret had appeared to her with
|
||
sparkling crowns upon their heads, and had encouraged her to be
|
||
virtuous and resolute. These visions had returned sometimes; but
|
||
the Voices very often; and the voices always said, 'Joan, thou art
|
||
appointed by Heaven to go and help the Dauphin!' She almost always
|
||
heard them while the chapel bells were ringing.
|
||
|
||
There is no doubt, now, that Joan believed she saw and heard these
|
||
things. It is very well known that such delusions are a disease
|
||
which is not by any means uncommon. It is probable enough that
|
||
there were figures of Saint Michael, and Saint Catherine, and Saint
|
||
Margaret, in the little chapel (where they would be very likely to
|
||
have shining crowns upon their heads), and that they first gave
|
||
Joan the idea of those three personages. She had long been a
|
||
moping, fanciful girl, and, though she was a very good girl, I dare
|
||
say she was a little vain, and wishful for notoriety.
|
||
|
||
Her father, something wiser than his neighbours, said, 'I tell
|
||
thee, Joan, it is thy fancy. Thou hadst better have a kind husband
|
||
to take care of thee, girl, and work to employ thy mind!' But Joan
|
||
told him in reply, that she had taken a vow never to have a
|
||
husband, and that she must go as Heaven directed her, to help the
|
||
Dauphin.
|
||
|
||
It happened, unfortunately for her father's persuasions, and most
|
||
unfortunately for the poor girl, too, that a party of the Dauphin's
|
||
enemies found their way into the village while Joan's disorder was
|
||
at this point, and burnt the chapel, and drove out the inhabitants.
|
||
The cruelties she saw committed, touched Joan's heart and made her
|
||
worse. She said that the voices and the figures were now
|
||
continually with her; that they told her she was the girl who,
|
||
according to an old prophecy, was to deliver France; and she must
|
||
go and help the Dauphin, and must remain with him until he should
|
||
be crowned at Rheims: and that she must travel a long way to a
|
||
certain lord named BAUDRICOURT, who could and would, bring her into
|
||
the Dauphin's presence.
|
||
|
||
As her father still said, 'I tell thee, Joan, it is thy fancy,' she
|
||
set off to find out this lord, accompanied by an uncle, a poor
|
||
village wheelwright and cart-maker, who believed in the reality of
|
||
her visions. They travelled a long way and went on and on, over a
|
||
rough country, full of the Duke of Burgundy's men, and of all kinds
|
||
of robbers and marauders, until they came to where this lord was.
|
||
|
||
When his servants told him that there was a poor peasant girl named
|
||
Joan of Arc, accompanied by nobody but an old village wheelwright
|
||
and cart-maker, who wished to see him because she was commanded to
|
||
help the Dauphin and save France, Baudricourt burst out a-laughing,
|
||
and bade them send the girl away. But, he soon heard so much about
|
||
her lingering in the town, and praying in the churches, and seeing
|
||
visions, and doing harm to no one, that he sent for her, and
|
||
questioned her. As she said the same things after she had been
|
||
well sprinkled with holy water as she had said before the
|
||
sprinkling, Baudricourt began to think there might be something in
|
||
it. At all events, he thought it worth while to send her on to the
|
||
town of Chinon, where the Dauphin was. So, he bought her a horse,
|
||
and a sword, and gave her two squires to conduct her. As the
|
||
Voices had told Joan that she was to wear a man's dress, now, she
|
||
put one on, and girded her sword to her side, and bound spurs to
|
||
her heels, and mounted her horse and rode away with her two
|
||
squires. As to her uncle the wheelwright, he stood staring at his
|
||
niece in wonder until she was out of sight - as well he might - and
|
||
then went home again. The best place, too.
|
||
|
||
Joan and her two squires rode on and on, until they came to Chinon,
|
||
where she was, after some doubt, admitted into the Dauphin's
|
||
presence. Picking him out immediately from all his court, she told
|
||
him that she came commanded by Heaven to subdue his enemies and
|
||
conduct him to his coronation at Rheims. She also told him (or he
|
||
pretended so afterwards, to make the greater impression upon his
|
||
soldiers) a number of his secrets known only to himself, and,
|
||
furthermore, she said there was an old, old sword in the cathedral
|
||
of Saint Catherine at Fierbois, marked with five old crosses on the
|
||
blade, which Saint Catherine had ordered her to wear.
|
||
|
||
Now, nobody knew anything about this old, old sword, but when the
|
||
cathedral came to be examined - which was immediately done - there,
|
||
sure enough, the sword was found! The Dauphin then required a
|
||
number of grave priests and bishops to give him their opinion
|
||
whether the girl derived her power from good spirits or from evil
|
||
spirits, which they held prodigiously long debates about, in the
|
||
course of which several learned men fell fast asleep and snored
|
||
loudly. At last, when one gruff old gentleman had said to Joan,
|
||
'What language do your Voices speak?' and when Joan had replied to
|
||
the gruff old gentleman, 'A pleasanter language than yours,' they
|
||
agreed that it was all correct, and that Joan of Arc was inspired
|
||
from Heaven. This wonderful circumstance put new heart into the
|
||
Dauphin's soldiers when they heard of it, and dispirited the
|
||
English army, who took Joan for a witch.
|
||
|
||
So Joan mounted horse again, and again rode on and on, until she
|
||
came to Orleans. But she rode now, as never peasant girl had
|
||
ridden yet. She rode upon a white war-horse, in a suit of
|
||
glittering armour; with the old, old sword from the cathedral,
|
||
newly burnished, in her belt; with a white flag carried before her,
|
||
upon which were a picture of God, and the words JESUS MARIA. In
|
||
this splendid state, at the head of a great body of troops
|
||
escorting provisions of all kinds for the starving inhabitants of
|
||
Orleans, she appeared before that beleaguered city.
|
||
|
||
When the people on the walls beheld her, they cried out 'The Maid
|
||
is come! The Maid of the Prophecy is come to deliver us!' And
|
||
this, and the sight of the Maid fighting at the head of their men,
|
||
made the French so bold, and made the English so fearful, that the
|
||
English line of forts was soon broken, the troops and provisions
|
||
were got into the town, and Orleans was saved.
|
||
|
||
Joan, henceforth called THE MAID OF ORLEANS, remained within the
|
||
walls for a few days, and caused letters to be thrown over,
|
||
ordering Lord Suffolk and his Englishmen to depart from before the
|
||
town according to the will of Heaven. As the English general very
|
||
positively declined to believe that Joan knew anything about the
|
||
will of Heaven (which did not mend the matter with his soldiers,
|
||
for they stupidly said if she were not inspired she was a witch,
|
||
and it was of no use to fight against a witch), she mounted her
|
||
white war-horse again, and ordered her white banner to advance.
|
||
|
||
The besiegers held the bridge, and some strong towers upon the
|
||
bridge; and here the Maid of Orleans attacked them. The fight was
|
||
fourteen hours long. She planted a scaling ladder with her own
|
||
hands, and mounted a tower wall, but was struck by an English arrow
|
||
in the neck, and fell into the trench. She was carried away and
|
||
the arrow was taken out, during which operation she screamed and
|
||
cried with the pain, as any other girl might have done; but
|
||
presently she said that the Voices were speaking to her and
|
||
soothing her to rest. After a while, she got up, and was again
|
||
foremost in the fight. When the English who had seen her fall and
|
||
supposed her dead, saw this, they were troubled with the strangest
|
||
fears, and some of them cried out that they beheld Saint Michael on
|
||
a white horse (probably Joan herself) fighting for the French.
|
||
They lost the bridge, and lost the towers, and next day set their
|
||
chain of forts on fire, and left the place.
|
||
|
||
But as Lord Suffolk himself retired no farther than the town of
|
||
Jargeau, which was only a few miles off, the Maid of Orleans
|
||
besieged him there, and he was taken prisoner. As the white banner
|
||
scaled the wall, she was struck upon the head with a stone, and was
|
||
again tumbled down into the ditch; but, she only cried all the
|
||
more, as she lay there, 'On, on, my countrymen! And fear nothing,
|
||
for the Lord hath delivered them into our hands!' After this new
|
||
success of the Maid's, several other fortresses and places which
|
||
had previously held out against the Dauphin were delivered up
|
||
without a battle; and at Patay she defeated the remainder of the
|
||
English army, and set up her victorious white banner on a field
|
||
where twelve hundred Englishmen lay dead.
|
||
|
||
She now urged the Dauphin (who always kept out of the way when
|
||
there was any fighting) to proceed to Rheims, as the first part of
|
||
her mission was accomplished; and to complete the whole by being
|
||
crowned there. The Dauphin was in no particular hurry to do this,
|
||
as Rheims was a long way off, and the English and the Duke of
|
||
Burgundy were still strong in the country through which the road
|
||
lay. However, they set forth, with ten thousand men, and again the
|
||
Maid of Orleans rode on and on, upon her white war-horse, and in
|
||
her shining armour. Whenever they came to a town which yielded
|
||
readily, the soldiers believed in her; but, whenever they came to a
|
||
town which gave them any trouble, they began to murmur that she was
|
||
an impostor. The latter was particularly the case at Troyes, which
|
||
finally yielded, however, through the persuasion of one Richard, a
|
||
friar of the place. Friar Richard was in the old doubt about the
|
||
Maid of Orleans, until he had sprinkled her well with holy water,
|
||
and had also well sprinkled the threshold of the gate by which she
|
||
came into the city. Finding that it made no change in her or the
|
||
gate, he said, as the other grave old gentlemen had said, that it
|
||
was all right, and became her great ally.
|
||
|
||
So, at last, by dint of riding on and on, the Maid of Orleans, and
|
||
the Dauphin, and the ten thousand sometimes believing and sometimes
|
||
unbelieving men, came to Rheims. And in the great cathedral of
|
||
Rheims, the Dauphin actually was crowned Charles the Seventh in a
|
||
great assembly of the people. Then, the Maid, who with her white
|
||
banner stood beside the King in that hour of his triumph, kneeled
|
||
down upon the pavement at his feet, and said, with tears, that what
|
||
she had been inspired to do, was done, and that the only recompense
|
||
she asked for, was, that she should now have leave to go back to
|
||
her distant home, and her sturdily incredulous father, and her
|
||
first simple escort the village wheelwright and cart-maker. But
|
||
the King said 'No!' and made her and her family as noble as a King
|
||
could, and settled upon her the income of a Count.
|
||
|
||
Ah! happy had it been for the Maid of Orleans, if she had resumed
|
||
her rustic dress that day, and had gone home to the little chapel
|
||
and the wild hills, and had forgotten all these things, and had
|
||
been a good man's wife, and had heard no stranger voices than the
|
||
voices of little children!
|
||
|
||
It was not to be, and she continued helping the King (she did a
|
||
world for him, in alliance with Friar Richard), and trying to
|
||
improve the lives of the coarse soldiers, and leading a religious,
|
||
an unselfish, and a modest life, herself, beyond any doubt. Still,
|
||
many times she prayed the King to let her go home; and once she
|
||
even took off her bright armour and hung it up in a church, meaning
|
||
never to wear it more. But, the King always won her back again -
|
||
while she was of any use to him - and so she went on and on and on,
|
||
to her doom.
|
||
|
||
When the Duke of Bedford, who was a very able man, began to be
|
||
active for England, and, by bringing the war back into France and
|
||
by holding the Duke of Burgundy to his faith, to distress and
|
||
disturb Charles very much, Charles sometimes asked the Maid of
|
||
Orleans what the Voices said about it? But, the Voices had become
|
||
(very like ordinary voices in perplexed times) contradictory and
|
||
confused, so that now they said one thing, and now said another,
|
||
and the Maid lost credit every day. Charles marched on Paris,
|
||
which was opposed to him, and attacked the suburb of Saint Honore.
|
||
In this fight, being again struck down into the ditch, she was
|
||
abandoned by the whole army. She lay unaided among a heap of dead,
|
||
and crawled out how she could. Then, some of her believers went
|
||
over to an opposition Maid, Catherine of La Rochelle, who said she
|
||
was inspired to tell where there were treasures of buried money -
|
||
though she never did - and then Joan accidentally broke the old,
|
||
old sword, and others said that her power was broken with it.
|
||
Finally, at the siege of Compi<70>gne, held by the Duke of Burgundy,
|
||
where she did valiant service, she was basely left alone in a
|
||
retreat, though facing about and fighting to the last; and an
|
||
archer pulled her off her horse.
|
||
|
||
O the uproar that was made, and the thanksgivings that were sung,
|
||
about the capture of this one poor country-girl! O the way in
|
||
which she was demanded to be tried for sorcery and heresy, and
|
||
anything else you like, by the Inquisitor-General of France, and by
|
||
this great man, and by that great man, until it is wearisome to
|
||
think of! She was bought at last by the Bishop of Beauvais for ten
|
||
thousand francs, and was shut up in her narrow prison: plain Joan
|
||
of Arc again, and Maid of Orleans no more.
|
||
|
||
I should never have done if I were to tell you how they had Joan
|
||
out to examine her, and cross-examine her, and re-examine her, and
|
||
worry her into saying anything and everything; and how all sorts of
|
||
scholars and doctors bestowed their utmost tediousness upon her.
|
||
Sixteen times she was brought out and shut up again, and worried,
|
||
and entrapped, and argued with, until she was heart-sick of the
|
||
dreary business. On the last occasion of this kind she was brought
|
||
into a burial-place at Rouen, dismally decorated with a scaffold,
|
||
and a stake and faggots, and the executioner, and a pulpit with a
|
||
friar therein, and an awful sermon ready. It is very affecting to
|
||
know that even at that pass the poor girl honoured the mean vermin
|
||
of a King, who had so used her for his purposes and so abandoned
|
||
her; and, that while she had been regardless of reproaches heaped
|
||
upon herself, she spoke out courageously for him.
|
||
|
||
It was natural in one so young to hold to life. To save her life,
|
||
she signed a declaration prepared for her - signed it with a cross,
|
||
for she couldn't write - that all her visions and Voices had come
|
||
from the Devil. Upon her recanting the past, and protesting that
|
||
she would never wear a man's dress in future, she was condemned to
|
||
imprisonment for life, 'on the bread of sorrow and the water of
|
||
affliction.'
|
||
|
||
But, on the bread of sorrow and the water of affliction, the
|
||
visions and the Voices soon returned. It was quite natural that
|
||
they should do so, for that kind of disease is much aggravated by
|
||
fasting, loneliness, and anxiety of mind. It was not only got out
|
||
of Joan that she considered herself inspired again, but, she was
|
||
taken in a man's dress, which had been left - to entrap her - in
|
||
her prison, and which she put on, in her solitude; perhaps, in
|
||
remembrance of her past glories, perhaps, because the imaginary
|
||
Voices told her. For this relapse into the sorcery and heresy and
|
||
anything else you like, she was sentenced to be burnt to death.
|
||
And, in the market-place of Rouen, in the hideous dress which the
|
||
monks had invented for such spectacles; with priests and bishops
|
||
sitting in a gallery looking on, though some had the Christian
|
||
grace to go away, unable to endure the infamous scene; this
|
||
shrieking girl - last seen amidst the smoke and fire, holding a
|
||
crucifix between her hands; last heard, calling upon Christ - was
|
||
burnt to ashes. They threw her ashes into the river Seine; but
|
||
they will rise against her murderers on the last day.
|
||
|
||
From the moment of her capture, neither the French King nor one
|
||
single man in all his court raised a finger to save her. It is no
|
||
defence of them that they may have never really believed in her, or
|
||
that they may have won her victories by their skill and bravery.
|
||
The more they pretended to believe in her, the more they had caused
|
||
her to believe in herself; and she had ever been true to them, ever
|
||
brave, ever nobly devoted. But, it is no wonder, that they, who
|
||
were in all things false to themselves, false to one another, false
|
||
to their country, false to Heaven, false to Earth, should be
|
||
monsters of ingratitude and treachery to a helpless peasant girl.
|
||
|
||
In the picturesque old town of Rouen, where weeds and grass grow
|
||
high on the cathedral towers, and the venerable Norman streets are
|
||
still warm in the blessed sunlight though the monkish fires that
|
||
once gleamed horribly upon them have long grown cold, there is a
|
||
statue of Joan of Arc, in the scene of her last agony, the square
|
||
to which she has given its present name. I know some statues of
|
||
modern times - even in the World's metropolis, I think - which
|
||
commemorate less constancy, less earnestness, smaller claims upon
|
||
the world's attention, and much greater impostors.
|
||
|
||
PART THE THIRD
|
||
|
||
BAD deeds seldom prosper, happily for mankind; and the English
|
||
cause gained no advantage from the cruel death of Joan of Arc. For
|
||
a long time, the war went heavily on. The Duke of Bedford died;
|
||
the alliance with the Duke of Burgundy was broken; and Lord Talbot
|
||
became a great general on the English side in France. But, two of
|
||
the consequences of wars are, Famine - because the people cannot
|
||
peacefully cultivate the ground - and Pestilence, which comes of
|
||
want, misery, and suffering. Both these horrors broke out in both
|
||
countries, and lasted for two wretched years. Then, the war went
|
||
on again, and came by slow degrees to be so badly conducted by the
|
||
English government, that, within twenty years from the execution of
|
||
the Maid of Orleans, of all the great French conquests, the town of
|
||
Calais alone remained in English hands.
|
||
|
||
While these victories and defeats were taking place in the course
|
||
of time, many strange things happened at home. The young King, as
|
||
he grew up, proved to be very unlike his great father, and showed
|
||
himself a miserable puny creature. There was no harm in him - he
|
||
had a great aversion to shedding blood: which was something - but,
|
||
he was a weak, silly, helpless young man, and a mere shuttlecock to
|
||
the great lordly battledores about the Court.
|
||
|
||
Of these battledores, Cardinal Beaufort, a relation of the King,
|
||
and the Duke of Gloucester, were at first the most powerful. The
|
||
Duke of Gloucester had a wife, who was nonsensically accused of
|
||
practising witchcraft to cause the King's death and lead to her
|
||
husband's coming to the throne, he being the next heir. She was
|
||
charged with having, by the help of a ridiculous old woman named
|
||
Margery (who was called a witch), made a little waxen doll in the
|
||
King's likeness, and put it before a slow fire that it might
|
||
gradually melt away. It was supposed, in such cases, that the
|
||
death of the person whom the doll was made to represent, was sure
|
||
to happen. Whether the duchess was as ignorant as the rest of
|
||
them, and really did make such a doll with such an intention, I
|
||
don't know; but, you and I know very well that she might have made
|
||
a thousand dolls, if she had been stupid enough, and might have
|
||
melted them all, without hurting the King or anybody else.
|
||
However, she was tried for it, and so was old Margery, and so was
|
||
one of the duke's chaplains, who was charged with having assisted
|
||
them. Both he and Margery were put to death, and the duchess,
|
||
after being taken on foot and bearing a lighted candle, three times
|
||
round the City, as a penance, was imprisoned for life. The duke,
|
||
himself, took all this pretty quietly, and made as little stir
|
||
about the matter as if he were rather glad to be rid of the
|
||
duchess.
|
||
|
||
But, he was not destined to keep himself out of trouble long. The
|
||
royal shuttlecock being three-and-twenty, the battledores were very
|
||
anxious to get him married. The Duke of Gloucester wanted him to
|
||
marry a daughter of the Count of Armagnac; but, the Cardinal and
|
||
the Earl of Suffolk were all for MARGARET, the daughter of the King
|
||
of Sicily, who they knew was a resolute, ambitious woman and would
|
||
govern the King as she chose. To make friends with this lady, the
|
||
Earl of Suffolk, who went over to arrange the match, consented to
|
||
accept her for the King's wife without any fortune, and even to
|
||
give up the two most valuable possessions England then had in
|
||
France. So, the marriage was arranged, on terms very advantageous
|
||
to the lady; and Lord Suffolk brought her to England, and she was
|
||
married at Westminster. On what pretence this queen and her party
|
||
charged the Duke of Gloucester with high treason within a couple of
|
||
years, it is impossible to make out, the matter is so confused;
|
||
but, they pretended that the King's life was in danger, and they
|
||
took the duke prisoner. A fortnight afterwards, he was found dead
|
||
in bed (they said), and his body was shown to the people, and Lord
|
||
Suffolk came in for the best part of his estates. You know by this
|
||
time how strangely liable state prisoners were to sudden death.
|
||
|
||
If Cardinal Beaufort had any hand in this matter, it did him no
|
||
good, for he died within six weeks; thinking it very hard and
|
||
curious - at eighty years old! - that he could not live to be Pope.
|
||
|
||
This was the time when England had completed her loss of all her
|
||
great French conquests. The people charged the loss principally
|
||
upon the Earl of Suffolk, now a duke, who had made those easy terms
|
||
about the Royal Marriage, and who, they believed, had even been
|
||
bought by France. So he was impeached as a traitor, on a great
|
||
number of charges, but chiefly on accusations of having aided the
|
||
French King, and of designing to make his own son King of England.
|
||
The Commons and the people being violent against him, the King was
|
||
made (by his friends) to interpose to save him, by banishing him
|
||
for five years, and proroguing the Parliament. The duke had much
|
||
ado to escape from a London mob, two thousand strong, who lay in
|
||
wait for him in St. Giles's fields; but, he got down to his own
|
||
estates in Suffolk, and sailed away from Ipswich. Sailing across
|
||
the Channel, he sent into Calais to know if he might land there;
|
||
but, they kept his boat and men in the harbour, until an English
|
||
ship, carrying a hundred and fifty men and called the Nicholas of
|
||
the Tower, came alongside his little vessel, and ordered him on
|
||
board. 'Welcome, traitor, as men say,' was the captain's grim and
|
||
not very respectful salutation. He was kept on board, a prisoner,
|
||
for eight-and-forty hours, and then a small boat appeared rowing
|
||
toward the ship. As this boat came nearer, it was seen to have in
|
||
it a block, a rusty sword, and an executioner in a black mask. The
|
||
duke was handed down into it, and there his head was cut off with
|
||
six strokes of the rusty sword. Then, the little boat rowed away
|
||
to Dover beach, where the body was cast out, and left until the
|
||
duchess claimed it. By whom, high in authority, this murder was
|
||
committed, has never appeared. No one was ever punished for it.
|
||
|
||
There now arose in Kent an Irishman, who gave himself the name of
|
||
Mortimer, but whose real name was JACK CADE. Jack, in imitation of
|
||
Wat Tyler, though he was a very different and inferior sort of man,
|
||
addressed the Kentish men upon their wrongs, occasioned by the bad
|
||
government of England, among so many battledores and such a poor
|
||
shuttlecock; and the Kentish men rose up to the number of twenty
|
||
thousand. Their place of assembly was Blackheath, where, headed by
|
||
Jack, they put forth two papers, which they called 'The Complaint
|
||
of the Commons of Kent,' and 'The Requests of the Captain of the
|
||
Great Assembly in Kent.' They then retired to Sevenoaks. The
|
||
royal army coming up with them here, they beat it and killed their
|
||
general. Then, Jack dressed himself in the dead general's armour,
|
||
and led his men to London.
|
||
|
||
Jack passed into the City from Southwark, over the bridge, and
|
||
entered it in triumph, giving the strictest orders to his men not
|
||
to plunder. Having made a show of his forces there, while the
|
||
citizens looked on quietly, he went back into Southwark in good
|
||
order, and passed the night. Next day, he came back again, having
|
||
got hold in the meantime of Lord Say, an unpopular nobleman. Says
|
||
Jack to the Lord Mayor and judges: 'Will you be so good as to make
|
||
a tribunal in Guildhall, and try me this nobleman?' The court
|
||
being hastily made, he was found guilty, and Jack and his men cut
|
||
his head off on Cornhill. They also cut off the head of his son-
|
||
in-law, and then went back in good order to Southwark again.
|
||
|
||
But, although the citizens could bear the beheading of an unpopular
|
||
lord, they could not bear to have their houses pillaged. And it
|
||
did so happen that Jack, after dinner - perhaps he had drunk a
|
||
little too much - began to plunder the house where he lodged; upon
|
||
which, of course, his men began to imitate him. Wherefore, the
|
||
Londoners took counsel with Lord Scales, who had a thousand
|
||
soldiers in the Tower; and defended London Bridge, and kept Jack
|
||
and his people out. This advantage gained, it was resolved by
|
||
divers great men to divide Jack's army in the old way, by making a
|
||
great many promises on behalf of the state, that were never
|
||
intended to be performed. This DID divide them; some of Jack's men
|
||
saying that they ought to take the conditions which were offered,
|
||
and others saying that they ought not, for they were only a snare;
|
||
some going home at once; others staying where they were; and all
|
||
doubting and quarrelling among themselves.
|
||
|
||
Jack, who was in two minds about fighting or accepting a pardon,
|
||
and who indeed did both, saw at last that there was nothing to
|
||
expect from his men, and that it was very likely some of them would
|
||
deliver him up and get a reward of a thousand marks, which was
|
||
offered for his apprehension. So, after they had travelled and
|
||
quarrelled all the way from Southwark to Blackheath, and from
|
||
Blackheath to Rochester, he mounted a good horse and galloped away
|
||
into Sussex. But, there galloped after him, on a better horse, one
|
||
Alexander Iden, who came up with him, had a hard fight with him,
|
||
and killed him. Jack's head was set aloft on London Bridge, with
|
||
the face looking towards Blackheath, where he had raised his flag;
|
||
and Alexander Iden got the thousand marks.
|
||
|
||
It is supposed by some, that the Duke of York, who had been removed
|
||
from a high post abroad through the Queen's influence, and sent out
|
||
of the way, to govern Ireland, was at the bottom of this rising of
|
||
Jack and his men, because he wanted to trouble the government. He
|
||
claimed (though not yet publicly) to have a better right to the
|
||
throne than Henry of Lancaster, as one of the family of the Earl of
|
||
March, whom Henry the Fourth had set aside. Touching this claim,
|
||
which, being through female relationship, was not according to the
|
||
usual descent, it is enough to say that Henry the Fourth was the
|
||
free choice of the people and the Parliament, and that his family
|
||
had now reigned undisputed for sixty years. The memory of Henry
|
||
the Fifth was so famous, and the English people loved it so much,
|
||
that the Duke of York's claim would, perhaps, never have been
|
||
thought of (it would have been so hopeless) but for the unfortunate
|
||
circumstance of the present King's being by this time quite an
|
||
idiot, and the country very ill governed. These two circumstances
|
||
gave the Duke of York a power he could not otherwise have had.
|
||
|
||
Whether the Duke knew anything of Jack Cade, or not, he came over
|
||
from Ireland while Jack's head was on London Bridge; being secretly
|
||
advised that the Queen was setting up his enemy, the Duke of
|
||
Somerset, against him. He went to Westminster, at the head of four
|
||
thousand men, and on his knees before the King, represented to him
|
||
the bad state of the country, and petitioned him to summon a
|
||
Parliament to consider it. This the King promised. When the
|
||
Parliament was summoned, the Duke of York accused the Duke of
|
||
Somerset, and the Duke of Somerset accused the Duke of York; and,
|
||
both in and out of Parliament, the followers of each party were
|
||
full of violence and hatred towards the other. At length the Duke
|
||
of York put himself at the head of a large force of his tenants,
|
||
and, in arms, demanded the reformation of the Government. Being
|
||
shut out of London, he encamped at Dartford, and the royal army
|
||
encamped at Blackheath. According as either side triumphed, the
|
||
Duke of York was arrested, or the Duke of Somerset was arrested.
|
||
The trouble ended, for the moment, in the Duke of York renewing his
|
||
oath of allegiance, and going in peace to one of his own castles.
|
||
|
||
Half a year afterwards the Queen gave birth to a son, who was very
|
||
ill received by the people, and not believed to be the son of the
|
||
King. It shows the Duke of York to have been a moderate man,
|
||
unwilling to involve England in new troubles, that he did not take
|
||
advantage of the general discontent at this time, but really acted
|
||
for the public good. He was made a member of the cabinet, and the
|
||
King being now so much worse that he could not be carried about and
|
||
shown to the people with any decency, the duke was made Lord
|
||
Protector of the kingdom, until the King should recover, or the
|
||
Prince should come of age. At the same time the Duke of Somerset
|
||
was committed to the Tower. So, now the Duke of Somerset was down,
|
||
and the Duke of York was up. By the end of the year, however, the
|
||
King recovered his memory and some spark of sense; upon which the
|
||
Queen used her power - which recovered with him - to get the
|
||
Protector disgraced, and her favourite released. So now the Duke
|
||
of York was down, and the Duke of Somerset was up.
|
||
|
||
These ducal ups and downs gradually separated the whole nation into
|
||
the two parties of York and Lancaster, and led to those terrible
|
||
civil wars long known as the Wars of the Red and White Roses,
|
||
because the red rose was the badge of the House of Lancaster, and
|
||
the white rose was the badge of the House of York.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of York, joined by some other powerful noblemen of the
|
||
White Rose party, and leading a small army, met the King with
|
||
another small army at St. Alban's, and demanded that the Duke of
|
||
Somerset should be given up. The poor King, being made to say in
|
||
answer that he would sooner die, was instantly attacked. The Duke
|
||
of Somerset was killed, and the King himself was wounded in the
|
||
neck, and took refuge in the house of a poor tanner. Whereupon,
|
||
the Duke of York went to him, led him with great submission to the
|
||
Abbey, and said he was very sorry for what had happened. Having
|
||
now the King in his possession, he got a Parliament summoned and
|
||
himself once more made Protector, but, only for a few months; for,
|
||
on the King getting a little better again, the Queen and her party
|
||
got him into their possession, and disgraced the Duke once more.
|
||
So, now the Duke of York was down again.
|
||
|
||
Some of the best men in power, seeing the danger of these constant
|
||
changes, tried even then to prevent the Red and the White Rose
|
||
Wars. They brought about a great council in London between the two
|
||
parties. The White Roses assembled in Blackfriars, the Red Roses
|
||
in Whitefriars; and some good priests communicated between them,
|
||
and made the proceedings known at evening to the King and the
|
||
judges. They ended in a peaceful agreement that there should be no
|
||
more quarrelling; and there was a great royal procession to St.
|
||
Paul's, in which the Queen walked arm-in-arm with her old enemy,
|
||
the Duke of York, to show the people how comfortable they all were.
|
||
This state of peace lasted half a year, when a dispute between the
|
||
Earl of Warwick (one of the Duke's powerful friends) and some of
|
||
the King's servants at Court, led to an attack upon that Earl - who
|
||
was a White Rose - and to a sudden breaking out of all old
|
||
animosities. So, here were greater ups and downs than ever.
|
||
|
||
There were even greater ups and downs than these, soon after.
|
||
After various battles, the Duke of York fled to Ireland, and his
|
||
son the Earl of March to Calais, with their friends the Earls of
|
||
Salisbury and Warwick; and a Parliament was held declaring them all
|
||
traitors. Little the worse for this, the Earl of Warwick presently
|
||
came back, landed in Kent, was joined by the Archbishop of
|
||
Canterbury and other powerful noblemen and gentlemen, engaged the
|
||
King's forces at Northampton, signally defeated them, and took the
|
||
King himself prisoner, who was found in his tent. Warwick would
|
||
have been glad, I dare say, to have taken the Queen and Prince too,
|
||
but they escaped into Wales and thence into Scotland.
|
||
|
||
The King was carried by the victorious force straight to London,
|
||
and made to call a new Parliament, which immediately declared that
|
||
the Duke of York and those other noblemen were not traitors, but
|
||
excellent subjects. Then, back comes the Duke from Ireland at the
|
||
head of five hundred horsemen, rides from London to Westminster,
|
||
and enters the House of Lords. There, he laid his hand upon the
|
||
cloth of gold which covered the empty throne, as if he had half a
|
||
mind to sit down in it - but he did not. On the Archbishop of
|
||
Canterbury, asking him if he would visit the King, who was in his
|
||
palace close by, he replied, 'I know no one in this country, my
|
||
lord, who ought not to visit ME.' None of the lords present spoke
|
||
a single word; so, the duke went out as he had come in, established
|
||
himself royally in the King's palace, and, six days afterwards,
|
||
sent in to the Lords a formal statement of his claim to the throne.
|
||
The lords went to the King on this momentous subject, and after a
|
||
great deal of discussion, in which the judges and the other law
|
||
officers were afraid to give an opinion on either side, the
|
||
question was compromised. It was agreed that the present King
|
||
should retain the crown for his life, and that it should then pass
|
||
to the Duke of York and his heirs.
|
||
|
||
But, the resolute Queen, determined on asserting her son's right,
|
||
would hear of no such thing. She came from Scotland to the north
|
||
of England, where several powerful lords armed in her cause. The
|
||
Duke of York, for his part, set off with some five thousand men, a
|
||
little time before Christmas Day, one thousand four hundred and
|
||
sixty, to give her battle. He lodged at Sandal Castle, near
|
||
Wakefield, and the Red Roses defied him to come out on Wakefield
|
||
Green, and fight them then and there. His generals said, he had
|
||
best wait until his gallant son, the Earl of March, came up with
|
||
his power; but, he was determined to accept the challenge. He did
|
||
so, in an evil hour. He was hotly pressed on all sides, two
|
||
thousand of his men lay dead on Wakefield Green, and he himself was
|
||
taken prisoner. They set him down in mock state on an ant-hill,
|
||
and twisted grass about his head, and pretended to pay court to him
|
||
on their knees, saying, 'O King, without a kingdom, and Prince
|
||
without a people, we hope your gracious Majesty is very well and
|
||
happy!' They did worse than this; they cut his head off, and
|
||
handed it on a pole to the Queen, who laughed with delight when she
|
||
saw it (you recollect their walking so religiously and comfortably
|
||
to St. Paul's!), and had it fixed, with a paper crown upon its
|
||
head, on the walls of York. The Earl of Salisbury lost his head,
|
||
too; and the Duke of York's second son, a handsome boy who was
|
||
flying with his tutor over Wakefield Bridge, was stabbed in the
|
||
heart by a murderous, lord - Lord Clifford by name - whose father
|
||
had been killed by the White Roses in the fight at St. Alban's.
|
||
There was awful sacrifice of life in this battle, for no quarter
|
||
was given, and the Queen was wild for revenge. When men
|
||
unnaturally fight against their own countrymen, they are always
|
||
observed to be more unnaturally cruel and filled with rage than
|
||
they are against any other enemy.
|
||
|
||
But, Lord Clifford had stabbed the second son of the Duke of York -
|
||
not the first. The eldest son, Edward Earl of March, was at
|
||
Gloucester; and, vowing vengeance for the death of his father, his
|
||
brother, and their faithful friends, he began to march against the
|
||
Queen. He had to turn and fight a great body of Welsh and Irish
|
||
first, who worried his advance. These he defeated in a great fight
|
||
at Mortimer's Cross, near Hereford, where he beheaded a number of
|
||
the Red Roses taken in battle, in retaliation for the beheading of
|
||
the White Roses at Wakefield. The Queen had the next turn of
|
||
beheading. Having moved towards London, and falling in, between
|
||
St. Alban's and Barnet, with the Earl of Warwick and the Duke of
|
||
Norfolk, White Roses both, who were there with an army to oppose
|
||
her, and had got the King with them; she defeated them with great
|
||
loss, and struck off the heads of two prisoners of note, who were
|
||
in the King's tent with him, and to whom the King had promised his
|
||
protection. Her triumph, however, was very short. She had no
|
||
treasure, and her army subsisted by plunder. This caused them to
|
||
be hated and dreaded by the people, and particularly by the London
|
||
people, who were wealthy. As soon as the Londoners heard that
|
||
Edward, Earl of March, united with the Earl of Warwick, was
|
||
advancing towards the city, they refused to send the Queen
|
||
supplies, and made a great rejoicing.
|
||
|
||
The Queen and her men retreated with all speed, and Edward and
|
||
Warwick came on, greeted with loud acclamations on every side. The
|
||
courage, beauty, and virtues of young Edward could not be
|
||
sufficiently praised by the whole people. He rode into London like
|
||
a conqueror, and met with an enthusiastic welcome. A few days
|
||
afterwards, Lord Falconbridge and the Bishop of Exeter assembled
|
||
the citizens in St. John's Field, Clerkenwell, and asked them if
|
||
they would have Henry of Lancaster for their King? To this they
|
||
all roared, 'No, no, no!' and 'King Edward! King Edward!' Then,
|
||
said those noblemen, would they love and serve young Edward? To
|
||
this they all cried, 'Yes, yes!' and threw up their caps and
|
||
clapped their hands, and cheered tremendously.
|
||
|
||
Therefore, it was declared that by joining the Queen and not
|
||
protecting those two prisoners of note, Henry of Lancaster had
|
||
forfeited the crown; and Edward of York was proclaimed King. He
|
||
made a great speech to the applauding people at Westminster, and
|
||
sat down as sovereign of England on that throne, on the golden
|
||
covering of which his father - worthy of a better fate than the
|
||
bloody axe which cut the thread of so many lives in England,
|
||
through so many years - had laid his hand.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIII - ENGLAND UNDER EDWARD THE FOURTH
|
||
|
||
KING EDWARD THE FOURTH was not quite twenty-one years of age when
|
||
he took that unquiet seat upon the throne of England. The
|
||
Lancaster party, the Red Roses, were then assembling in great
|
||
numbers near York, and it was necessary to give them battle
|
||
instantly. But, the stout Earl of Warwick leading for the young
|
||
King, and the young King himself closely following him, and the
|
||
English people crowding round the Royal standard, the White and the
|
||
Red Roses met, on a wild March day when the snow was falling
|
||
heavily, at Towton; and there such a furious battle raged between
|
||
them, that the total loss amounted to forty thousand men - all
|
||
Englishmen, fighting, upon English ground, against one another.
|
||
The young King gained the day, took down the heads of his father
|
||
and brother from the walls of York, and put up the heads of some of
|
||
the most famous noblemen engaged in the battle on the other side.
|
||
Then, he went to London and was crowned with great splendour.
|
||
|
||
A new Parliament met. No fewer than one hundred and fifty of the
|
||
principal noblemen and gentlemen on the Lancaster side were
|
||
declared traitors, and the King - who had very little humanity,
|
||
though he was handsome in person and agreeable in manners -
|
||
resolved to do all he could, to pluck up the Red Rose root and
|
||
branch.
|
||
|
||
Queen Margaret, however, was still active for her young son. She
|
||
obtained help from Scotland and from Normandy, and took several
|
||
important English castles. But, Warwick soon retook them; the
|
||
Queen lost all her treasure on board ship in a great storm; and
|
||
both she and her son suffered great misfortunes. Once, in the
|
||
winter weather, as they were riding through a forest, they were
|
||
attacked and plundered by a party of robbers; and, when they had
|
||
escaped from these men and were passing alone and on foot through a
|
||
thick dark part of the wood, they came, all at once, upon another
|
||
robber. So the Queen, with a stout heart, took the little Prince
|
||
by the hand, and going straight up to that robber, said to him, 'My
|
||
friend, this is the young son of your lawful King! I confide him
|
||
to your care.' The robber was surprised, but took the boy in his
|
||
arms, and faithfully restored him and his mother to their friends.
|
||
In the end, the Queen's soldiers being beaten and dispersed, she
|
||
went abroad again, and kept quiet for the present.
|
||
|
||
Now, all this time, the deposed King Henry was concealed by a Welsh
|
||
knight, who kept him close in his castle. But, next year, the
|
||
Lancaster party recovering their spirits, raised a large body of
|
||
men, and called him out of his retirement, to put him at their
|
||
head. They were joined by some powerful noblemen who had sworn
|
||
fidelity to the new King, but who were ready, as usual, to break
|
||
their oaths, whenever they thought there was anything to be got by
|
||
it. One of the worst things in the history of the war of the Red
|
||
and White Roses, is the ease with which these noblemen, who should
|
||
have set an example of honour to the people, left either side as
|
||
they took slight offence, or were disappointed in their greedy
|
||
expectations, and joined the other. Well! Warwick's brother soon
|
||
beat the Lancastrians, and the false noblemen, being taken, were
|
||
beheaded without a moment's loss of time. The deposed King had a
|
||
narrow escape; three of his servants were taken, and one of them
|
||
bore his cap of estate, which was set with pearls and embroidered
|
||
with two golden crowns. However, the head to which the cap
|
||
belonged, got safely into Lancashire, and lay pretty quietly there
|
||
(the people in the secret being very true) for more than a year.
|
||
At length, an old monk gave such intelligence as led to Henry's
|
||
being taken while he was sitting at dinner in a place called
|
||
Waddington Hall. He was immediately sent to London, and met at
|
||
Islington by the Earl of Warwick, by whose directions he was put
|
||
upon a horse, with his legs tied under it, and paraded three times
|
||
round the pillory. Then, he was carried off to the Tower, where
|
||
they treated him well enough.
|
||
|
||
The White Rose being so triumphant, the young King abandoned
|
||
himself entirely to pleasure, and led a jovial life. But, thorns
|
||
were springing up under his bed of roses, as he soon found out.
|
||
For, having been privately married to ELIZABETH WOODVILLE, a young
|
||
widow lady, very beautiful and very captivating; and at last
|
||
resolving to make his secret known, and to declare her his Queen;
|
||
he gave some offence to the Earl of Warwick, who was usually called
|
||
the King-Maker, because of his power and influence, and because of
|
||
his having lent such great help to placing Edward on the throne.
|
||
This offence was not lessened by the jealousy with which the Nevil
|
||
family (the Earl of Warwick's) regarded the promotion of the
|
||
Woodville family. For, the young Queen was so bent on providing
|
||
for her relations, that she made her father an earl and a great
|
||
officer of state; married her five sisters to young noblemen of the
|
||
highest rank; and provided for her younger brother, a young man of
|
||
twenty, by marrying him to an immensely rich old duchess of eighty.
|
||
The Earl of Warwick took all this pretty graciously for a man of
|
||
his proud temper, until the question arose to whom the King's
|
||
sister, MARGARET, should be married. The Earl of Warwick said, 'To
|
||
one of the French King's sons,' and was allowed to go over to the
|
||
French King to make friendly proposals for that purpose, and to
|
||
hold all manner of friendly interviews with him. But, while he was
|
||
so engaged, the Woodville party married the young lady to the Duke
|
||
of Burgundy! Upon this he came back in great rage and scorn, and
|
||
shut himself up discontented, in his Castle of Middleham.
|
||
|
||
A reconciliation, though not a very sincere one, was patched up
|
||
between the Earl of Warwick and the King, and lasted until the Earl
|
||
married his daughter, against the King's wishes, to the Duke of
|
||
Clarence. While the marriage was being celebrated at Calais, the
|
||
people in the north of England, where the influence of the Nevil
|
||
family was strongest, broke out into rebellion; their complaint
|
||
was, that England was oppressed and plundered by the Woodville
|
||
family, whom they demanded to have removed from power. As they
|
||
were joined by great numbers of people, and as they openly declared
|
||
that they were supported by the Earl of Warwick, the King did not
|
||
know what to do. At last, as he wrote to the earl beseeching his
|
||
aid, he and his new son-in-law came over to England, and began to
|
||
arrange the business by shutting the King up in Middleham Castle in
|
||
the safe keeping of the Archbishop of York; so England was not only
|
||
in the strange position of having two kings at once, but they were
|
||
both prisoners at the same time.
|
||
|
||
Even as yet, however, the King-Maker was so far true to the King,
|
||
that he dispersed a new rising of the Lancastrians, took their
|
||
leader prisoner, and brought him to the King, who ordered him to be
|
||
immediately executed. He presently allowed the King to return to
|
||
London, and there innumerable pledges of forgiveness and friendship
|
||
were exchanged between them, and between the Nevils and the
|
||
Woodvilles; the King's eldest daughter was promised in marriage to
|
||
the heir of the Nevil family; and more friendly oaths were sworn,
|
||
and more friendly promises made, than this book would hold.
|
||
|
||
They lasted about three months. At the end of that time, the
|
||
Archbishop of York made a feast for the King, the Earl of Warwick,
|
||
and the Duke of Clarence, at his house, the Moor, in Hertfordshire.
|
||
The King was washing his hands before supper, when some one
|
||
whispered him that a body of a hundred men were lying in ambush
|
||
outside the house. Whether this were true or untrue, the King took
|
||
fright, mounted his horse, and rode through the dark night to
|
||
Windsor Castle. Another reconciliation was patched up between him
|
||
and the King-Maker, but it was a short one, and it was the last. A
|
||
new rising took place in Lincolnshire, and the King marched to
|
||
repress it. Having done so, he proclaimed that both the Earl of
|
||
Warwick and the Duke of Clarence were traitors, who had secretly
|
||
assisted it, and who had been prepared publicly to join it on the
|
||
following day. In these dangerous circumstances they both took
|
||
ship and sailed away to the French court.
|
||
|
||
And here a meeting took place between the Earl of Warwick and his
|
||
old enemy, the Dowager Queen Margaret, through whom his father had
|
||
had his head struck off, and to whom he had been a bitter foe.
|
||
But, now, when he said that he had done with the ungrateful and
|
||
perfidious Edward of York, and that henceforth he devoted himself
|
||
to the restoration of the House of Lancaster, either in the person
|
||
of her husband or of her little son, she embraced him as if he had
|
||
ever been her dearest friend. She did more than that; she married
|
||
her son to his second daughter, the Lady Anne. However agreeable
|
||
this marriage was to the new friends, it was very disagreeable to
|
||
the Duke of Clarence, who perceived that his father-in-law, the
|
||
King-Maker, would never make HIM King, now. So, being but a weak-
|
||
minded young traitor, possessed of very little worth or sense, he
|
||
readily listened to an artful court lady sent over for the purpose,
|
||
and promised to turn traitor once more, and go over to his brother,
|
||
King Edward, when a fitting opportunity should come.
|
||
|
||
The Earl of Warwick, knowing nothing of this, soon redeemed his
|
||
promise to the Dowager Queen Margaret, by invading England and
|
||
landing at Plymouth, where he instantly proclaimed King Henry, and
|
||
summoned all Englishmen between the ages of sixteen and sixty, to
|
||
join his banner. Then, with his army increasing as he marched
|
||
along, he went northward, and came so near King Edward, who was in
|
||
that part of the country, that Edward had to ride hard for it to
|
||
the coast of Norfolk, and thence to get away in such ships as he
|
||
could find, to Holland. Thereupon, the triumphant King-Maker and
|
||
his false son-in-law, the Duke of Clarence, went to London, took
|
||
the old King out of the Tower, and walked him in a great procession
|
||
to Saint Paul's Cathedral with the crown upon his head. This did
|
||
not improve the temper of the Duke of Clarence, who saw himself
|
||
farther off from being King than ever; but he kept his secret, and
|
||
said nothing. The Nevil family were restored to all their honours
|
||
and glories, and the Woodvilles and the rest were disgraced. The
|
||
King-Maker, less sanguinary than the King, shed no blood except
|
||
that of the Earl of Worcester, who had been so cruel to the people
|
||
as to have gained the title of the Butcher. Him they caught hidden
|
||
in a tree, and him they tried and executed. No other death stained
|
||
the King-Maker's triumph.
|
||
|
||
To dispute this triumph, back came King Edward again, next year,
|
||
landing at Ravenspur, coming on to York, causing all his men to cry
|
||
'Long live King Henry!' and swearing on the altar, without a blush,
|
||
that he came to lay no claim to the crown. Now was the time for
|
||
the Duke of Clarence, who ordered his men to assume the White Rose,
|
||
and declare for his brother. The Marquis of Montague, though the
|
||
Earl of Warwick's brother, also declining to fight against King
|
||
Edward, he went on successfully to London, where the Archbishop of
|
||
York let him into the City, and where the people made great
|
||
demonstrations in his favour. For this they had four reasons.
|
||
Firstly, there were great numbers of the King's adherents hiding in
|
||
the City and ready to break out; secondly, the King owed them a
|
||
great deal of money, which they could never hope to get if he were
|
||
unsuccessful; thirdly, there was a young prince to inherit the
|
||
crown; and fourthly, the King was gay and handsome, and more
|
||
popular than a better man might have been with the City ladies.
|
||
After a stay of only two days with these worthy supporters, the
|
||
King marched out to Barnet Common, to give the Earl of Warwick
|
||
battle. And now it was to be seen, for the last time, whether the
|
||
King or the King-Maker was to carry the day.
|
||
|
||
While the battle was yet pending, the fainthearted Duke of Clarence
|
||
began to repent, and sent over secret messages to his father-in-
|
||
law, offering his services in mediation with the King. But, the
|
||
Earl of Warwick disdainfully rejected them, and replied that
|
||
Clarence was false and perjured, and that he would settle the
|
||
quarrel by the sword. The battle began at four o'clock in the
|
||
morning and lasted until ten, and during the greater part of the
|
||
time it was fought in a thick mist - absurdly supposed to be raised
|
||
by a magician. The loss of life was very great, for the hatred was
|
||
strong on both sides. The King-Maker was defeated, and the King
|
||
triumphed. Both the Earl of Warwick and his brother were slain,
|
||
and their bodies lay in St. Paul's, for some days, as a spectacle
|
||
to the people.
|
||
|
||
Margaret's spirit was not broken even by this great blow. Within
|
||
five days she was in arms again, and raised her standard in Bath,
|
||
whence she set off with her army, to try and join Lord Pembroke,
|
||
who had a force in Wales. But, the King, coming up with her
|
||
outside the town of Tewkesbury, and ordering his brother, the DUKE
|
||
OF GLOUCESTER, who was a brave soldier, to attack her men, she
|
||
sustained an entire defeat, and was taken prisoner, together with
|
||
her son, now only eighteen years of age. The conduct of the King
|
||
to this poor youth was worthy of his cruel character. He ordered
|
||
him to be led into his tent. 'And what,' said he, 'brought YOU to
|
||
England?' 'I came to England,' replied the prisoner, with a spirit
|
||
which a man of spirit might have admired in a captive, 'to recover
|
||
my father's kingdom, which descended to him as his right, and from
|
||
him descends to me, as mine.' The King, drawing off his iron
|
||
gauntlet, struck him with it in the face; and the Duke of Clarence
|
||
and some other lords, who were there, drew their noble swords, and
|
||
killed him.
|
||
|
||
His mother survived him, a prisoner, for five years; after her
|
||
ransom by the King of France, she survived for six years more.
|
||
Within three weeks of this murder, Henry died one of those
|
||
convenient sudden deaths which were so common in the Tower; in
|
||
plainer words, he was murdered by the King's order.
|
||
|
||
Having no particular excitement on his hands after this great
|
||
defeat of the Lancaster party, and being perhaps desirous to get
|
||
rid of some of his fat (for he was now getting too corpulent to be
|
||
handsome), the King thought of making war on France. As he wanted
|
||
more money for this purpose than the Parliament could give him,
|
||
though they were usually ready enough for war, he invented a new
|
||
way of raising it, by sending for the principal citizens of London,
|
||
and telling them, with a grave face, that he was very much in want
|
||
of cash, and would take it very kind in them if they would lend him
|
||
some. It being impossible for them safely to refuse, they
|
||
complied, and the moneys thus forced from them were called - no
|
||
doubt to the great amusement of the King and the Court - as if they
|
||
were free gifts, 'Benevolences.' What with grants from Parliament,
|
||
and what with Benevolences, the King raised an army and passed over
|
||
to Calais. As nobody wanted war, however, the French King made
|
||
proposals of peace, which were accepted, and a truce was concluded
|
||
for seven long years. The proceedings between the Kings of France
|
||
and England on this occasion, were very friendly, very splendid,
|
||
and very distrustful. They finished with a meeting between the two
|
||
Kings, on a temporary bridge over the river Somme, where they
|
||
embraced through two holes in a strong wooden grating like a lion's
|
||
cage, and made several bows and fine speeches to one another.
|
||
|
||
It was time, now, that the Duke of Clarence should be punished for
|
||
his treacheries; and Fate had his punishment in store. He was,
|
||
probably, not trusted by the King - for who could trust him who
|
||
knew him! - and he had certainly a powerful opponent in his brother
|
||
Richard, Duke of Gloucester, who, being avaricious and ambitious,
|
||
wanted to marry that widowed daughter of the Earl of Warwick's who
|
||
had been espoused to the deceased young Prince, at Calais.
|
||
Clarence, who wanted all the family wealth for himself, secreted
|
||
this lady, whom Richard found disguised as a servant in the City of
|
||
London, and whom he married; arbitrators appointed by the King,
|
||
then divided the property between the brothers. This led to ill-
|
||
will and mistrust between them. Clarence's wife dying, and he
|
||
wishing to make another marriage, which was obnoxious to the King,
|
||
his ruin was hurried by that means, too. At first, the Court
|
||
struck at his retainers and dependents, and accused some of them of
|
||
magic and witchcraft, and similar nonsense. Successful against
|
||
this small game, it then mounted to the Duke himself, who was
|
||
impeached by his brother the King, in person, on a variety of such
|
||
charges. He was found guilty, and sentenced to be publicly
|
||
executed. He never was publicly executed, but he met his death
|
||
somehow, in the Tower, and, no doubt, through some agency of the
|
||
King or his brother Gloucester, or both. It was supposed at the
|
||
time that he was told to choose the manner of his death, and that
|
||
he chose to be drowned in a butt of Malmsey wine. I hope the story
|
||
may be true, for it would have been a becoming death for such a
|
||
miserable creature.
|
||
|
||
The King survived him some five years. He died in the forty-second
|
||
year of his life, and the twenty-third of his reign. He had a very
|
||
good capacity and some good points, but he was selfish, careless,
|
||
sensual, and cruel. He was a favourite with the people for his
|
||
showy manners; and the people were a good example to him in the
|
||
constancy of their attachment. He was penitent on his death-bed
|
||
for his 'benevolences,' and other extortions, and ordered
|
||
restitution to be made to the people who had suffered from them.
|
||
He also called about his bed the enriched members of the Woodville
|
||
family, and the proud lords whose honours were of older date, and
|
||
endeavoured to reconcile them, for the sake of the peaceful
|
||
succession of his son and the tranquillity of England.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIV - ENGLAND UNDER EDWARD THE FIFTH
|
||
|
||
THE late King's eldest son, the Prince of Wales, called EDWARD
|
||
after him, was only thirteen years of age at his father's death.
|
||
He was at Ludlow Castle with his uncle, the Earl of Rivers. The
|
||
prince's brother, the Duke of York, only eleven years of age, was
|
||
in London with his mother. The boldest, most crafty, and most
|
||
dreaded nobleman in England at that time was their uncle RICHARD,
|
||
Duke of Gloucester, and everybody wondered how the two poor boys
|
||
would fare with such an uncle for a friend or a foe.
|
||
|
||
The Queen, their mother, being exceedingly uneasy about this, was
|
||
anxious that instructions should be sent to Lord Rivers to raise an
|
||
army to escort the young King safely to London. But, Lord
|
||
Hastings, who was of the Court party opposed to the Woodvilles, and
|
||
who disliked the thought of giving them that power, argued against
|
||
the proposal, and obliged the Queen to be satisfied with an escort
|
||
of two thousand horse. The Duke of Gloucester did nothing, at
|
||
first, to justify suspicion. He came from Scotland (where he was
|
||
commanding an army) to York, and was there the first to swear
|
||
allegiance to his nephew. He then wrote a condoling letter to the
|
||
Queen-Mother, and set off to be present at the coronation in
|
||
London.
|
||
|
||
Now, the young King, journeying towards London too, with Lord
|
||
Rivers and Lord Gray, came to Stony Stratford, as his uncle came to
|
||
Northampton, about ten miles distant; and when those two lords
|
||
heard that the Duke of Gloucester was so near, they proposed to the
|
||
young King that they should go back and greet him in his name. The
|
||
boy being very willing that they should do so, they rode off and
|
||
were received with great friendliness, and asked by the Duke of
|
||
Gloucester to stay and dine with him. In the evening, while they
|
||
were merry together, up came the Duke of Buckingham with three
|
||
hundred horsemen; and next morning the two lords and the two dukes,
|
||
and the three hundred horsemen, rode away together to rejoin the
|
||
King. Just as they were entering Stony Stratford, the Duke of
|
||
Gloucester, checking his horse, turned suddenly on the two lords,
|
||
charged them with alienating from him the affections of his sweet
|
||
nephew, and caused them to be arrested by the three hundred
|
||
horsemen and taken back. Then, he and the Duke of Buckingham went
|
||
straight to the King (whom they had now in their power), to whom
|
||
they made a show of kneeling down, and offering great love and
|
||
submission; and then they ordered his attendants to disperse, and
|
||
took him, alone with them, to Northampton.
|
||
|
||
A few days afterwards they conducted him to London, and lodged him
|
||
in the Bishop's Palace. But, he did not remain there long; for,
|
||
the Duke of Buckingham with a tender face made a speech expressing
|
||
how anxious he was for the Royal boy's safety, and how much safer
|
||
he would be in the Tower until his coronation, than he could be
|
||
anywhere else. So, to the Tower he was taken, very carefully, and
|
||
the Duke of Gloucester was named Protector of the State.
|
||
|
||
Although Gloucester had proceeded thus far with a very smooth
|
||
countenance - and although he was a clever man, fair of speech, and
|
||
not ill-looking, in spite of one of his shoulders being something
|
||
higher than the other - and although he had come into the City
|
||
riding bare-headed at the King's side, and looking very fond of him
|
||
- he had made the King's mother more uneasy yet; and when the Royal
|
||
boy was taken to the Tower, she became so alarmed that she took
|
||
sanctuary in Westminster with her five daughters.
|
||
|
||
Nor did she do this without reason, for, the Duke of Gloucester,
|
||
finding that the lords who were opposed to the Woodville family
|
||
were faithful to the young King nevertheless, quickly resolved to
|
||
strike a blow for himself. Accordingly, while those lords met in
|
||
council at the Tower, he and those who were in his interest met in
|
||
separate council at his own residence, Crosby Palace, in
|
||
Bishopsgate Street. Being at last quite prepared, he one day
|
||
appeared unexpectedly at the council in the Tower, and appeared to
|
||
be very jocular and merry. He was particularly gay with the Bishop
|
||
of Ely: praising the strawberries that grew in his garden on
|
||
Holborn Hill, and asking him to have some gathered that he might
|
||
eat them at dinner. The Bishop, quite proud of the honour, sent
|
||
one of his men to fetch some; and the Duke, still very jocular and
|
||
gay, went out; and the council all said what a very agreeable duke
|
||
he was! In a little time, however, he came back quite altered -
|
||
not at all jocular - frowning and fierce - and suddenly said, -
|
||
|
||
'What do those persons deserve who have compassed my destruction; I
|
||
being the King's lawful, as well as natural, protector?'
|
||
|
||
To this strange question, Lord Hastings replied, that they deserved
|
||
death, whosoever they were.
|
||
|
||
'Then,' said the Duke, 'I tell you that they are that sorceress my
|
||
brother's wife;' meaning the Queen: 'and that other sorceress,
|
||
Jane Shore. Who, by witchcraft, have withered my body, and caused
|
||
my arm to shrink as I now show you.'
|
||
|
||
He then pulled up his sleeve and showed them his arm, which was
|
||
shrunken, it is true, but which had been so, as they all very well
|
||
knew, from the hour of his birth.
|
||
|
||
Jane Shore, being then the lover of Lord Hastings, as she had
|
||
formerly been of the late King, that lord knew that he himself was
|
||
attacked. So, he said, in some confusion, 'Certainly, my Lord, if
|
||
they have done this, they be worthy of punishment.'
|
||
|
||
'If?' said the Duke of Gloucester; 'do you talk to me of ifs? I
|
||
tell you that they HAVE so done, and I will make it good upon thy
|
||
body, thou traitor!'
|
||
|
||
With that, he struck the table a great blow with his fist. This
|
||
was a signal to some of his people outside to cry 'Treason!' They
|
||
immediately did so, and there was a rush into the chamber of so
|
||
many armed men that it was filled in a moment.
|
||
|
||
'First,' said the Duke of Gloucester to Lord Hastings, 'I arrest
|
||
thee, traitor! And let him,' he added to the armed men who took
|
||
him, 'have a priest at once, for by St. Paul I will not dine until
|
||
I have seen his head of!'
|
||
|
||
Lord Hastings was hurried to the green by the Tower chapel, and
|
||
there beheaded on a log of wood that happened to be lying on the
|
||
ground. Then, the Duke dined with a good appetite, and after
|
||
dinner summoning the principal citizens to attend him, told them
|
||
that Lord Hastings and the rest had designed to murder both himself
|
||
and the Duke if Buckingham, who stood by his side, if he had not
|
||
providentially discovered their design. He requested them to be so
|
||
obliging as to inform their fellow-citizens of the truth of what he
|
||
said, and issued a proclamation (prepared and neatly copied out
|
||
beforehand) to the same effect.
|
||
|
||
On the same day that the Duke did these things in the Tower, Sir
|
||
Richard Ratcliffe, the boldest and most undaunted of his men, went
|
||
down to Pontefract; arrested Lord Rivers, Lord Gray, and two other
|
||
gentlemen; and publicly executed them on the scaffold, without any
|
||
trial, for having intended the Duke's death. Three days afterwards
|
||
the Duke, not to lose time, went down the river to Westminster in
|
||
his barge, attended by divers bishops, lords, and soldiers, and
|
||
demanded that the Queen should deliver her second son, the Duke of
|
||
York, into his safe keeping. The Queen, being obliged to comply,
|
||
resigned the child after she had wept over him; and Richard of
|
||
Gloucester placed him with his brother in the Tower. Then, he
|
||
seized Jane Shore, and, because she had been the lover of the late
|
||
King, confiscated her property, and got her sentenced to do public
|
||
penance in the streets by walking in a scanty dress, with bare
|
||
feet, and carrying a lighted candle, to St. Paul's Cathedral,
|
||
through the most crowded part of the City.
|
||
|
||
Having now all things ready for his own advancement, he caused a
|
||
friar to preach a sermon at the cross which stood in front of St.
|
||
Paul's Cathedral, in which he dwelt upon the profligate manners of
|
||
the late King, and upon the late shame of Jane Shore, and hinted
|
||
that the princes were not his children. 'Whereas, good people,'
|
||
said the friar, whose name was SHAW, 'my Lord the Protector, the
|
||
noble Duke of Gloucester, that sweet prince, the pattern of all the
|
||
noblest virtues, is the perfect image and express likeness of his
|
||
father.' There had been a little plot between the Duke and the
|
||
friar, that the Duke should appear in the crowd at this moment,
|
||
when it was expected that the people would cry 'Long live King
|
||
Richard!' But, either through the friar saying the words too soon,
|
||
or through the Duke's coming too late, the Duke and the words did
|
||
not come together, and the people only laughed, and the friar
|
||
sneaked off ashamed.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Buckingham was a better hand at such business than the
|
||
friar, so he went to the Guildhall the next day, and addressed the
|
||
citizens in the Lord Protector's behalf. A few dirty men, who had
|
||
been hired and stationed there for the purpose, crying when he had
|
||
done, 'God save King Richard!' he made them a great bow, and
|
||
thanked them with all his heart. Next day, to make an end of it,
|
||
he went with the mayor and some lords and citizens to Bayard
|
||
Castle, by the river, where Richard then was, and read an address,
|
||
humbly entreating him to accept the Crown of England. Richard, who
|
||
looked down upon them out of a window and pretended to be in great
|
||
uneasiness and alarm, assured them there was nothing he desired
|
||
less, and that his deep affection for his nephews forbade him to
|
||
think of it. To this the Duke of Buckingham replied, with
|
||
pretended warmth, that the free people of England would never
|
||
submit to his nephew's rule, and that if Richard, who was the
|
||
lawful heir, refused the Crown, why then they must find some one
|
||
else to wear it. The Duke of Gloucester returned, that since he
|
||
used that strong language, it became his painful duty to think no
|
||
more of himself, and to accept the Crown.
|
||
|
||
Upon that, the people cheered and dispersed; and the Duke of
|
||
Gloucester and the Duke of Buckingham passed a pleasant evening,
|
||
talking over the play they had just acted with so much success, and
|
||
every word of which they had prepared together.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXV - ENGLAND UNDER RICHARD THE THIRD
|
||
|
||
KING RICHARD THE THIRD was up betimes in the morning, and went to
|
||
Westminster Hall. In the Hall was a marble seat, upon which he sat
|
||
himself down between two great noblemen, and told the people that
|
||
he began the new reign in that place, because the first duty of a
|
||
sovereign was to administer the laws equally to all, and to
|
||
maintain justice. He then mounted his horse and rode back to the
|
||
City, where he was received by the clergy and the crowd as if he
|
||
really had a right to the throne, and really were a just man. The
|
||
clergy and the crowd must have been rather ashamed of themselves in
|
||
secret, I think, for being such poor-spirited knaves.
|
||
|
||
The new King and his Queen were soon crowned with a great deal of
|
||
show and noise, which the people liked very much; and then the King
|
||
set forth on a royal progress through his dominions. He was
|
||
crowned a second time at York, in order that the people might have
|
||
show and noise enough; and wherever he went was received with
|
||
shouts of rejoicing - from a good many people of strong lungs, who
|
||
were paid to strain their throats in crying, 'God save King
|
||
Richard!' The plan was so successful that I am told it has been
|
||
imitated since, by other usurpers, in other progresses through
|
||
other dominions.
|
||
|
||
While he was on this journey, King Richard stayed a week at
|
||
Warwick. And from Warwick he sent instructions home for one of the
|
||
wickedest murders that ever was done - the murder of the two young
|
||
princes, his nephews, who were shut up in the Tower of London.
|
||
|
||
Sir Robert Brackenbury was at that time Governor of the Tower. To
|
||
him, by the hands of a messenger named JOHN GREEN, did King Richard
|
||
send a letter, ordering him by some means to put the two young
|
||
princes to death. But Sir Robert - I hope because he had children
|
||
of his own, and loved them - sent John Green back again, riding and
|
||
spurring along the dusty roads, with the answer that he could not
|
||
do so horrible a piece of work. The King, having frowningly
|
||
considered a little, called to him SIR JAMES TYRREL, his master of
|
||
the horse, and to him gave authority to take command of the Tower,
|
||
whenever he would, for twenty-four hours, and to keep all the keys
|
||
of the Tower during that space of time. Tyrrel, well knowing what
|
||
was wanted, looked about him for two hardened ruffians, and chose
|
||
JOHN DIGHTON, one of his own grooms, and MILES FOREST, who was a
|
||
murderer by trade. Having secured these two assistants, he went,
|
||
upon a day in August, to the Tower, showed his authority from the
|
||
King, took the command for four-and-twenty hours, and obtained
|
||
possession of the keys. And when the black night came he went
|
||
creeping, creeping, like a guilty villain as he was, up the dark,
|
||
stone winding stairs, and along the dark stone passages, until he
|
||
came to the door of the room where the two young princes, having
|
||
said their prayers, lay fast asleep, clasped in each other's arms.
|
||
And while he watched and listened at the door, he sent in those
|
||
evil demons, John Dighton and Miles Forest, who smothered the two
|
||
princes with the bed and pillows, and carried their bodies down the
|
||
stairs, and buried them under a great heap of stones at the
|
||
staircase foot. And when the day came, he gave up the command of
|
||
the Tower, and restored the keys, and hurried away without once
|
||
looking behind him; and Sir Robert Brackenbury went with fear and
|
||
sadness to the princes' room, and found the princes gone for ever.
|
||
|
||
You know, through all this history, how true it is that traitors
|
||
are never true, and you will not be surprised to learn that the
|
||
Duke of Buckingham soon turned against King Richard, and joined a
|
||
great conspiracy that was formed to dethrone him, and to place the
|
||
crown upon its rightful owner's head. Richard had meant to keep
|
||
the murder secret; but when he heard through his spies that this
|
||
conspiracy existed, and that many lords and gentlemen drank in
|
||
secret to the healths of the two young princes in the Tower, he
|
||
made it known that they were dead. The conspirators, though
|
||
thwarted for a moment, soon resolved to set up for the crown
|
||
against the murderous Richard, HENRY Earl of Richmond, grandson of
|
||
Catherine: that widow of Henry the Fifth who married Owen Tudor.
|
||
And as Henry was of the house of Lancaster, they proposed that he
|
||
should marry the Princess Elizabeth, the eldest daughter of the
|
||
late King, now the heiress of the house of York, and thus by
|
||
uniting the rival families put an end to the fatal wars of the Red
|
||
and White Roses. All being settled, a time was appointed for Henry
|
||
to come over from Brittany, and for a great rising against Richard
|
||
to take place in several parts of England at the same hour. On a
|
||
certain day, therefore, in October, the revolt took place; but
|
||
unsuccessfully. Richard was prepared, Henry was driven back at sea
|
||
by a storm, his followers in England were dispersed, and the Duke
|
||
of Buckingham was taken, and at once beheaded in the market-place
|
||
at Salisbury.
|
||
|
||
The time of his success was a good time, Richard thought, for
|
||
summoning a Parliament and getting some money. So, a Parliament
|
||
was called, and it flattered and fawned upon him as much as he
|
||
could possibly desire, and declared him to be the rightful King of
|
||
England, and his only son Edward, then eleven years of age, the
|
||
next heir to the throne.
|
||
|
||
Richard knew full well that, let the Parliament say what it would,
|
||
the Princess Elizabeth was remembered by people as the heiress of
|
||
the house of York; and having accurate information besides, of its
|
||
being designed by the conspirators to marry her to Henry of
|
||
Richmond, he felt that it would much strengthen him and weaken
|
||
them, to be beforehand with them, and marry her to his son. With
|
||
this view he went to the Sanctuary at Westminster, where the late
|
||
King's widow and her daughter still were, and besought them to come
|
||
to Court: where (he swore by anything and everything) they should
|
||
be safely and honourably entertained. They came, accordingly, but
|
||
had scarcely been at Court a month when his son died suddenly - or
|
||
was poisoned - and his plan was crushed to pieces.
|
||
|
||
In this extremity, King Richard, always active, thought, 'I must
|
||
make another plan.' And he made the plan of marrying the Princess
|
||
Elizabeth himself, although she was his niece. There was one
|
||
difficulty in the way: his wife, the Queen Anne, was alive. But,
|
||
he knew (remembering his nephews) how to remove that obstacle, and
|
||
he made love to the Princess Elizabeth, telling her he felt
|
||
perfectly confident that the Queen would die in February. The
|
||
Princess was not a very scrupulous young lady, for, instead of
|
||
rejecting the murderer of her brothers with scorn and hatred, she
|
||
openly declared she loved him dearly; and, when February came and
|
||
the Queen did not die, she expressed her impatient opinion that she
|
||
was too long about it. However, King Richard was not so far out in
|
||
his prediction, but, that she died in March - he took good care of
|
||
that - and then this precious pair hoped to be married. But they
|
||
were disappointed, for the idea of such a marriage was so unpopular
|
||
in the country, that the King's chief counsellors, RATCLIFFE and
|
||
CATESBY, would by no means undertake to propose it, and the King
|
||
was even obliged to declare in public that he had never thought of
|
||
such a thing.
|
||
|
||
He was, by this time, dreaded and hated by all classes of his
|
||
subjects. His nobles deserted every day to Henry's side; he dared
|
||
not call another Parliament, lest his crimes should be denounced
|
||
there; and for want of money, he was obliged to get Benevolences
|
||
from the citizens, which exasperated them all against him. It was
|
||
said too, that, being stricken by his conscience, he dreamed
|
||
frightful dreams, and started up in the night-time, wild with
|
||
terror and remorse. Active to the last, through all this, he
|
||
issued vigorous proclamations against Henry of Richmond and all his
|
||
followers, when he heard that they were coming against him with a
|
||
Fleet from France; and took the field as fierce and savage as a
|
||
wild boar - the animal represented on his shield.
|
||
|
||
Henry of Richmond landed with six thousand men at Milford Haven,
|
||
and came on against King Richard, then encamped at Leicester with
|
||
an army twice as great, through North Wales. On Bosworth Field the
|
||
two armies met; and Richard, looking along Henry's ranks, and
|
||
seeing them crowded with the English nobles who had abandoned him,
|
||
turned pale when he beheld the powerful Lord Stanley and his son
|
||
(whom he had tried hard to retain) among them. But, he was as
|
||
brave as he was wicked, and plunged into the thickest of the fight.
|
||
He was riding hither and thither, laying about him in all
|
||
directions, when he observed the Earl of Northumberland - one of
|
||
his few great allies - to stand inactive, and the main body of his
|
||
troops to hesitate. At the same moment, his desperate glance
|
||
caught Henry of Richmond among a little group of his knights.
|
||
Riding hard at him, and crying 'Treason!' he killed his standard-
|
||
bearer, fiercely unhorsed another gentleman, and aimed a powerful
|
||
stroke at Henry himself, to cut him down. But, Sir William Stanley
|
||
parried it as it fell, and before Richard could raise his arm
|
||
again, he was borne down in a press of numbers, unhorsed, and
|
||
killed. Lord Stanley picked up the crown, all bruised and
|
||
trampled, and stained with blood, and put it upon Richmond's head,
|
||
amid loud and rejoicing cries of 'Long live King Henry!'
|
||
|
||
That night, a horse was led up to the church of the Grey Friars at
|
||
Leicester; across whose back was tied, like some worthless sack, a
|
||
naked body brought there for burial. It was the body of the last
|
||
of the Plantagenet line, King Richard the Third, usurper and
|
||
murderer, slain at the battle of Bosworth Field in the thirty-
|
||
second year of his age, after a reign of two years.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXVI - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE SEVENTH
|
||
|
||
KING HENRY THE SEVENTH did not turn out to be as fine a fellow as
|
||
the nobility and people hoped, in the first joy of their
|
||
deliverance from Richard the Third. He was very cold, crafty, and
|
||
calculating, and would do almost anything for money. He possessed
|
||
considerable ability, but his chief merit appears to have been that
|
||
he was not cruel when there was nothing to be got by it.
|
||
|
||
The new King had promised the nobles who had espoused his cause
|
||
that he would marry the Princess Elizabeth. The first thing he
|
||
did, was, to direct her to be removed from the castle of Sheriff
|
||
Hutton in Yorkshire, where Richard had placed her, and restored to
|
||
the care of her mother in London. The young Earl of Warwick,
|
||
Edward Plantagenet, son and heir of the late Duke of Clarence, had
|
||
been kept a prisoner in the same old Yorkshire Castle with her.
|
||
This boy, who was now fifteen, the new King placed in the Tower for
|
||
safety. Then he came to London in great state, and gratified the
|
||
people with a fine procession; on which kind of show he often very
|
||
much relied for keeping them in good humour. The sports and feasts
|
||
which took place were followed by a terrible fever, called the
|
||
Sweating Sickness; of which great numbers of people died. Lord
|
||
Mayors and Aldermen are thought to have suffered most from it;
|
||
whether, because they were in the habit of over-eating themselves,
|
||
or because they were very jealous of preserving filth and nuisances
|
||
in the City (as they have been since), I don't know.
|
||
|
||
The King's coronation was postponed on account of the general ill-
|
||
health, and he afterwards deferred his marriage, as if he were not
|
||
very anxious that it should take place: and, even after that,
|
||
deferred the Queen's coronation so long that he gave offence to the
|
||
York party. However, he set these things right in the end, by
|
||
hanging some men and seizing on the rich possessions of others; by
|
||
granting more popular pardons to the followers of the late King
|
||
than could, at first, be got from him; and, by employing about his
|
||
Court, some very scrupulous persons who had been employed in the
|
||
previous reign.
|
||
|
||
As this reign was principally remarkable for two very curious
|
||
impostures which have become famous in history, we will make those
|
||
two stories its principal feature.
|
||
|
||
There was a priest at Oxford of the name of Simons, who had for a
|
||
pupil a handsome boy named Lambert Simnel, the son of a baker.
|
||
Partly to gratify his own ambitious ends, and partly to carry out
|
||
the designs of a secret party formed against the King, this priest
|
||
declared that his pupil, the boy, was no other than the young Earl
|
||
of Warwick; who (as everybody might have known) was safely locked
|
||
up in the Tower of London. The priest and the boy went over to
|
||
Ireland; and, at Dublin, enlisted in their cause all ranks of the
|
||
people: who seem to have been generous enough, but exceedingly
|
||
irrational. The Earl of Kildare, the governor of Ireland, declared
|
||
that he believed the boy to be what the priest represented; and the
|
||
boy, who had been well tutored by the priest, told them such things
|
||
of his childhood, and gave them so many descriptions of the Royal
|
||
Family, that they were perpetually shouting and hurrahing, and
|
||
drinking his health, and making all kinds of noisy and thirsty
|
||
demonstrations, to express their belief in him. Nor was this
|
||
feeling confined to Ireland alone, for the Earl of Lincoln - whom
|
||
the late usurper had named as his successor - went over to the
|
||
young Pretender; and, after holding a secret correspondence with
|
||
the Dowager Duchess of Burgundy - the sister of Edward the Fourth,
|
||
who detested the present King and all his race - sailed to Dublin
|
||
with two thousand German soldiers of her providing. In this
|
||
promising state of the boy's fortunes, he was crowned there, with a
|
||
crown taken off the head of a statue of the Virgin Mary; and was
|
||
then, according to the Irish custom of those days, carried home on
|
||
the shoulders of a big chieftain possessing a great deal more
|
||
strength than sense. Father Simons, you may be sure, was mighty
|
||
busy at the coronation.
|
||
|
||
Ten days afterwards, the Germans, and the Irish, and the priest,
|
||
and the boy, and the Earl of Lincoln, all landed in Lancashire to
|
||
invade England. The King, who had good intelligence of their
|
||
movements, set up his standard at Nottingham, where vast numbers
|
||
resorted to him every day; while the Earl of Lincoln could gain but
|
||
very few. With his small force he tried to make for the town of
|
||
Newark; but the King's army getting between him and that place, he
|
||
had no choice but to risk a battle at Stoke. It soon ended in the
|
||
complete destruction of the Pretender's forces, one half of whom
|
||
were killed; among them, the Earl himself. The priest and the
|
||
baker's boy were taken prisoners. The priest, after confessing the
|
||
trick, was shut up in prison, where he afterwards died - suddenly
|
||
perhaps. The boy was taken into the King's kitchen and made a
|
||
turnspit. He was afterwards raised to the station of one of the
|
||
King's falconers; and so ended this strange imposition.
|
||
|
||
There seems reason to suspect that the Dowager Queen - always a
|
||
restless and busy woman - had had some share in tutoring the
|
||
baker's son. The King was very angry with her, whether or no. He
|
||
seized upon her property, and shut her up in a convent at
|
||
Bermondsey.
|
||
|
||
One might suppose that the end of this story would have put the
|
||
Irish people on their guard; but they were quite ready to receive a
|
||
second impostor, as they had received the first, and that same
|
||
troublesome Duchess of Burgundy soon gave them the opportunity.
|
||
All of a sudden there appeared at Cork, in a vessel arriving from
|
||
Portugal, a young man of excellent abilities, of very handsome
|
||
appearance and most winning manners, who declared himself to be
|
||
Richard, Duke of York, the second son of King Edward the Fourth.
|
||
'O,' said some, even of those ready Irish believers, 'but surely
|
||
that young Prince was murdered by his uncle in the Tower!' - 'It IS
|
||
supposed so,' said the engaging young man; 'and my brother WAS
|
||
killed in that gloomy prison; but I escaped - it don't matter how,
|
||
at present - and have been wandering about the world for seven long
|
||
years.' This explanation being quite satisfactory to numbers of
|
||
the Irish people, they began again to shout and to hurrah, and to
|
||
drink his health, and to make the noisy and thirsty demonstrations
|
||
all over again. And the big chieftain in Dublin began to look out
|
||
for another coronation, and another young King to be carried home
|
||
on his back.
|
||
|
||
Now, King Henry being then on bad terms with France, the French
|
||
King, Charles the Eighth, saw that, by pretending to believe in the
|
||
handsome young man, he could trouble his enemy sorely. So, he
|
||
invited him over to the French Court, and appointed him a body-
|
||
guard, and treated him in all respects as if he really were the
|
||
Duke of York. Peace, however, being soon concluded between the two
|
||
Kings, the pretended Duke was turned adrift, and wandered for
|
||
protection to the Duchess of Burgundy. She, after feigning to
|
||
inquire into the reality of his claims, declared him to be the very
|
||
picture of her dear departed brother; gave him a body-guard at her
|
||
Court, of thirty halberdiers; and called him by the sounding name
|
||
of the White Rose of England.
|
||
|
||
The leading members of the White Rose party in England sent over an
|
||
agent, named Sir Robert Clifford, to ascertain whether the White
|
||
Rose's claims were good: the King also sent over his agents to
|
||
inquire into the Rose's history. The White Roses declared the
|
||
young man to be really the Duke of York; the King declared him to
|
||
be PERKIN WARBECK, the son of a merchant of the city of Tournay,
|
||
who had acquired his knowledge of England, its language and
|
||
manners, from the English merchants who traded in Flanders; it was
|
||
also stated by the Royal agents that he had been in the service of
|
||
Lady Brompton, the wife of an exiled English nobleman, and that the
|
||
Duchess of Burgundy had caused him to be trained and taught,
|
||
expressly for this deception. The King then required the Archduke
|
||
Philip - who was the sovereign of Burgundy - to banish this new
|
||
Pretender, or to deliver him up; but, as the Archduke replied that
|
||
he could not control the Duchess in her own land, the King, in
|
||
revenge, took the market of English cloth away from Antwerp, and
|
||
prevented all commercial intercourse between the two countries.
|
||
|
||
He also, by arts and bribes, prevailed on Sir Robert Clifford to
|
||
betray his employers; and he denouncing several famous English
|
||
noblemen as being secretly the friends of Perkin Warbeck, the King
|
||
had three of the foremost executed at once. Whether he pardoned
|
||
the remainder because they were poor, I do not know; but it is only
|
||
too probable that he refused to pardon one famous nobleman against
|
||
whom the same Clifford soon afterwards informed separately, because
|
||
he was rich. This was no other than Sir William Stanley, who had
|
||
saved the King's life at the battle of Bosworth Field. It is very
|
||
doubtful whether his treason amounted to much more than his having
|
||
said, that if he were sure the young man was the Duke of York, he
|
||
would not take arms against him. Whatever he had done he admitted,
|
||
like an honourable spirit; and he lost his head for it, and the
|
||
covetous King gained all his wealth.
|
||
|
||
Perkin Warbeck kept quiet for three years; but, as the Flemings
|
||
began to complain heavily of the loss of their trade by the
|
||
stoppage of the Antwerp market on his account, and as it was not
|
||
unlikely that they might even go so far as to take his life, or
|
||
give him up, he found it necessary to do something. Accordingly he
|
||
made a desperate sally, and landed, with only a few hundred men, on
|
||
the coast of Deal. But he was soon glad to get back to the place
|
||
from whence he came; for the country people rose against his
|
||
followers, killed a great many, and took a hundred and fifty
|
||
prisoners: who were all driven to London, tied together with
|
||
ropes, like a team of cattle. Every one of them was hanged on some
|
||
part or other of the sea-shore; in order, that if any more men
|
||
should come over with Perkin Warbeck, they might see the bodies as
|
||
a warning before they landed.
|
||
|
||
Then the wary King, by making a treaty of commerce with the
|
||
Flemings, drove Perkin Warbeck out of that country; and, by
|
||
completely gaining over the Irish to his side, deprived him of that
|
||
asylum too. He wandered away to Scotland, and told his story at
|
||
that Court. King James the Fourth of Scotland, who was no friend
|
||
to King Henry, and had no reason to be (for King Henry had bribed
|
||
his Scotch lords to betray him more than once; but had never
|
||
succeeded in his plots), gave him a great reception, called him his
|
||
cousin, and gave him in marriage the Lady Catherine Gordon, a
|
||
beautiful and charming creature related to the royal house of
|
||
Stuart.
|
||
|
||
Alarmed by this successful reappearance of the Pretender, the King
|
||
still undermined, and bought, and bribed, and kept his doings and
|
||
Perkin Warbeck's story in the dark, when he might, one would
|
||
imagine, have rendered the matter clear to all England. But, for
|
||
all this bribing of the Scotch lords at the Scotch King's Court, he
|
||
could not procure the Pretender to be delivered up to him. James,
|
||
though not very particular in many respects, would not betray him;
|
||
and the ever-busy Duchess of Burgundy so provided him with arms,
|
||
and good soldiers, and with money besides, that he had soon a
|
||
little army of fifteen hundred men of various nations. With these,
|
||
and aided by the Scottish King in person, he crossed the border
|
||
into England, and made a proclamation to the people, in which he
|
||
called the King 'Henry Tudor;' offered large rewards to any who
|
||
should take or distress him; and announced himself as King Richard
|
||
the Fourth come to receive the homage of his faithful subjects.
|
||
His faithful subjects, however, cared nothing for him, and hated
|
||
his faithful troops: who, being of different nations, quarrelled
|
||
also among themselves. Worse than this, if worse were possible,
|
||
they began to plunder the country; upon which the White Rose said,
|
||
that he would rather lose his rights, than gain them through the
|
||
miseries of the English people. The Scottish King made a jest of
|
||
his scruples; but they and their whole force went back again
|
||
without fighting a battle.
|
||
|
||
The worst consequence of this attempt was, that a rising took place
|
||
among the people of Cornwall, who considered themselves too heavily
|
||
taxed to meet the charges of the expected war. Stimulated by
|
||
Flammock, a lawyer, and Joseph, a blacksmith, and joined by Lord
|
||
Audley and some other country gentlemen, they marched on all the
|
||
way to Deptford Bridge, where they fought a battle with the King's
|
||
army. They were defeated - though the Cornish men fought with
|
||
great bravery - and the lord was beheaded, and the lawyer and the
|
||
blacksmith were hanged, drawn, and quartered. The rest were
|
||
pardoned. The King, who believed every man to be as avaricious as
|
||
himself, and thought that money could settle anything, allowed them
|
||
to make bargains for their liberty with the soldiers who had taken
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
Perkin Warbeck, doomed to wander up and down, and never to find
|
||
rest anywhere - a sad fate: almost a sufficient punishment for an
|
||
imposture, which he seems in time to have half believed himself -
|
||
lost his Scottish refuge through a truce being made between the two
|
||
Kings; and found himself, once more, without a country before him
|
||
in which he could lay his head. But James (always honourable and
|
||
true to him, alike when he melted down his plate, and even the
|
||
great gold chain he had been used to wear, to pay soldiers in his
|
||
cause; and now, when that cause was lost and hopeless) did not
|
||
conclude the treaty, until he had safely departed out of the
|
||
Scottish dominions. He, and his beautiful wife, who was faithful
|
||
to him under all reverses, and left her state and home to follow
|
||
his poor fortunes, were put aboard ship with everything necessary
|
||
for their comfort and protection, and sailed for Ireland.
|
||
|
||
But, the Irish people had had enough of counterfeit Earls of
|
||
Warwick and Dukes of York, for one while; and would give the White
|
||
Rose no aid. So, the White Rose - encircled by thorns indeed -
|
||
resolved to go with his beautiful wife to Cornwall as a forlorn
|
||
resource, and see what might be made of the Cornish men, who had
|
||
risen so valiantly a little while before, and who had fought so
|
||
bravely at Deptford Bridge.
|
||
|
||
To Whitsand Bay, in Cornwall, accordingly, came Perkin Warbeck and
|
||
his wife; and the lovely lady he shut up for safety in the Castle
|
||
of St. Michael's Mount, and then marched into Devonshire at the
|
||
head of three thousand Cornishmen. These were increased to six
|
||
thousand by the time of his arrival in Exeter; but, there the
|
||
people made a stout resistance, and he went on to Taunton, where he
|
||
came in sight of the King's army. The stout Cornish men, although
|
||
they were few in number, and badly armed, were so bold, that they
|
||
never thought of retreating; but bravely looked forward to a battle
|
||
on the morrow. Unhappily for them, the man who was possessed of so
|
||
many engaging qualities, and who attracted so many people to his
|
||
side when he had nothing else with which to tempt them, was not as
|
||
brave as they. In the night, when the two armies lay opposite to
|
||
each other, he mounted a swift horse and fled. When morning
|
||
dawned, the poor confiding Cornish men, discovering that they had
|
||
no leader, surrendered to the King's power. Some of them were
|
||
hanged, and the rest were pardoned and went miserably home.
|
||
|
||
Before the King pursued Perkin Warbeck to the sanctuary of Beaulieu
|
||
in the New Forest, where it was soon known that he had taken
|
||
refuge, he sent a body of horsemen to St. Michael's Mount, to seize
|
||
his wife. She was soon taken and brought as a captive before the
|
||
King. But she was so beautiful, and so good, and so devoted to the
|
||
man in whom she believed, that the King regarded her with
|
||
compassion, treated her with great respect, and placed her at
|
||
Court, near the Queen's person. And many years after Perkin
|
||
Warbeck was no more, and when his strange story had become like a
|
||
nursery tale, SHE was called the White Rose, by the people, in
|
||
remembrance of her beauty.
|
||
|
||
The sanctuary at Beaulieu was soon surrounded by the King's men;
|
||
and the King, pursuing his usual dark, artful ways, sent pretended
|
||
friends to Perkin Warbeck to persuade him to come out and surrender
|
||
himself. This he soon did; the King having taken a good look at
|
||
the man of whom he had heard so much - from behind a screen -
|
||
directed him to be well mounted, and to ride behind him at a little
|
||
distance, guarded, but not bound in any way. So they entered
|
||
London with the King's favourite show - a procession; and some of
|
||
the people hooted as the Pretender rode slowly through the streets
|
||
to the Tower; but the greater part were quiet, and very curious to
|
||
see him. From the Tower, he was taken to the Palace at
|
||
Westminster, and there lodged like a gentleman, though closely
|
||
watched. He was examined every now and then as to his imposture;
|
||
but the King was so secret in all he did, that even then he gave it
|
||
a consequence, which it cannot be supposed to have in itself
|
||
deserved.
|
||
|
||
At last Perkin Warbeck ran away, and took refuge in another
|
||
sanctuary near Richmond in Surrey. From this he was again
|
||
persuaded to deliver himself up; and, being conveyed to London, he
|
||
stood in the stocks for a whole day, outside Westminster Hall, and
|
||
there read a paper purporting to be his full confession, and
|
||
relating his history as the King's agents had originally described
|
||
it. He was then shut up in the Tower again, in the company of the
|
||
Earl of Warwick, who had now been there for fourteen years: ever
|
||
since his removal out of Yorkshire, except when the King had had
|
||
him at Court, and had shown him to the people, to prove the
|
||
imposture of the Baker's boy. It is but too probable, when we
|
||
consider the crafty character of Henry the Seventh, that these two
|
||
were brought together for a cruel purpose. A plot was soon
|
||
discovered between them and the keepers, to murder the Governor,
|
||
get possession of the keys, and proclaim Perkin Warbeck as King
|
||
Richard the Fourth. That there was some such plot, is likely; that
|
||
they were tempted into it, is at least as likely; that the
|
||
unfortunate Earl of Warwick - last male of the Plantagenet line -
|
||
was too unused to the world, and too ignorant and simple to know
|
||
much about it, whatever it was, is perfectly certain; and that it
|
||
was the King's interest to get rid of him, is no less so. He was
|
||
beheaded on Tower Hill, and Perkin Warbeck was hanged at Tyburn.
|
||
|
||
Such was the end of the pretended Duke of York, whose shadowy
|
||
history was made more shadowy - and ever will be - by the mystery
|
||
and craft of the King. If he had turned his great natural
|
||
advantages to a more honest account, he might have lived a happy
|
||
and respected life, even in those days. But he died upon a gallows
|
||
at Tyburn, leaving the Scottish lady, who had loved him so well,
|
||
kindly protected at the Queen's Court. After some time she forgot
|
||
her old loves and troubles, as many people do with Time's merciful
|
||
assistance, and married a Welsh gentleman. Her second husband, SIR
|
||
MATTHEW CRADOC, more honest and more happy than her first, lies
|
||
beside her in a tomb in the old church of Swansea.
|
||
|
||
The ill-blood between France and England in this reign, arose out
|
||
of the continued plotting of the Duchess of Burgundy, and disputes
|
||
respecting the affairs of Brittany. The King feigned to be very
|
||
patriotic, indignant, and warlike; but he always contrived so as
|
||
never to make war in reality, and always to make money. His
|
||
taxation of the people, on pretence of war with France, involved,
|
||
at one time, a very dangerous insurrection, headed by Sir John
|
||
Egremont, and a common man called John a Chambre. But it was
|
||
subdued by the royal forces, under the command of the Earl of
|
||
Surrey. The knighted John escaped to the Duchess of Burgundy, who
|
||
was ever ready to receive any one who gave the King trouble; and
|
||
the plain John was hanged at York, in the midst of a number of his
|
||
men, but on a much higher gibbet, as being a greater traitor. Hung
|
||
high or hung low, however, hanging is much the same to the person
|
||
hung.
|
||
|
||
Within a year after her marriage, the Queen had given birth to a
|
||
son, who was called Prince Arthur, in remembrance of the old
|
||
British prince of romance and story; and who, when all these events
|
||
had happened, being then in his fifteenth year, was married to
|
||
CATHERINE, the daughter of the Spanish monarch, with great
|
||
rejoicings and bright prospects; but in a very few months he
|
||
sickened and died. As soon as the King had recovered from his
|
||
grief, he thought it a pity that the fortune of the Spanish
|
||
Princess, amounting to two hundred thousand crowns, should go out
|
||
of the family; and therefore arranged that the young widow should
|
||
marry his second son HENRY, then twelve years of age, when he too
|
||
should be fifteen. There were objections to this marriage on the
|
||
part of the clergy; but, as the infallible Pope was gained over,
|
||
and, as he MUST be right, that settled the business for the time.
|
||
The King's eldest daughter was provided for, and a long course of
|
||
disturbance was considered to be set at rest, by her being married
|
||
to the Scottish King.
|
||
|
||
And now the Queen died. When the King had got over that grief too,
|
||
his mind once more reverted to his darling money for consolation,
|
||
and he thought of marrying the Dowager Queen of Naples, who was
|
||
immensely rich: but, as it turned out not to be practicable to
|
||
gain the money however practicable it might have been to gain the
|
||
lady, he gave up the idea. He was not so fond of her but that he
|
||
soon proposed to marry the Dowager Duchess of Savoy; and, soon
|
||
afterwards, the widow of the King of Castile, who was raving mad.
|
||
But he made a money-bargain instead, and married neither.
|
||
|
||
The Duchess of Burgundy, among the other discontented people to
|
||
whom she had given refuge, had sheltered EDMUND DE LA POLE (younger
|
||
brother of that Earl of Lincoln who was killed at Stoke), now Earl
|
||
of Suffolk. The King had prevailed upon him to return to the
|
||
marriage of Prince Arthur; but, he soon afterwards went away again;
|
||
and then the King, suspecting a conspiracy, resorted to his
|
||
favourite plan of sending him some treacherous friends, and buying
|
||
of those scoundrels the secrets they disclosed or invented. Some
|
||
arrests and executions took place in consequence. In the end, the
|
||
King, on a promise of not taking his life, obtained possession of
|
||
the person of Edmund de la Pole, and shut him up in the Tower.
|
||
|
||
This was his last enemy. If he had lived much longer he would have
|
||
made many more among the people, by the grinding exaction to which
|
||
he constantly exposed them, and by the tyrannical acts of his two
|
||
prime favourites in all money-raising matters, EDMUND DUDLEY and
|
||
RICHARD EMPSON. But Death - the enemy who is not to be bought off
|
||
or deceived, and on whom no money, and no treachery has any effect
|
||
- presented himself at this juncture, and ended the King's reign.
|
||
He died of the gout, on the twenty-second of April, one thousand
|
||
five hundred and nine, and in the fifty-third year of his age,
|
||
after reigning twenty-four years; he was buried in the beautiful
|
||
Chapel of Westminster Abbey, which he had himself founded, and
|
||
which still bears his name.
|
||
|
||
It was in this reign that the great CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS, on behalf
|
||
of Spain, discovered what was then called The New World. Great
|
||
wonder, interest, and hope of wealth being awakened in England
|
||
thereby, the King and the merchants of London and Bristol fitted
|
||
out an English expedition for further discoveries in the New World,
|
||
and entrusted it to SEBASTIAN CABOT, of Bristol, the son of a
|
||
Venetian pilot there. He was very successful in his voyage, and
|
||
gained high reputation, both for himself and England.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXVII - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE EIGHTH, CALLED BLUFF KING
|
||
HAL AND BURLY KING HARRY
|
||
|
||
PART THE FIRST
|
||
|
||
WE now come to King Henry the Eighth, whom it has been too much the
|
||
fashion to call 'Bluff King Hal,' and 'Burly King Harry,' and other
|
||
fine names; but whom I shall take the liberty to call, plainly, one
|
||
of the most detestable villains that ever drew breath. You will be
|
||
able to judge, long before we come to the end of his life, whether
|
||
he deserves the character.
|
||
|
||
He was just eighteen years of age when he came to the throne.
|
||
People said he was handsome then; but I don't believe it. He was a
|
||
big, burly, noisy, small-eyed, large-faced, double-chinned,
|
||
swinish-looking fellow in later life (as we know from the
|
||
likenesses of him, painted by the famous HANS HOLBEIN), and it is
|
||
not easy to believe that so bad a character can ever have been
|
||
veiled under a prepossessing appearance.
|
||
|
||
He was anxious to make himself popular; and the people, who had
|
||
long disliked the late King, were very willing to believe that he
|
||
deserved to be so. He was extremely fond of show and display, and
|
||
so were they. Therefore there was great rejoicing when he married
|
||
the Princess Catherine, and when they were both crowned. And the
|
||
King fought at tournaments and always came off victorious - for the
|
||
courtiers took care of that - and there was a general outcry that
|
||
he was a wonderful man. Empson, Dudley, and their supporters were
|
||
accused of a variety of crimes they had never committed, instead of
|
||
the offences of which they really had been guilty; and they were
|
||
pilloried, and set upon horses with their faces to the tails, and
|
||
knocked about and beheaded, to the satisfaction of the people, and
|
||
the enrichment of the King.
|
||
|
||
The Pope, so indefatigable in getting the world into trouble, had
|
||
mixed himself up in a war on the continent of Europe, occasioned by
|
||
the reigning Princes of little quarrelling states in Italy having
|
||
at various times married into other Royal families, and so led to
|
||
THEIR claiming a share in those petty Governments. The King, who
|
||
discovered that he was very fond of the Pope, sent a herald to the
|
||
King of France, to say that he must not make war upon that holy
|
||
personage, because he was the father of all Christians. As the
|
||
French King did not mind this relationship in the least, and also
|
||
refused to admit a claim King Henry made to certain lands in
|
||
France, war was declared between the two countries. Not to perplex
|
||
this story with an account of the tricks and designs of all the
|
||
sovereigns who were engaged in it, it is enough to say that England
|
||
made a blundering alliance with Spain, and got stupidly taken in by
|
||
that country; which made its own terms with France when it could
|
||
and left England in the lurch. SIR EDWARD HOWARD, a bold admiral,
|
||
son of the Earl of Surrey, distinguished himself by his bravery
|
||
against the French in this business; but, unfortunately, he was
|
||
more brave than wise, for, skimming into the French harbour of
|
||
Brest with only a few row-boats, he attempted (in revenge for the
|
||
defeat and death of SIR THOMAS KNYVETT, another bold English
|
||
admiral) to take some strong French ships, well defended with
|
||
batteries of cannon. The upshot was, that he was left on board of
|
||
one of them (in consequence of its shooting away from his own
|
||
boat), with not more than about a dozen men, and was thrown into
|
||
the sea and drowned: though not until he had taken from his breast
|
||
his gold chain and gold whistle, which were the signs of his
|
||
office, and had cast them into the sea to prevent their being made
|
||
a boast of by the enemy. After this defeat - which was a great
|
||
one, for Sir Edward Howard was a man of valour and fame - the King
|
||
took it into his head to invade France in person; first executing
|
||
that dangerous Earl of Suffolk whom his father had left in the
|
||
Tower, and appointing Queen Catherine to the charge of his kingdom
|
||
in his absence. He sailed to Calais, where he was joined by
|
||
MAXIMILIAN, Emperor of Germany, who pretended to be his soldier,
|
||
and who took pay in his service: with a good deal of nonsense of
|
||
that sort, flattering enough to the vanity of a vain blusterer.
|
||
The King might be successful enough in sham fights; but his idea of
|
||
real battles chiefly consisted in pitching silken tents of bright
|
||
colours that were ignominiously blown down by the wind, and in
|
||
making a vast display of gaudy flags and golden curtains. Fortune,
|
||
however, favoured him better than he deserved; for, after much
|
||
waste of time in tent pitching, flag flying, gold curtaining, and
|
||
other such masquerading, he gave the French battle at a place
|
||
called Guinegate: where they took such an unaccountable panic, and
|
||
fled with such swiftness, that it was ever afterwards called by the
|
||
English the Battle of Spurs. Instead of following up his
|
||
advantage, the King, finding that he had had enough of real
|
||
fighting, came home again.
|
||
|
||
The Scottish King, though nearly related to Henry by marriage, had
|
||
taken part against him in this war. The Earl of Surrey, as the
|
||
English general, advanced to meet him when he came out of his own
|
||
dominions and crossed the river Tweed. The two armies came up with
|
||
one another when the Scottish King had also crossed the river Till,
|
||
and was encamped upon the last of the Cheviot Hills, called the
|
||
Hill of Flodden. Along the plain below it, the English, when the
|
||
hour of battle came, advanced. The Scottish army, which had been
|
||
drawn up in five great bodies, then came steadily down in perfect
|
||
silence. So they, in their turn, advanced to meet the English
|
||
army, which came on in one long line; and they attacked it with a
|
||
body of spearmen, under LORD HOME. At first they had the best of
|
||
it; but the English recovered themselves so bravely, and fought
|
||
with such valour, that, when the Scottish King had almost made his
|
||
way up to the Royal Standard, he was slain, and the whole Scottish
|
||
power routed. Ten thousand Scottish men lay dead that day on
|
||
Flodden Field; and among them, numbers of the nobility and gentry.
|
||
For a long time afterwards, the Scottish peasantry used to believe
|
||
that their King had not been really killed in this battle, because
|
||
no Englishman had found an iron belt he wore about his body as a
|
||
penance for having been an unnatural and undutiful son. But,
|
||
whatever became of his belt, the English had his sword and dagger,
|
||
and the ring from his finger, and his body too, covered with
|
||
wounds. There is no doubt of it; for it was seen and recognised by
|
||
English gentlemen who had known the Scottish King well.
|
||
|
||
When King Henry was making ready to renew the war in France, the
|
||
French King was contemplating peace. His queen, dying at this
|
||
time, he proposed, though he was upwards of fifty years old, to
|
||
marry King Henry's sister, the Princess Mary, who, besides being
|
||
only sixteen, was betrothed to the Duke of Suffolk. As the
|
||
inclinations of young Princesses were not much considered in such
|
||
matters, the marriage was concluded, and the poor girl was escorted
|
||
to France, where she was immediately left as the French King's
|
||
bride, with only one of all her English attendants. That one was a
|
||
pretty young girl named ANNE BOLEYN, niece of the Earl of Surrey,
|
||
who had been made Duke of Norfolk, after the victory of Flodden
|
||
Field. Anne Boleyn's is a name to be remembered, as you will
|
||
presently find.
|
||
|
||
And now the French King, who was very proud of his young wife, was
|
||
preparing for many years of happiness, and she was looking forward,
|
||
I dare say, to many years of misery, when he died within three
|
||
months, and left her a young widow. The new French monarch,
|
||
FRANCIS THE FIRST, seeing how important it was to his interests
|
||
that she should take for her second husband no one but an
|
||
Englishman, advised her first lover, the Duke of Suffolk, when King
|
||
Henry sent him over to France to fetch her home, to marry her. The
|
||
Princess being herself so fond of that Duke, as to tell him that he
|
||
must either do so then, or for ever lose her, they were wedded; and
|
||
Henry afterwards forgave them. In making interest with the King,
|
||
the Duke of Suffolk had addressed his most powerful favourite and
|
||
adviser, THOMAS WOLSEY - a name very famous in history for its rise
|
||
and downfall.
|
||
|
||
Wolsey was the son of a respectable butcher at Ipswich, in Suffolk
|
||
and received so excellent an education that he became a tutor to
|
||
the family of the Marquis of Dorset, who afterwards got him
|
||
appointed one of the late King's chaplains. On the accession of
|
||
Henry the Eighth, he was promoted and taken into great favour. He
|
||
was now Archbishop of York; the Pope had made him a Cardinal
|
||
besides; and whoever wanted influence in England or favour with the
|
||
King - whether he were a foreign monarch or an English nobleman -
|
||
was obliged to make a friend of the great Cardinal Wolsey.
|
||
|
||
He was a gay man, who could dance and jest, and sing and drink; and
|
||
those were the roads to so much, or rather so little, of a heart as
|
||
King Henry had. He was wonderfully fond of pomp and glitter, and
|
||
so was the King. He knew a good deal of the Church learning of
|
||
that time; much of which consisted in finding artful excuses and
|
||
pretences for almost any wrong thing, and in arguing that black was
|
||
white, or any other colour. This kind of learning pleased the King
|
||
too. For many such reasons, the Cardinal was high in estimation
|
||
with the King; and, being a man of far greater ability, knew as
|
||
well how to manage him, as a clever keeper may know how to manage a
|
||
wolf or a tiger, or any other cruel and uncertain beast, that may
|
||
turn upon him and tear him any day. Never had there been seen in
|
||
England such state as my Lord Cardinal kept. His wealth was
|
||
enormous; equal, it was reckoned, to the riches of the Crown. His
|
||
palaces were as splendid as the King's, and his retinue was eight
|
||
hundred strong. He held his Court, dressed out from top to toe in
|
||
flaming scarlet; and his very shoes were golden, set with precious
|
||
stones. His followers rode on blood horses; while he, with a
|
||
wonderful affectation of humility in the midst of his great
|
||
splendour, ambled on a mule with a red velvet saddle and bridle and
|
||
golden stirrups.
|
||
|
||
Through the influence of this stately priest, a grand meeting was
|
||
arranged to take place between the French and English Kings in
|
||
France; but on ground belonging to England. A prodigious show of
|
||
friendship and rejoicing was to be made on the occasion; and
|
||
heralds were sent to proclaim with brazen trumpets through all the
|
||
principal cities of Europe, that, on a certain day, the Kings of
|
||
France and England, as companions and brothers in arms, each
|
||
attended by eighteen followers, would hold a tournament against all
|
||
knights who might choose to come.
|
||
|
||
CHARLES, the new Emperor of Germany (the old one being dead),
|
||
wanted to prevent too cordial an alliance between these sovereigns,
|
||
and came over to England before the King could repair to the place
|
||
of meeting; and, besides making an agreeable impression upon him,
|
||
secured Wolsey's interest by promising that his influence should
|
||
make him Pope when the next vacancy occurred. On the day when the
|
||
Emperor left England, the King and all the Court went over to
|
||
Calais, and thence to the place of meeting, between Ardres and
|
||
Guisnes, commonly called the Field of the Cloth of Gold. Here, all
|
||
manner of expense and prodigality was lavished on the decorations
|
||
of the show; many of the knights and gentlemen being so superbly
|
||
dressed that it was said they carried their whole estates upon
|
||
their shoulders.
|
||
|
||
There were sham castles, temporary chapels, fountains running wine,
|
||
great cellars full of wine free as water to all comers, silk tents,
|
||
gold lace and foil, gilt lions, and such things without end; and,
|
||
in the midst of all, the rich Cardinal out-shone and out-glittered
|
||
all the noblemen and gentlemen assembled. After a treaty made
|
||
between the two Kings with as much solemnity as if they had
|
||
intended to keep it, the lists - nine hundred feet long, and three
|
||
hundred and twenty broad - were opened for the tournament; the
|
||
Queens of France and England looking on with great array of lords
|
||
and ladies. Then, for ten days, the two sovereigns fought five
|
||
combats every day, and always beat their polite adversaries; though
|
||
they DO write that the King of England, being thrown in a wrestle
|
||
one day by the King of France, lost his kingly temper with his
|
||
brother-in-arms, and wanted to make a quarrel of it. Then, there
|
||
is a great story belonging to this Field of the Cloth of Gold,
|
||
showing how the English were distrustful of the French, and the
|
||
French of the English, until Francis rode alone one morning to
|
||
Henry's tent; and, going in before he was out of bed, told him in
|
||
joke that he was his prisoner; and how Henry jumped out of bed and
|
||
embraced Francis; and how Francis helped Henry to dress, and warmed
|
||
his linen for him; and how Henry gave Francis a splendid jewelled
|
||
collar, and how Francis gave Henry, in return, a costly bracelet.
|
||
All this and a great deal more was so written about, and sung
|
||
about, and talked about at that time (and, indeed, since that time
|
||
too), that the world has had good cause to be sick of it, for ever.
|
||
|
||
Of course, nothing came of all these fine doings but a speedy
|
||
renewal of the war between England and France, in which the two
|
||
Royal companions and brothers in arms longed very earnestly to
|
||
damage one another. But, before it broke out again, the Duke of
|
||
Buckingham was shamefully executed on Tower Hill, on the evidence
|
||
of a discharged servant - really for nothing, except the folly of
|
||
having believed in a friar of the name of HOPKINS, who had
|
||
pretended to be a prophet, and who had mumbled and jumbled out some
|
||
nonsense about the Duke's son being destined to be very great in
|
||
the land. It was believed that the unfortunate Duke had given
|
||
offence to the great Cardinal by expressing his mind freely about
|
||
the expense and absurdity of the whole business of the Field of the
|
||
Cloth of Gold. At any rate, he was beheaded, as I have said, for
|
||
nothing. And the people who saw it done were very angry, and cried
|
||
out that it was the work of 'the butcher's son!'
|
||
|
||
The new war was a short one, though the Earl of Surrey invaded
|
||
France again, and did some injury to that country. It ended in
|
||
another treaty of peace between the two kingdoms, and in the
|
||
discovery that the Emperor of Germany was not such a good friend to
|
||
England in reality, as he pretended to be. Neither did he keep his
|
||
promise to Wolsey to make him Pope, though the King urged him. Two
|
||
Popes died in pretty quick succession; but the foreign priests were
|
||
too much for the Cardinal, and kept him out of the post. So the
|
||
Cardinal and King together found out that the Emperor of Germany
|
||
was not a man to keep faith with; broke off a projected marriage
|
||
between the King's daughter MARY, Princess of Wales, and that
|
||
sovereign; and began to consider whether it might not be well to
|
||
marry the young lady, either to Francis himself, or to his eldest
|
||
son.
|
||
|
||
There now arose at Wittemberg, in Germany, the great leader of the
|
||
mighty change in England which is called The Reformation, and which
|
||
set the people free from their slavery to the priests. This was a
|
||
learned Doctor, named MARTIN LUTHER, who knew all about them, for
|
||
he had been a priest, and even a monk, himself. The preaching and
|
||
writing of Wickliffe had set a number of men thinking on this
|
||
subject; and Luther, finding one day to his great surprise, that
|
||
there really was a book called the New Testament which the priests
|
||
did not allow to be read, and which contained truths that they
|
||
suppressed, began to be very vigorous against the whole body, from
|
||
the Pope downward. It happened, while he was yet only beginning
|
||
his vast work of awakening the nation, that an impudent fellow
|
||
named TETZEL, a friar of very bad character, came into his
|
||
neighbourhood selling what were called Indulgences, by wholesale,
|
||
to raise money for beautifying the great Cathedral of St. Peter's,
|
||
at Rome. Whoever bought an Indulgence of the Pope was supposed to
|
||
buy himself off from the punishment of Heaven for his offences.
|
||
Luther told the people that these Indulgences were worthless bits
|
||
of paper, before God, and that Tetzel and his masters were a crew
|
||
of impostors in selling them.
|
||
|
||
The King and the Cardinal were mightily indignant at this
|
||
presumption; and the King (with the help of SIR THOMAS MORE, a wise
|
||
man, whom he afterwards repaid by striking off his head) even wrote
|
||
a book about it, with which the Pope was so well pleased that he
|
||
gave the King the title of Defender of the Faith. The King and the
|
||
Cardinal also issued flaming warnings to the people not to read
|
||
Luther's books, on pain of excommunication. But they did read them
|
||
for all that; and the rumour of what was in them spread far and
|
||
wide.
|
||
|
||
When this great change was thus going on, the King began to show
|
||
himself in his truest and worst colours. Anne Boleyn, the pretty
|
||
little girl who had gone abroad to France with his sister, was by
|
||
this time grown up to be very beautiful, and was one of the ladies
|
||
in attendance on Queen Catherine. Now, Queen Catherine was no
|
||
longer young or handsome, and it is likely that she was not
|
||
particularly good-tempered; having been always rather melancholy,
|
||
and having been made more so by the deaths of four of her children
|
||
when they were very young. So, the King fell in love with the fair
|
||
Anne Boleyn, and said to himself, 'How can I be best rid of my own
|
||
troublesome wife whom I am tired of, and marry Anne?'
|
||
|
||
You recollect that Queen Catherine had been the wife of Henry's
|
||
brother. What does the King do, after thinking it over, but calls
|
||
his favourite priests about him, and says, O! his mind is in such a
|
||
dreadful state, and he is so frightfully uneasy, because he is
|
||
afraid it was not lawful for him to marry the Queen! Not one of
|
||
those priests had the courage to hint that it was rather curious he
|
||
had never thought of that before, and that his mind seemed to have
|
||
been in a tolerably jolly condition during a great many years, in
|
||
which he certainly had not fretted himself thin; but, they all
|
||
said, Ah! that was very true, and it was a serious business; and
|
||
perhaps the best way to make it right, would be for his Majesty to
|
||
be divorced! The King replied, Yes, he thought that would be the
|
||
best way, certainly; so they all went to work.
|
||
|
||
If I were to relate to you the intrigues and plots that took place
|
||
in the endeavour to get this divorce, you would think the History
|
||
of England the most tiresome book in the world. So I shall say no
|
||
more, than that after a vast deal of negotiation and evasion, the
|
||
Pope issued a commission to Cardinal Wolsey and CARDINAL CAMPEGGIO
|
||
(whom he sent over from Italy for the purpose), to try the whole
|
||
case in England. It is supposed - and I think with reason - that
|
||
Wolsey was the Queen's enemy, because she had reproved him for his
|
||
proud and gorgeous manner of life. But, he did not at first know
|
||
that the King wanted to marry Anne Boleyn; and when he did know it,
|
||
he even went down on his knees, in the endeavour to dissuade him.
|
||
|
||
The Cardinals opened their court in the Convent of the Black
|
||
Friars, near to where the bridge of that name in London now stands;
|
||
and the King and Queen, that they might be near it, took up their
|
||
lodgings at the adjoining palace of Bridewell, of which nothing now
|
||
remains but a bad prison. On the opening of the court, when the
|
||
King and Queen were called on to appear, that poor ill-used lady,
|
||
with a dignity and firmness and yet with a womanly affection worthy
|
||
to be always admired, went and kneeled at the King's feet, and said
|
||
that she had come, a stranger, to his dominions; that she had been
|
||
a good and true wife to him for twenty years; and that she could
|
||
acknowledge no power in those Cardinals to try whether she should
|
||
be considered his wife after all that time, or should be put away.
|
||
With that, she got up and left the court, and would never
|
||
afterwards come back to it.
|
||
|
||
The King pretended to be very much overcome, and said, O! my lords
|
||
and gentlemen, what a good woman she was to be sure, and how
|
||
delighted he would be to live with her unto death, but for that
|
||
terrible uneasiness in his mind which was quite wearing him away!
|
||
So, the case went on, and there was nothing but talk for two
|
||
months. Then Cardinal Campeggio, who, on behalf of the Pope,
|
||
wanted nothing so much as delay, adjourned it for two more months;
|
||
and before that time was elapsed, the Pope himself adjourned it
|
||
indefinitely, by requiring the King and Queen to come to Rome and
|
||
have it tried there. But by good luck for the King, word was
|
||
brought to him by some of his people, that they had happened to
|
||
meet at supper, THOMAS CRANMER, a learned Doctor of Cambridge, who
|
||
had proposed to urge the Pope on, by referring the case to all the
|
||
learned doctors and bishops, here and there and everywhere, and
|
||
getting their opinions that the King's marriage was unlawful. The
|
||
King, who was now in a hurry to marry Anne Boleyn, thought this
|
||
such a good idea, that he sent for Cranmer, post haste, and said to
|
||
LORD ROCHFORT, Anne Boleyn's father, 'Take this learned Doctor down
|
||
to your country-house, and there let him have a good room for a
|
||
study, and no end of books out of which to prove that I may marry
|
||
your daughter.' Lord Rochfort, not at all reluctant, made the
|
||
learned Doctor as comfortable as he could; and the learned Doctor
|
||
went to work to prove his case. All this time, the King and Anne
|
||
Boleyn were writing letters to one another almost daily, full of
|
||
impatience to have the case settled; and Anne Boleyn was showing
|
||
herself (as I think) very worthy of the fate which afterwards befel
|
||
her.
|
||
|
||
It was bad for Cardinal Wolsey that he had left Cranmer to render
|
||
this help. It was worse for him that he had tried to dissuade the
|
||
King from marrying Anne Boleyn. Such a servant as he, to such a
|
||
master as Henry, would probably have fallen in any case; but,
|
||
between the hatred of the party of the Queen that was, and the
|
||
hatred of the party of the Queen that was to be, he fell suddenly
|
||
and heavily. Going down one day to the Court of Chancery, where he
|
||
now presided, he was waited upon by the Dukes of Norfolk and
|
||
Suffolk, who told him that they brought an order to him to resign
|
||
that office, and to withdraw quietly to a house he had at Esher, in
|
||
Surrey. The Cardinal refusing, they rode off to the King; and next
|
||
day came back with a letter from him, on reading which, the
|
||
Cardinal submitted. An inventory was made out of all the riches in
|
||
his palace at York Place (now Whitehall), and he went sorrowfully
|
||
up the river, in his barge, to Putney. An abject man he was, in
|
||
spite of his pride; for being overtaken, riding out of that place
|
||
towards Esher, by one of the King's chamberlains who brought him a
|
||
kind message and a ring, he alighted from his mule, took off his
|
||
cap, and kneeled down in the dirt. His poor Fool, whom in his
|
||
prosperous days he had always kept in his palace to entertain him,
|
||
cut a far better figure than he; for, when the Cardinal said to the
|
||
chamberlain that he had nothing to send to his lord the King as a
|
||
present, but that jester who was a most excellent one, it took six
|
||
strong yeomen to remove the faithful fool from his master.
|
||
|
||
The once proud Cardinal was soon further disgraced, and wrote the
|
||
most abject letters to his vile sovereign; who humbled him one day
|
||
and encouraged him the next, according to his humour, until he was
|
||
at last ordered to go and reside in his diocese of York. He said
|
||
he was too poor; but I don't know how he made that out, for he took
|
||
a hundred and sixty servants with him, and seventy-two cart-loads
|
||
of furniture, food, and wine. He remained in that part of the
|
||
country for the best part of a year, and showed himself so improved
|
||
by his misfortunes, and was so mild and so conciliating, that he
|
||
won all hearts. And indeed, even in his proud days, he had done
|
||
some magnificent things for learning and education. At last, he
|
||
was arrested for high treason; and, coming slowly on his journey
|
||
towards London, got as far as Leicester. Arriving at Leicester
|
||
Abbey after dark, and very ill, he said - when the monks came out
|
||
at the gate with lighted torches to receive him - that he had come
|
||
to lay his bones among them. He had indeed; for he was taken to a
|
||
bed, from which he never rose again. His last words were, 'Had I
|
||
but served God as diligently as I have served the King, He would
|
||
not have given me over, in my grey hairs. Howbeit, this is my just
|
||
reward for my pains and diligence, not regarding my service to God,
|
||
but only my duty to my prince.' The news of his death was quickly
|
||
carried to the King, who was amusing himself with archery in the
|
||
garden of the magnificent Palace at Hampton Court, which that very
|
||
Wolsey had presented to him. The greatest emotion his royal mind
|
||
displayed at the loss of a servant so faithful and so ruined, was a
|
||
particular desire to lay hold of fifteen hundred pounds which the
|
||
Cardinal was reported to have hidden somewhere.
|
||
|
||
The opinions concerning the divorce, of the learned doctors and
|
||
bishops and others, being at last collected, and being generally in
|
||
the King's favour, were forwarded to the Pope, with an entreaty
|
||
that he would now grant it. The unfortunate Pope, who was a timid
|
||
man, was half distracted between his fear of his authority being
|
||
set aside in England if he did not do as he was asked, and his
|
||
dread of offending the Emperor of Germany, who was Queen
|
||
Catherine's nephew. In this state of mind he still evaded and did
|
||
nothing. Then, THOMAS CROMWELL, who had been one of Wolsey's
|
||
faithful attendants, and had remained so even in his decline,
|
||
advised the King to take the matter into his own hands, and make
|
||
himself the head of the whole Church. This, the King by various
|
||
artful means, began to do; but he recompensed the clergy by
|
||
allowing them to burn as many people as they pleased, for holding
|
||
Luther's opinions. You must understand that Sir Thomas More, the
|
||
wise man who had helped the King with his book, had been made
|
||
Chancellor in Wolsey's place. But, as he was truly attached to the
|
||
Church as it was even in its abuses, he, in this state of things,
|
||
resigned.
|
||
|
||
Being now quite resolved to get rid of Queen Catherine, and to
|
||
marry Anne Boleyn without more ado, the King made Cranmer
|
||
Archbishop of Canterbury, and directed Queen Catherine to leave the
|
||
Court. She obeyed; but replied that wherever she went, she was
|
||
Queen of England still, and would remain so, to the last. The King
|
||
then married Anne Boleyn privately; and the new Archbishop of
|
||
Canterbury, within half a year, declared his marriage with Queen
|
||
Catherine void, and crowned Anne Boleyn Queen.
|
||
|
||
She might have known that no good could ever come from such wrong,
|
||
and that the corpulent brute who had been so faithless and so cruel
|
||
to his first wife, could be more faithless and more cruel to his
|
||
second. She might have known that, even when he was in love with
|
||
her, he had been a mean and selfish coward, running away, like a
|
||
frightened cur, from her society and her house, when a dangerous
|
||
sickness broke out in it, and when she might easily have taken it
|
||
and died, as several of the household did. But, Anne Boleyn
|
||
arrived at all this knowledge too late, and bought it at a dear
|
||
price. Her bad marriage with a worse man came to its natural end.
|
||
Its natural end was not, as we shall too soon see, a natural death
|
||
for her.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXVIII - ENGLAND UNDER HENRY THE EIGHTH
|
||
|
||
PART THE SECOND
|
||
|
||
THE Pope was thrown into a very angry state of mind when he heard
|
||
of the King's marriage, and fumed exceedingly. Many of the English
|
||
monks and friars, seeing that their order was in danger, did the
|
||
same; some even declaimed against the King in church before his
|
||
face, and were not to be stopped until he himself roared out
|
||
'Silence!' The King, not much the worse for this, took it pretty
|
||
quietly; and was very glad when his Queen gave birth to a daughter,
|
||
who was christened ELIZABETH, and declared Princess of Wales as her
|
||
sister Mary had already been.
|
||
|
||
One of the most atrocious features of this reign was that Henry the
|
||
Eighth was always trimming between the reformed religion and the
|
||
unreformed one; so that the more he quarrelled with the Pope, the
|
||
more of his own subjects he roasted alive for not holding the
|
||
Pope's opinions. Thus, an unfortunate student named John Frith,
|
||
and a poor simple tailor named Andrew Hewet who loved him very
|
||
much, and said that whatever John Frith believed HE believed, were
|
||
burnt in Smithfield - to show what a capital Christian the King
|
||
was.
|
||
|
||
But, these were speedily followed by two much greater victims, Sir
|
||
Thomas More, and John Fisher, the Bishop of Rochester. The latter,
|
||
who was a good and amiable old man, had committed no greater
|
||
offence than believing in Elizabeth Barton, called the Maid of Kent
|
||
- another of those ridiculous women who pretended to be inspired,
|
||
and to make all sorts of heavenly revelations, though they indeed
|
||
uttered nothing but evil nonsense. For this offence - as it was
|
||
pretended, but really for denying the King to be the supreme Head
|
||
of the Church - he got into trouble, and was put in prison; but,
|
||
even then, he might have been suffered to die naturally (short work
|
||
having been made of executing the Kentish Maid and her principal
|
||
followers), but that the Pope, to spite the King, resolved to make
|
||
him a cardinal. Upon that the King made a ferocious joke to the
|
||
effect that the Pope might send Fisher a red hat - which is the way
|
||
they make a cardinal - but he should have no head on which to wear
|
||
it; and he was tried with all unfairness and injustice, and
|
||
sentenced to death. He died like a noble and virtuous old man, and
|
||
left a worthy name behind him. The King supposed, I dare say, that
|
||
Sir Thomas More would be frightened by this example; but, as he was
|
||
not to be easily terrified, and, thoroughly believing in the Pope,
|
||
had made up his mind that the King was not the rightful Head of the
|
||
Church, he positively refused to say that he was. For this crime
|
||
he too was tried and sentenced, after having been in prison a whole
|
||
year. When he was doomed to death, and came away from his trial
|
||
with the edge of the executioner's axe turned towards him - as was
|
||
always done in those times when a state prisoner came to that
|
||
hopeless pass - he bore it quite serenely, and gave his blessing to
|
||
his son, who pressed through the crowd in Westminster Hall and
|
||
kneeled down to receive it. But, when he got to the Tower Wharf on
|
||
his way back to his prison, and his favourite daughter, MARGARET
|
||
ROPER, a very good woman, rushed through the guards again and
|
||
again, to kiss him and to weep upon his neck, he was overcome at
|
||
last. He soon recovered, and never more showed any feeling but
|
||
cheerfulness and courage. When he was going up the steps of the
|
||
scaffold to his death, he said jokingly to the Lieutenant of the
|
||
Tower, observing that they were weak and shook beneath his tread,
|
||
'I pray you, master Lieutenant, see me safe up; and, for my coming
|
||
down, I can shift for myself.' Also he said to the executioner,
|
||
after he had laid his head upon the block, 'Let me put my beard out
|
||
of the way; for that, at least, has never committed any treason.'
|
||
Then his head was struck off at a blow. These two executions were
|
||
worthy of King Henry the Eighth. Sir Thomas More was one of the
|
||
most virtuous men in his dominions, and the Bishop was one of his
|
||
oldest and truest friends. But to be a friend of that fellow was
|
||
almost as dangerous as to be his wife.
|
||
|
||
When the news of these two murders got to Rome, the Pope raged
|
||
against the murderer more than ever Pope raged since the world
|
||
began, and prepared a Bull, ordering his subjects to take arms
|
||
against him and dethrone him. The King took all possible
|
||
precautions to keep that document out of his dominions, and set to
|
||
work in return to suppress a great number of the English
|
||
monasteries and abbeys.
|
||
|
||
This destruction was begun by a body of commissioners, of whom
|
||
Cromwell (whom the King had taken into great favour) was the head;
|
||
and was carried on through some few years to its entire completion.
|
||
There is no doubt that many of these religious establishments were
|
||
religious in nothing but in name, and were crammed with lazy,
|
||
indolent, and sensual monks. There is no doubt that they imposed
|
||
upon the people in every possible way; that they had images moved
|
||
by wires, which they pretended were miraculously moved by Heaven;
|
||
that they had among them a whole tun measure full of teeth, all
|
||
purporting to have come out of the head of one saint, who must
|
||
indeed have been a very extraordinary person with that enormous
|
||
allowance of grinders; that they had bits of coal which they said
|
||
had fried Saint Lawrence, and bits of toe-nails which they said
|
||
belonged to other famous saints; penknives, and boots, and girdles,
|
||
which they said belonged to others; and that all these bits of
|
||
rubbish were called Relics, and adored by the ignorant people.
|
||
But, on the other hand, there is no doubt either, that the King's
|
||
officers and men punished the good monks with the bad; did great
|
||
injustice; demolished many beautiful things and many valuable
|
||
libraries; destroyed numbers of paintings, stained glass windows,
|
||
fine pavements, and carvings; and that the whole court were
|
||
ravenously greedy and rapacious for the division of this great
|
||
spoil among them. The King seems to have grown almost mad in the
|
||
ardour of this pursuit; for he declared Thomas a Becket a traitor,
|
||
though he had been dead so many years, and had his body dug up out
|
||
of his grave. He must have been as miraculous as the monks
|
||
pretended, if they had told the truth, for he was found with one
|
||
head on his shoulders, and they had shown another as his undoubted
|
||
and genuine head ever since his death; it had brought them vast
|
||
sums of money, too. The gold and jewels on his shrine filled two
|
||
great chests, and eight men tottered as they carried them away.
|
||
How rich the monasteries were you may infer from the fact that,
|
||
when they were all suppressed, one hundred and thirty thousand
|
||
pounds a year - in those days an immense sum - came to the Crown.
|
||
|
||
These things were not done without causing great discontent among
|
||
the people. The monks had been good landlords and hospitable
|
||
entertainers of all travellers, and had been accustomed to give
|
||
away a great deal of corn, and fruit, and meat, and other things.
|
||
In those days it was difficult to change goods into money, in
|
||
consequence of the roads being very few and very bad, and the
|
||
carts, and waggons of the worst description; and they must either
|
||
have given away some of the good things they possessed in enormous
|
||
quantities, or have suffered them to spoil and moulder. So, many
|
||
of the people missed what it was more agreeable to get idly than to
|
||
work for; and the monks who were driven out of their homes and
|
||
wandered about encouraged their discontent; and there were,
|
||
consequently, great risings in Lincolnshire and Yorkshire. These
|
||
were put down by terrific executions, from which the monks
|
||
themselves did not escape, and the King went on grunting and
|
||
growling in his own fat way, like a Royal pig.
|
||
|
||
I have told all this story of the religious houses at one time, to
|
||
make it plainer, and to get back to the King's domestic affairs.
|
||
|
||
The unfortunate Queen Catherine was by this time dead; and the King
|
||
was by this time as tired of his second Queen as he had been of his
|
||
first. As he had fallen in love with Anne when she was in the
|
||
service of Catherine, so he now fell in love with another lady in
|
||
the service of Anne. See how wicked deeds are punished, and how
|
||
bitterly and self-reproachfully the Queen must now have thought of
|
||
her own rise to the throne! The new fancy was a LADY JANE SEYMOUR;
|
||
and the King no sooner set his mind on her, than he resolved to
|
||
have Anne Boleyn's head. So, he brought a number of charges
|
||
against Anne, accusing her of dreadful crimes which she had never
|
||
committed, and implicating in them her own brother and certain
|
||
gentlemen in her service: among whom one Norris, and Mark Smeaton
|
||
a musician, are best remembered. As the lords and councillors were
|
||
as afraid of the King and as subservient to him as the meanest
|
||
peasant in England was, they brought in Anne Boleyn guilty, and the
|
||
other unfortunate persons accused with her, guilty too. Those
|
||
gentlemen died like men, with the exception of Smeaton, who had
|
||
been tempted by the King into telling lies, which he called
|
||
confessions, and who had expected to be pardoned; but who, I am
|
||
very glad to say, was not. There was then only the Queen to
|
||
dispose of. She had been surrounded in the Tower with women spies;
|
||
had been monstrously persecuted and foully slandered; and had
|
||
received no justice. But her spirit rose with her afflictions;
|
||
and, after having in vain tried to soften the King by writing an
|
||
affecting letter to him which still exists, 'from her doleful
|
||
prison in the Tower,' she resigned herself to death. She said to
|
||
those about her, very cheerfully, that she had heard say the
|
||
executioner was a good one, and that she had a little neck (she
|
||
laughed and clasped it with her hands as she said that), and would
|
||
soon be out of her pain. And she WAS soon out of her pain, poor
|
||
creature, on the Green inside the Tower, and her body was flung
|
||
into an old box and put away in the ground under the chapel.
|
||
|
||
There is a story that the King sat in his palace listening very
|
||
anxiously for the sound of the cannon which was to announce this
|
||
new murder; and that, when he heard it come booming on the air, he
|
||
rose up in great spirits and ordered out his dogs to go a-hunting.
|
||
He was bad enough to do it; but whether he did it or not, it is
|
||
certain that he married Jane Seymour the very next day.
|
||
|
||
I have not much pleasure in recording that she lived just long
|
||
enough to give birth to a son who was christened EDWARD, and then
|
||
to die of a fever: for, I cannot but think that any woman who
|
||
married such a ruffian, and knew what innocent blood was on his
|
||
hands, deserved the axe that would assuredly have fallen on the
|
||
neck of Jane Seymour, if she had lived much longer.
|
||
|
||
Cranmer had done what he could to save some of the Church property
|
||
for purposes of religion and education; but, the great families had
|
||
been so hungry to get hold of it, that very little could be rescued
|
||
for such objects. Even MILES COVERDALE, who did the people the
|
||
inestimable service of translating the Bible into English (which
|
||
the unreformed religion never permitted to be done), was left in
|
||
poverty while the great families clutched the Church lands and
|
||
money. The people had been told that when the Crown came into
|
||
possession of these funds, it would not be necessary to tax them;
|
||
but they were taxed afresh directly afterwards. It was fortunate
|
||
for them, indeed, that so many nobles were so greedy for this
|
||
wealth; since, if it had remained with the Crown, there might have
|
||
been no end to tyranny for hundreds of years. One of the most
|
||
active writers on the Church's side against the King was a member
|
||
of his own family - a sort of distant cousin, REGINALD POLE by name
|
||
- who attacked him in the most violent manner (though he received a
|
||
pension from him all the time), and fought for the Church with his
|
||
pen, day and night. As he was beyond the King's reach - being in
|
||
Italy - the King politely invited him over to discuss the subject;
|
||
but he, knowing better than to come, and wisely staying where he
|
||
was, the King's rage fell upon his brother Lord Montague, the
|
||
Marquis of Exeter, and some other gentlemen: who were tried for
|
||
high treason in corresponding with him and aiding him - which they
|
||
probably did - and were all executed. The Pope made Reginald Pole
|
||
a cardinal; but, so much against his will, that it is thought he
|
||
even aspired in his own mind to the vacant throne of England, and
|
||
had hopes of marrying the Princess Mary. His being made a high
|
||
priest, however, put an end to all that. His mother, the venerable
|
||
Countess of Salisbury - who was, unfortunately for herself, within
|
||
the tyrant's reach - was the last of his relatives on whom his
|
||
wrath fell. When she was told to lay her grey head upon the block,
|
||
she answered the executioner, 'No! My head never committed
|
||
treason, and if you want it, you shall seize it.' So, she ran
|
||
round and round the scaffold with the executioner striking at her,
|
||
and her grey hair bedabbled with blood; and even when they held her
|
||
down upon the block she moved her head about to the last, resolved
|
||
to be no party to her own barbarous murder. All this the people
|
||
bore, as they had borne everything else.
|
||
|
||
Indeed they bore much more; for the slow fires of Smithfield were
|
||
continually burning, and people were constantly being roasted to
|
||
death - still to show what a good Christian the King was. He
|
||
defied the Pope and his Bull, which was now issued, and had come
|
||
into England; but he burned innumerable people whose only offence
|
||
was that they differed from the Pope's religious opinions. There
|
||
was a wretched man named LAMBERT, among others, who was tried for
|
||
this before the King, and with whom six bishops argued one after
|
||
another. When he was quite exhausted (as well he might be, after
|
||
six bishops), he threw himself on the King's mercy; but the King
|
||
blustered out that he had no mercy for heretics. So, HE too fed
|
||
the fire.
|
||
|
||
All this the people bore, and more than all this yet. The national
|
||
spirit seems to have been banished from the kingdom at this time.
|
||
The very people who were executed for treason, the very wives and
|
||
friends of the 'bluff' King, spoke of him on the scaffold as a good
|
||
prince, and a gentle prince - just as serfs in similar
|
||
circumstances have been known to do, under the Sultan and Bashaws
|
||
of the East, or under the fierce old tyrants of Russia, who poured
|
||
boiling and freezing water on them alternately, until they died.
|
||
The Parliament were as bad as the rest, and gave the King whatever
|
||
he wanted; among other vile accommodations, they gave him new
|
||
powers of murdering, at his will and pleasure, any one whom he
|
||
might choose to call a traitor. But the worst measure they passed
|
||
was an Act of Six Articles, commonly called at the time 'the whip
|
||
with six strings;' which punished offences against the Pope's
|
||
opinions, without mercy, and enforced the very worst parts of the
|
||
monkish religion. Cranmer would have modified it, if he could;
|
||
but, being overborne by the Romish party, had not the power. As
|
||
one of the articles declared that priests should not marry, and as
|
||
he was married himself, he sent his wife and children into Germany,
|
||
and began to tremble at his danger; none the less because he was,
|
||
and had long been, the King's friend. This whip of six strings was
|
||
made under the King's own eye. It should never be forgotten of him
|
||
how cruelly he supported the worst of the Popish doctrines when
|
||
there was nothing to be got by opposing them.
|
||
|
||
This amiable monarch now thought of taking another wife. He
|
||
proposed to the French King to have some of the ladies of the
|
||
French Court exhibited before him, that he might make his Royal
|
||
choice; but the French King answered that he would rather not have
|
||
his ladies trotted out to be shown like horses at a fair. He
|
||
proposed to the Dowager Duchess of Milan, who replied that she
|
||
might have thought of such a match if she had had two heads; but,
|
||
that only owning one, she must beg to keep it safe. At last
|
||
Cromwell represented that there was a Protestant Princess in
|
||
Germany - those who held the reformed religion were called
|
||
Protestants, because their leaders had Protested against the abuses
|
||
and impositions of the unreformed Church - named ANNE OF CLEVES,
|
||
who was beautiful, and would answer the purpose admirably. The
|
||
King said was she a large woman, because he must have a fat wife?
|
||
'O yes,' said Cromwell; 'she was very large, just the thing.' On
|
||
hearing this the King sent over his famous painter, Hans Holbein,
|
||
to take her portrait. Hans made her out to be so good-looking that
|
||
the King was satisfied, and the marriage was arranged. But,
|
||
whether anybody had paid Hans to touch up the picture; or whether
|
||
Hans, like one or two other painters, flattered a princess in the
|
||
ordinary way of business, I cannot say: all I know is, that when
|
||
Anne came over and the King went to Rochester to meet her, and
|
||
first saw her without her seeing him, he swore she was 'a great
|
||
Flanders mare,' and said he would never marry her. Being obliged
|
||
to do it now matters had gone so far, he would not give her the
|
||
presents he had prepared, and would never notice her. He never
|
||
forgave Cromwell his part in the affair. His downfall dates from
|
||
that time.
|
||
|
||
It was quickened by his enemies, in the interests of the unreformed
|
||
religion, putting in the King's way, at a state dinner, a niece of
|
||
the Duke of Norfolk, CATHERINE HOWARD, a young lady of fascinating
|
||
manners, though small in stature and not particularly beautiful.
|
||
Falling in love with her on the spot, the King soon divorced Anne
|
||
of Cleves after making her the subject of much brutal talk, on
|
||
pretence that she had been previously betrothed to some one else -
|
||
which would never do for one of his dignity - and married
|
||
Catherine. It is probable that on his wedding day, of all days in
|
||
the year, he sent his faithful Cromwell to the scaffold, and had
|
||
his head struck off. He further celebrated the occasion by burning
|
||
at one time, and causing to be drawn to the fire on the same
|
||
hurdles, some Protestant prisoners for denying the Pope's
|
||
doctrines, and some Roman Catholic prisoners for denying his own
|
||
supremacy. Still the people bore it, and not a gentleman in
|
||
England raised his hand.
|
||
|
||
But, by a just retribution, it soon came out that Catherine Howard,
|
||
before her marriage, had been really guilty of such crimes as the
|
||
King had falsely attributed to his second wife Anne Boleyn; so,
|
||
again the dreadful axe made the King a widower, and this Queen
|
||
passed away as so many in that reign had passed away before her.
|
||
As an appropriate pursuit under the circumstances, Henry then
|
||
applied himself to superintending the composition of a religious
|
||
book called 'A necessary doctrine for any Christian Man.' He must
|
||
have been a little confused in his mind, I think, at about this
|
||
period; for he was so false to himself as to be true to some one:
|
||
that some one being Cranmer, whom the Duke of Norfolk and others of
|
||
his enemies tried to ruin; but to whom the King was steadfast, and
|
||
to whom he one night gave his ring, charging him when he should
|
||
find himself, next day, accused of treason, to show it to the
|
||
council board. This Cranmer did to the confusion of his enemies.
|
||
I suppose the King thought he might want him a little longer.
|
||
|
||
He married yet once more. Yes, strange to say, he found in England
|
||
another woman who would become his wife, and she was CATHERINE
|
||
PARR, widow of Lord Latimer. She leaned towards the reformed
|
||
religion; and it is some comfort to know, that she tormented the
|
||
King considerably by arguing a variety of doctrinal points with him
|
||
on all possible occasions. She had very nearly done this to her
|
||
own destruction. After one of these conversations the King in a
|
||
very black mood actually instructed GARDINER, one of his Bishops
|
||
who favoured the Popish opinions, to draw a bill of accusation
|
||
against her, which would have inevitably brought her to the
|
||
scaffold where her predecessors had died, but that one of her
|
||
friends picked up the paper of instructions which had been dropped
|
||
in the palace, and gave her timely notice. She fell ill with
|
||
terror; but managed the King so well when he came to entrap her
|
||
into further statements - by saying that she had only spoken on
|
||
such points to divert his mind and to get some information from his
|
||
extraordinary wisdom - that he gave her a kiss and called her his
|
||
sweetheart. And, when the Chancellor came next day actually to
|
||
take her to the Tower, the King sent him about his business, and
|
||
honoured him with the epithets of a beast, a knave, and a fool. So
|
||
near was Catherine Parr to the block, and so narrow was her escape!
|
||
|
||
There was war with Scotland in this reign, and a short clumsy war
|
||
with France for favouring Scotland; but, the events at home were so
|
||
dreadful, and leave such an enduring stain on the country, that I
|
||
need say no more of what happened abroad.
|
||
|
||
A few more horrors, and this reign is over. There was a lady, ANNE
|
||
ASKEW, in Lincolnshire, who inclined to the Protestant opinions,
|
||
and whose husband being a fierce Catholic, turned her out of his
|
||
house. She came to London, and was considered as offending against
|
||
the six articles, and was taken to the Tower, and put upon the rack
|
||
- probably because it was hoped that she might, in her agony,
|
||
criminate some obnoxious persons; if falsely, so much the better.
|
||
She was tortured without uttering a cry, until the Lieutenant of
|
||
the Tower would suffer his men to torture her no more; and then two
|
||
priests who were present actually pulled off their robes, and
|
||
turned the wheels of the rack with their own hands, so rending and
|
||
twisting and breaking her that she was afterwards carried to the
|
||
fire in a chair. She was burned with three others, a gentleman, a
|
||
clergyman, and a tailor; and so the world went on.
|
||
|
||
Either the King became afraid of the power of the Duke of Norfolk,
|
||
and his son the Earl of Surrey, or they gave him some offence, but
|
||
he resolved to pull THEM down, to follow all the rest who were
|
||
gone. The son was tried first - of course for nothing - and
|
||
defended himself bravely; but of course he was found guilty, and of
|
||
course he was executed. Then his father was laid hold of, and left
|
||
for death too.
|
||
|
||
But the King himself was left for death by a Greater King, and the
|
||
earth was to be rid of him at last. He was now a swollen, hideous
|
||
spectacle, with a great hole in his leg, and so odious to every
|
||
sense that it was dreadful to approach him. When he was found to
|
||
be dying, Cranmer was sent for from his palace at Croydon, and came
|
||
with all speed, but found him speechless. Happily, in that hour he
|
||
perished. He was in the fifty-sixth year of his age, and the
|
||
thirty-eighth of his reign.
|
||
|
||
Henry the Eighth has been favoured by some Protestant writers,
|
||
because the Reformation was achieved in his time. But the mighty
|
||
merit of it lies with other men and not with him; and it can be
|
||
rendered none the worse by this monster's crimes, and none the
|
||
better by any defence of them. The plain truth is, that he was a
|
||
most intolerable ruffian, a disgrace to human nature, and a blot of
|
||
blood and grease upon the History of England.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXIX - ENGLAND UNDER EDWARD THE SIXTH
|
||
|
||
HENRY THE EIGHTH had made a will, appointing a council of sixteen
|
||
to govern the kingdom for his son while he was under age (he was
|
||
now only ten years old), and another council of twelve to help
|
||
them. The most powerful of the first council was the EARL OF
|
||
HERTFORD, the young King's uncle, who lost no time in bringing his
|
||
nephew with great state up to Enfield, and thence to the Tower. It
|
||
was considered at the time a striking proof of virtue in the young
|
||
King that he was sorry for his father's death; but, as common
|
||
subjects have that virtue too, sometimes, we will say no more about
|
||
it.
|
||
|
||
There was a curious part of the late King's will, requiring his
|
||
executors to fulfil whatever promises he had made. Some of the
|
||
court wondering what these might be, the Earl of Hertford and the
|
||
other noblemen interested, said that they were promises to advance
|
||
and enrich THEM. So, the Earl of Hertford made himself DUKE OF
|
||
SOMERSET, and made his brother EDWARD SEYMOUR a baron; and there
|
||
were various similar promotions, all very agreeable to the parties
|
||
concerned, and very dutiful, no doubt, to the late King's memory.
|
||
To be more dutiful still, they made themselves rich out of the
|
||
Church lands, and were very comfortable. The new Duke of Somerset
|
||
caused himself to be declared PROTECTOR of the kingdom, and was,
|
||
indeed, the King.
|
||
|
||
As young Edward the Sixth had been brought up in the principles of
|
||
the Protestant religion, everybody knew that they would be
|
||
maintained. But Cranmer, to whom they were chiefly entrusted,
|
||
advanced them steadily and temperately. Many superstitious and
|
||
ridiculous practices were stopped; but practices which were
|
||
harmless were not interfered with.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Somerset, the Protector, was anxious to have the young
|
||
King engaged in marriage to the young Queen of Scotland, in order
|
||
to prevent that princess from making an alliance with any foreign
|
||
power; but, as a large party in Scotland were unfavourable to this
|
||
plan, he invaded that country. His excuse for doing so was, that
|
||
the Border men - that is, the Scotch who lived in that part of the
|
||
country where England and Scotland joined - troubled the English
|
||
very much. But there were two sides to this question; for the
|
||
English Border men troubled the Scotch too; and, through many long
|
||
years, there were perpetual border quarrels which gave rise to
|
||
numbers of old tales and songs. However, the Protector invaded
|
||
Scotland; and ARRAN, the Scottish Regent, with an army twice as
|
||
large as his, advanced to meet him. They encountered on the banks
|
||
of the river Esk, within a few miles of Edinburgh; and there, after
|
||
a little skirmish, the Protector made such moderate proposals, in
|
||
offering to retire if the Scotch would only engage not to marry
|
||
their princess to any foreign prince, that the Regent thought the
|
||
English were afraid. But in this he made a horrible mistake; for
|
||
the English soldiers on land, and the English sailors on the water,
|
||
so set upon the Scotch, that they broke and fled, and more than ten
|
||
thousand of them were killed. It was a dreadful battle, for the
|
||
fugitives were slain without mercy. The ground for four miles, all
|
||
the way to Edinburgh, was strewn with dead men, and with arms, and
|
||
legs, and heads. Some hid themselves in streams and were drowned;
|
||
some threw away their armour and were killed running, almost naked;
|
||
but in this battle of Pinkey the English lost only two or three
|
||
hundred men. They were much better clothed than the Scotch; at the
|
||
poverty of whose appearance and country they were exceedingly
|
||
astonished.
|
||
|
||
A Parliament was called when Somerset came back, and it repealed
|
||
the whip with six strings, and did one or two other good things;
|
||
though it unhappily retained the punishment of burning for those
|
||
people who did not make believe to believe, in all religious
|
||
matters, what the Government had declared that they must and should
|
||
believe. It also made a foolish law (meant to put down beggars),
|
||
that any man who lived idly and loitered about for three days
|
||
together, should be burned with a hot iron, made a slave, and wear
|
||
an iron fetter. But this savage absurdity soon came to an end, and
|
||
went the way of a great many other foolish laws.
|
||
|
||
The Protector was now so proud that he sat in Parliament before all
|
||
the nobles, on the right hand of the throne. Many other noblemen,
|
||
who only wanted to be as proud if they could get a chance, became
|
||
his enemies of course; and it is supposed that he came back
|
||
suddenly from Scotland because he had received news that his
|
||
brother, LORD SEYMOUR, was becoming dangerous to him. This lord
|
||
was now High Admiral of England; a very handsome man, and a great
|
||
favourite with the Court ladies - even with the young Princess
|
||
Elizabeth, who romped with him a little more than young princesses
|
||
in these times do with any one. He had married Catherine Parr, the
|
||
late King's widow, who was now dead; and, to strengthen his power,
|
||
he secretly supplied the young King with money. He may even have
|
||
engaged with some of his brother's enemies in a plot to carry the
|
||
boy off. On these and other accusations, at any rate, he was
|
||
confined in the Tower, impeached, and found guilty; his own
|
||
brother's name being - unnatural and sad to tell - the first signed
|
||
to the warrant of his execution. He was executed on Tower Hill,
|
||
and died denying his treason. One of his last proceedings in this
|
||
world was to write two letters, one to the Princess Elizabeth, and
|
||
one to the Princess Mary, which a servant of his took charge of,
|
||
and concealed in his shoe. These letters are supposed to have
|
||
urged them against his brother, and to revenge his death. What
|
||
they truly contained is not known; but there is no doubt that he
|
||
had, at one time, obtained great influence over the Princess
|
||
Elizabeth.
|
||
|
||
All this while, the Protestant religion was making progress. The
|
||
images which the people had gradually come to worship, were removed
|
||
from the churches; the people were informed that they need not
|
||
confess themselves to priests unless they chose; a common prayer-
|
||
book was drawn up in the English language, which all could
|
||
understand, and many other improvements were made; still
|
||
moderately. For Cranmer was a very moderate man, and even
|
||
restrained the Protestant clergy from violently abusing the
|
||
unreformed religion - as they very often did, and which was not a
|
||
good example. But the people were at this time in great distress.
|
||
The rapacious nobility who had come into possession of the Church
|
||
lands, were very bad landlords. They enclosed great quantities of
|
||
ground for the feeding of sheep, which was then more profitable
|
||
than the growing of crops; and this increased the general distress.
|
||
So the people, who still understood little of what was going on
|
||
about them, and still readily believed what the homeless monks told
|
||
them - many of whom had been their good friends in their better
|
||
days - took it into their heads that all this was owing to the
|
||
reformed religion, and therefore rose, in many parts of the
|
||
country.
|
||
|
||
The most powerful risings were in Devonshire and Norfolk. In
|
||
Devonshire, the rebellion was so strong that ten thousand men
|
||
united within a few days, and even laid siege to Exeter. But LORD
|
||
RUSSELL, coming to the assistance of the citizens who defended that
|
||
town, defeated the rebels; and, not only hanged the Mayor of one
|
||
place, but hanged the vicar of another from his own church steeple.
|
||
What with hanging and killing by the sword, four thousand of the
|
||
rebels are supposed to have fallen in that one county. In Norfolk
|
||
(where the rising was more against the enclosure of open lands than
|
||
against the reformed religion), the popular leader was a man named
|
||
ROBERT KET, a tanner of Wymondham. The mob were, in the first
|
||
instance, excited against the tanner by one JOHN FLOWERDEW, a
|
||
gentleman who owed him a grudge: but the tanner was more than a
|
||
match for the gentleman, since he soon got the people on his side,
|
||
and established himself near Norwich with quite an army. There was
|
||
a large oak-tree in that place, on a spot called Moushold Hill,
|
||
which Ket named the Tree of Reformation; and under its green
|
||
boughs, he and his men sat, in the midsummer weather, holding
|
||
courts of justice, and debating affairs of state. They were even
|
||
impartial enough to allow some rather tiresome public speakers to
|
||
get up into this Tree of Reformation, and point out their errors to
|
||
them, in long discourses, while they lay listening (not always
|
||
without some grumbling and growling) in the shade below. At last,
|
||
one sunny July day, a herald appeared below the tree, and
|
||
proclaimed Ket and all his men traitors, unless from that moment
|
||
they dispersed and went home: in which case they were to receive a
|
||
pardon. But, Ket and his men made light of the herald and became
|
||
stronger than ever, until the Earl of Warwick went after them with
|
||
a sufficient force, and cut them all to pieces. A few were hanged,
|
||
drawn, and quartered, as traitors, and their limbs were sent into
|
||
various country places to be a terror to the people. Nine of them
|
||
were hanged upon nine green branches of the Oak of Reformation; and
|
||
so, for the time, that tree may be said to have withered away.
|
||
|
||
The Protector, though a haughty man, had compassion for the real
|
||
distresses of the common people, and a sincere desire to help them.
|
||
But he was too proud and too high in degree to hold even their
|
||
favour steadily; and many of the nobles always envied and hated
|
||
him, because they were as proud and not as high as he. He was at
|
||
this time building a great Palace in the Strand: to get the stone
|
||
for which he blew up church steeples with gunpowder, and pulled
|
||
down bishops' houses: thus making himself still more disliked. At
|
||
length, his principal enemy, the Earl of Warwick - Dudley by name,
|
||
and the son of that Dudley who had made himself so odious with
|
||
Empson, in the reign of Henry the Seventh - joined with seven other
|
||
members of the Council against him, formed a separate Council; and,
|
||
becoming stronger in a few days, sent him to the Tower under
|
||
twenty-nine articles of accusation. After being sentenced by the
|
||
Council to the forfeiture of all his offices and lands, he was
|
||
liberated and pardoned, on making a very humble submission. He was
|
||
even taken back into the Council again, after having suffered this
|
||
fall, and married his daughter, LADY ANNE SEYMOUR, to Warwick's
|
||
eldest son. But such a reconciliation was little likely to last,
|
||
and did not outlive a year. Warwick, having got himself made Duke
|
||
of Northumberland, and having advanced the more important of his
|
||
friends, then finished the history by causing the Duke of Somerset
|
||
and his friend LORD GREY, and others, to be arrested for treason,
|
||
in having conspired to seize and dethrone the King. They were also
|
||
accused of having intended to seize the new Duke of Northumberland,
|
||
with his friends LORD NORTHAMPTON and LORD PEMBROKE; to murder them
|
||
if they found need; and to raise the City to revolt. All this the
|
||
fallen Protector positively denied; except that he confessed to
|
||
having spoken of the murder of those three noblemen, but having
|
||
never designed it. He was acquitted of the charge of treason, and
|
||
found guilty of the other charges; so when the people - who
|
||
remembered his having been their friend, now that he was disgraced
|
||
and in danger, saw him come out from his trial with the axe turned
|
||
from him - they thought he was altogether acquitted, and sent up a
|
||
loud shout of joy.
|
||
|
||
But the Duke of Somerset was ordered to be beheaded on Tower Hill,
|
||
at eight o'clock in the morning, and proclamations were issued
|
||
bidding the citizens keep at home until after ten. They filled the
|
||
streets, however, and crowded the place of execution as soon as it
|
||
was light; and, with sad faces and sad hearts, saw the once
|
||
powerful Protector ascend the scaffold to lay his head upon the
|
||
dreadful block. While he was yet saying his last words to them
|
||
with manly courage, and telling them, in particular, how it
|
||
comforted him, at that pass, to have assisted in reforming the
|
||
national religion, a member of the Council was seen riding up on
|
||
horseback. They again thought that the Duke was saved by his
|
||
bringing a reprieve, and again shouted for joy. But the Duke
|
||
himself told them they were mistaken, and laid down his head and
|
||
had it struck off at a blow.
|
||
|
||
Many of the bystanders rushed forward and steeped their
|
||
handkerchiefs in his blood, as a mark of their affection. He had,
|
||
indeed, been capable of many good acts, and one of them was
|
||
discovered after he was no more. The Bishop of Durham, a very good
|
||
man, had been informed against to the Council, when the Duke was in
|
||
power, as having answered a treacherous letter proposing a
|
||
rebellion against the reformed religion. As the answer could not
|
||
be found, he could not be declared guilty; but it was now
|
||
discovered, hidden by the Duke himself among some private papers,
|
||
in his regard for that good man. The Bishop lost his office, and
|
||
was deprived of his possessions.
|
||
|
||
It is not very pleasant to know that while his uncle lay in prison
|
||
under sentence of death, the young King was being vastly
|
||
entertained by plays, and dances, and sham fights: but there is no
|
||
doubt of it, for he kept a journal himself. It is pleasanter to
|
||
know that not a single Roman Catholic was burnt in this reign for
|
||
holding that religion; though two wretched victims suffered for
|
||
heresy. One, a woman named JOAN BOCHER, for professing some
|
||
opinions that even she could only explain in unintelligible jargon.
|
||
The other, a Dutchman, named VON PARIS, who practised as a surgeon
|
||
in London. Edward was, to his credit, exceedingly unwilling to
|
||
sign the warrant for the woman's execution: shedding tears before
|
||
he did so, and telling Cranmer, who urged him to do it (though
|
||
Cranmer really would have spared the woman at first, but for her
|
||
own determined obstinacy), that the guilt was not his, but that of
|
||
the man who so strongly urged the dreadful act. We shall see, too
|
||
soon, whether the time ever came when Cranmer is likely to have
|
||
remembered this with sorrow and remorse.
|
||
|
||
Cranmer and RIDLEY (at first Bishop of Rochester, and afterwards
|
||
Bishop of London) were the most powerful of the clergy of this
|
||
reign. Others were imprisoned and deprived of their property for
|
||
still adhering to the unreformed religion; the most important among
|
||
whom were GARDINER Bishop of Winchester, HEATH Bishop of Worcester,
|
||
DAY Bishop of Chichester, and BONNER that Bishop of London who was
|
||
superseded by Ridley. The Princess Mary, who inherited her
|
||
mother's gloomy temper, and hated the reformed religion as
|
||
connected with her mother's wrongs and sorrows - she knew nothing
|
||
else about it, always refusing to read a single book in which it
|
||
was truly described - held by the unreformed religion too, and was
|
||
the only person in the kingdom for whom the old Mass was allowed to
|
||
be performed; nor would the young King have made that exception
|
||
even in her favour, but for the strong persuasions of Cranmer and
|
||
Ridley. He always viewed it with horror; and when he fell into a
|
||
sickly condition, after having been very ill, first of the measles
|
||
and then of the small-pox, he was greatly troubled in mind to think
|
||
that if he died, and she, the next heir to the throne, succeeded,
|
||
the Roman Catholic religion would be set up again.
|
||
|
||
This uneasiness, the Duke of Northumberland was not slow to
|
||
encourage: for, if the Princess Mary came to the throne, he, who
|
||
had taken part with the Protestants, was sure to be disgraced.
|
||
Now, the Duchess of Suffolk was descended from King Henry the
|
||
Seventh; and, if she resigned what little or no right she had, in
|
||
favour of her daughter LADY JANE GREY, that would be the succession
|
||
to promote the Duke's greatness; because LORD GUILFORD DUDLEY, one
|
||
of his sons, was, at this very time, newly married to her. So, he
|
||
worked upon the King's fears, and persuaded him to set aside both
|
||
the Princess Mary and the Princess Elizabeth, and assert his right
|
||
to appoint his successor. Accordingly the young King handed to the
|
||
Crown lawyers a writing signed half a dozen times over by himself,
|
||
appointing Lady Jane Grey to succeed to the Crown, and requiring
|
||
them to have his will made out according to law. They were much
|
||
against it at first, and told the King so; but the Duke of
|
||
Northumberland - being so violent about it that the lawyers even
|
||
expected him to beat them, and hotly declaring that, stripped to
|
||
his shirt, he would fight any man in such a quarrel - they yielded.
|
||
Cranmer, also, at first hesitated; pleading that he had sworn to
|
||
maintain the succession of the Crown to the Princess Mary; but, he
|
||
was a weak man in his resolutions, and afterwards signed the
|
||
document with the rest of the council.
|
||
|
||
It was completed none too soon; for Edward was now sinking in a
|
||
rapid decline; and, by way of making him better, they handed him
|
||
over to a woman-doctor who pretended to be able to cure it. He
|
||
speedily got worse. On the sixth of July, in the year one thousand
|
||
five hundred and fifty-three, he died, very peaceably and piously,
|
||
praying God, with his last breath, to protect the reformed
|
||
religion.
|
||
|
||
This King died in the sixteenth year of his age, and in the seventh
|
||
of his reign. It is difficult to judge what the character of one
|
||
so young might afterwards have become among so many bad, ambitious,
|
||
quarrelling nobles. But, he was an amiable boy, of very good
|
||
abilities, and had nothing coarse or cruel or brutal in his
|
||
disposition - which in the son of such a father is rather
|
||
surprising.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXX - ENGLAND UNDER MARY
|
||
|
||
THE Duke of Northumberland was very anxious to keep the young
|
||
King's death a secret, in order that he might get the two
|
||
Princesses into his power. But, the Princess Mary, being informed
|
||
of that event as she was on her way to London to see her sick
|
||
brother, turned her horse's head, and rode away into Norfolk. The
|
||
Earl of Arundel was her friend, and it was he who sent her warning
|
||
of what had happened.
|
||
|
||
As the secret could not be kept, the Duke of Northumberland and the
|
||
council sent for the Lord Mayor of London and some of the aldermen,
|
||
and made a merit of telling it to them. Then, they made it known
|
||
to the people, and set off to inform Lady Jane Grey that she was to
|
||
be Queen.
|
||
|
||
She was a pretty girl of only sixteen, and was amiable, learned,
|
||
and clever. When the lords who came to her, fell on their knees
|
||
before her, and told her what tidings they brought, she was so
|
||
astonished that she fainted. On recovering, she expressed her
|
||
sorrow for the young King's death, and said that she knew she was
|
||
unfit to govern the kingdom; but that if she must be Queen, she
|
||
prayed God to direct her. She was then at Sion House, near
|
||
Brentford; and the lords took her down the river in state to the
|
||
Tower, that she might remain there (as the custom was) until she
|
||
was crowned. But the people were not at all favourable to Lady
|
||
Jane, considering that the right to be Queen was Mary's, and
|
||
greatly disliking the Duke of Northumberland. They were not put
|
||
into a better humour by the Duke's causing a vintner's servant, one
|
||
Gabriel Pot, to be taken up for expressing his dissatisfaction
|
||
among the crowd, and to have his ears nailed to the pillory, and
|
||
cut off. Some powerful men among the nobility declared on Mary's
|
||
side. They raised troops to support her cause, had her proclaimed
|
||
Queen at Norwich, and gathered around her at the castle of
|
||
Framlingham, which belonged to the Duke of Norfolk. For, she was
|
||
not considered so safe as yet, but that it was best to keep her in
|
||
a castle on the sea-coast, from whence she might be sent abroad, if
|
||
necessary.
|
||
|
||
The Council would have despatched Lady Jane's father, the Duke of
|
||
Suffolk, as the general of the army against this force; but, as
|
||
Lady Jane implored that her father might remain with her, and as he
|
||
was known to be but a weak man, they told the Duke of
|
||
Northumberland that he must take the command himself. He was not
|
||
very ready to do so, as he mistrusted the Council much; but there
|
||
was no help for it, and he set forth with a heavy heart, observing
|
||
to a lord who rode beside him through Shoreditch at the head of the
|
||
troops, that, although the people pressed in great numbers to look
|
||
at them, they were terribly silent.
|
||
|
||
And his fears for himself turned out to be well founded. While he
|
||
was waiting at Cambridge for further help from the Council, the
|
||
Council took it into their heads to turn their backs on Lady Jane's
|
||
cause, and to take up the Princess Mary's. This was chiefly owing
|
||
to the before-mentioned Earl of Arundel, who represented to the
|
||
Lord Mayor and aldermen, in a second interview with those sagacious
|
||
persons, that, as for himself, he did not perceive the Reformed
|
||
religion to be in much danger - which Lord Pembroke backed by
|
||
flourishing his sword as another kind of persuasion. The Lord
|
||
Mayor and aldermen, thus enlightened, said there could be no doubt
|
||
that the Princess Mary ought to be Queen. So, she was proclaimed
|
||
at the Cross by St. Paul's, and barrels of wine were given to the
|
||
people, and they got very drunk, and danced round blazing bonfires
|
||
- little thinking, poor wretches, what other bonfires would soon be
|
||
blazing in Queen Mary's name.
|
||
|
||
After a ten days' dream of royalty, Lady Jane Grey resigned the
|
||
Crown with great willingness, saying that she had only accepted it
|
||
in obedience to her father and mother; and went gladly back to her
|
||
pleasant house by the river, and her books. Mary then came on
|
||
towards London; and at Wanstead in Essex, was joined by her half-
|
||
sister, the Princess Elizabeth. They passed through the streets of
|
||
London to the Tower, and there the new Queen met some eminent
|
||
prisoners then confined in it, kissed them, and gave them their
|
||
liberty. Among these was that Gardiner, Bishop of Winchester, who
|
||
had been imprisoned in the last reign for holding to the unreformed
|
||
religion. Him she soon made chancellor.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Northumberland had been taken prisoner, and, together
|
||
with his son and five others, was quickly brought before the
|
||
Council. He, not unnaturally, asked that Council, in his defence,
|
||
whether it was treason to obey orders that had been issued under
|
||
the great seal; and, if it were, whether they, who had obeyed them
|
||
too, ought to be his judges? But they made light of these points;
|
||
and, being resolved to have him out of the way, soon sentenced him
|
||
to death. He had risen into power upon the death of another man,
|
||
and made but a poor show (as might be expected) when he himself lay
|
||
low. He entreated Gardiner to let him live, if it were only in a
|
||
mouse's hole; and, when he ascended the scaffold to be beheaded on
|
||
Tower Hill, addressed the people in a miserable way, saying that he
|
||
had been incited by others, and exhorting them to return to the
|
||
unreformed religion, which he told them was his faith. There seems
|
||
reason to suppose that he expected a pardon even then, in return
|
||
for this confession; but it matters little whether he did or not.
|
||
His head was struck off.
|
||
|
||
Mary was now crowned Queen. She was thirty-seven years of age,
|
||
short and thin, wrinkled in the face, and very unhealthy. But she
|
||
had a great liking for show and for bright colours, and all the
|
||
ladies of her Court were magnificently dressed. She had a great
|
||
liking too for old customs, without much sense in them; and she was
|
||
oiled in the oldest way, and blessed in the oldest way, and done
|
||
all manner of things to in the oldest way, at her coronation. I
|
||
hope they did her good.
|
||
|
||
She soon began to show her desire to put down the Reformed
|
||
religion, and put up the unreformed one: though it was dangerous
|
||
work as yet, the people being something wiser than they used to be.
|
||
They even cast a shower of stones - and among them a dagger - at
|
||
one of the royal chaplains who attacked the Reformed religion in a
|
||
public sermon. But the Queen and her priests went steadily on.
|
||
Ridley, the powerful bishop of the last reign, was seized and sent
|
||
to the Tower. LATIMER, also celebrated among the Clergy of the
|
||
last reign, was likewise sent to the Tower, and Cranmer speedily
|
||
followed. Latimer was an aged man; and, as his guards took him
|
||
through Smithfield, he looked round it, and said, 'This is a place
|
||
that hath long groaned for me.' For he knew well, what kind of
|
||
bonfires would soon be burning. Nor was the knowledge confined to
|
||
him. The prisons were fast filled with the chief Protestants, who
|
||
were there left rotting in darkness, hunger, dirt, and separation
|
||
from their friends; many, who had time left them for escape, fled
|
||
from the kingdom; and the dullest of the people began, now, to see
|
||
what was coming.
|
||
|
||
It came on fast. A Parliament was got together; not without strong
|
||
suspicion of unfairness; and they annulled the divorce, formerly
|
||
pronounced by Cranmer between the Queen's mother and King Henry the
|
||
Eighth, and unmade all the laws on the subject of religion that had
|
||
been made in the last King Edward's reign. They began their
|
||
proceedings, in violation of the law, by having the old mass said
|
||
before them in Latin, and by turning out a bishop who would not
|
||
kneel down. They also declared guilty of treason, Lady Jane Grey
|
||
for aspiring to the Crown; her husband, for being her husband; and
|
||
Cranmer, for not believing in the mass aforesaid. They then prayed
|
||
the Queen graciously to choose a husband for herself, as soon as
|
||
might be.
|
||
|
||
Now, the question who should be the Queen's husband had given rise
|
||
to a great deal of discussion, and to several contending parties.
|
||
Some said Cardinal Pole was the man - but the Queen was of opinion
|
||
that he was NOT the man, he being too old and too much of a
|
||
student. Others said that the gallant young COURTENAY, whom the
|
||
Queen had made Earl of Devonshire, was the man - and the Queen
|
||
thought so too, for a while; but she changed her mind. At last it
|
||
appeared that PHILIP, PRINCE OF SPAIN, was certainly the man -
|
||
though certainly not the people's man; for they detested the idea
|
||
of such a marriage from the beginning to the end, and murmured that
|
||
the Spaniard would establish in England, by the aid of foreign
|
||
soldiers, the worst abuses of the Popish religion, and even the
|
||
terrible Inquisition itself.
|
||
|
||
These discontents gave rise to a conspiracy for marrying young
|
||
Courtenay to the Princess Elizabeth, and setting them up, with
|
||
popular tumults all over the kingdom, against the Queen. This was
|
||
discovered in time by Gardiner; but in Kent, the old bold county,
|
||
the people rose in their old bold way. SIR THOMAS WYAT, a man of
|
||
great daring, was their leader. He raised his standard at
|
||
Maidstone, marched on to Rochester, established himself in the old
|
||
castle there, and prepared to hold out against the Duke of Norfolk,
|
||
who came against him with a party of the Queen's guards, and a body
|
||
of five hundred London men. The London men, however, were all for
|
||
Elizabeth, and not at all for Mary. They declared, under the
|
||
castle walls, for Wyat; the Duke retreated; and Wyat came on to
|
||
Deptford, at the head of fifteen thousand men.
|
||
|
||
But these, in their turn, fell away. When he came to Southwark,
|
||
there were only two thousand left. Not dismayed by finding the
|
||
London citizens in arms, and the guns at the Tower ready to oppose
|
||
his crossing the river there, Wyat led them off to Kingston-upon-
|
||
Thames, intending to cross the bridge that he knew to be in that
|
||
place, and so to work his way round to Ludgate, one of the old
|
||
gates of the City. He found the bridge broken down, but mended it,
|
||
came across, and bravely fought his way up Fleet Street to Ludgate
|
||
Hill. Finding the gate closed against him, he fought his way back
|
||
again, sword in hand, to Temple Bar. Here, being overpowered, he
|
||
surrendered himself, and three or four hundred of his men were
|
||
taken, besides a hundred killed. Wyat, in a moment of weakness
|
||
(and perhaps of torture) was afterwards made to accuse the Princess
|
||
Elizabeth as his accomplice to some very small extent. But his
|
||
manhood soon returned to him, and he refused to save his life by
|
||
making any more false confessions. He was quartered and
|
||
distributed in the usual brutal way, and from fifty to a hundred of
|
||
his followers were hanged. The rest were led out, with halters
|
||
round their necks, to be pardoned, and to make a parade of crying
|
||
out, 'God save Queen Mary!'
|
||
|
||
In the danger of this rebellion, the Queen showed herself to be a
|
||
woman of courage and spirit. She disdained to retreat to any place
|
||
of safety, and went down to the Guildhall, sceptre in hand, and
|
||
made a gallant speech to the Lord Mayor and citizens. But on the
|
||
day after Wyat's defeat, she did the most cruel act, even of her
|
||
cruel reign, in signing the warrant for the execution of Lady Jane
|
||
Grey.
|
||
|
||
They tried to persuade Lady Jane to accept the unreformed religion;
|
||
but she steadily refused. On the morning when she was to die, she
|
||
saw from her window the bleeding and headless body of her husband
|
||
brought back in a cart from the scaffold on Tower Hill where he had
|
||
laid down his life. But, as she had declined to see him before his
|
||
execution, lest she should be overpowered and not make a good end,
|
||
so, she even now showed a constancy and calmness that will never be
|
||
forgotten. She came up to the scaffold with a firm step and a
|
||
quiet face, and addressed the bystanders in a steady voice. They
|
||
were not numerous; for she was too young, too innocent and fair, to
|
||
be murdered before the people on Tower Hill, as her husband had
|
||
just been; so, the place of her execution was within the Tower
|
||
itself. She said that she had done an unlawful act in taking what
|
||
was Queen Mary's right; but that she had done so with no bad
|
||
intent, and that she died a humble Christian. She begged the
|
||
executioner to despatch her quickly, and she asked him, 'Will you
|
||
take my head off before I lay me down?' He answered, 'No, Madam,'
|
||
and then she was very quiet while they bandaged her eyes. Being
|
||
blinded, and unable to see the block on which she was to lay her
|
||
young head, she was seen to feel about for it with her hands, and
|
||
was heard to say, confused, 'O what shall I do! Where is it?'
|
||
Then they guided her to the right place, and the executioner struck
|
||
off her head. You know too well, now, what dreadful deeds the
|
||
executioner did in England, through many, many years, and how his
|
||
axe descended on the hateful block through the necks of some of the
|
||
bravest, wisest, and best in the land. But it never struck so
|
||
cruel and so vile a blow as this.
|
||
|
||
The father of Lady Jane soon followed, but was little pitied.
|
||
Queen Mary's next object was to lay hold of Elizabeth, and this was
|
||
pursued with great eagerness. Five hundred men were sent to her
|
||
retired house at Ashridge, by Berkhampstead, with orders to bring
|
||
her up, alive or dead. They got there at ten at night, when she
|
||
was sick in bed. But, their leaders followed her lady into her
|
||
bedchamber, whence she was brought out betimes next morning, and
|
||
put into a litter to be conveyed to London. She was so weak and
|
||
ill, that she was five days on the road; still, she was so resolved
|
||
to be seen by the people that she had the curtains of the litter
|
||
opened; and so, very pale and sickly, passed through the streets.
|
||
She wrote to her sister, saying she was innocent of any crime, and
|
||
asking why she was made a prisoner; but she got no answer, and was
|
||
ordered to the Tower. They took her in by the Traitor's Gate, to
|
||
which she objected, but in vain. One of the lords who conveyed her
|
||
offered to cover her with his cloak, as it was raining, but she put
|
||
it away from her, proudly and scornfully, and passed into the
|
||
Tower, and sat down in a court-yard on a stone. They besought her
|
||
to come in out of the wet; but she answered that it was better
|
||
sitting there, than in a worse place. At length she went to her
|
||
apartment, where she was kept a prisoner, though not so close a
|
||
prisoner as at Woodstock, whither she was afterwards removed, and
|
||
where she is said to have one day envied a milkmaid whom she heard
|
||
singing in the sunshine as she went through the green fields.
|
||
Gardiner, than whom there were not many worse men among the fierce
|
||
and sullen priests, cared little to keep secret his stern desire
|
||
for her death: being used to say that it was of little service to
|
||
shake off the leaves, and lop the branches of the tree of heresy,
|
||
if its root, the hope of heretics, were left. He failed, however,
|
||
in his benevolent design. Elizabeth was, at length, released; and
|
||
Hatfield House was assigned to her as a residence, under the care
|
||
of one SIR THOMAS POPE.
|
||
|
||
It would seem that Philip, the Prince of Spain, was a main cause of
|
||
this change in Elizabeth's fortunes. He was not an amiable man,
|
||
being, on the contrary, proud, overbearing, and gloomy; but he and
|
||
the Spanish lords who came over with him, assuredly did
|
||
discountenance the idea of doing any violence to the Princess. It
|
||
may have been mere prudence, but we will hope it was manhood and
|
||
honour. The Queen had been expecting her husband with great
|
||
impatience, and at length he came, to her great joy, though he
|
||
never cared much for her. They were married by Gardiner, at
|
||
Winchester, and there was more holiday-making among the people; but
|
||
they had their old distrust of this Spanish marriage, in which even
|
||
the Parliament shared. Though the members of that Parliament were
|
||
far from honest, and were strongly suspected to have been bought
|
||
with Spanish money, they would pass no bill to enable the Queen to
|
||
set aside the Princess Elizabeth and appoint her own successor.
|
||
|
||
Although Gardiner failed in this object, as well as in the darker
|
||
one of bringing the Princess to the scaffold, he went on at a great
|
||
pace in the revival of the unreformed religion. A new Parliament
|
||
was packed, in which there were no Protestants. Preparations were
|
||
made to receive Cardinal Pole in England as the Pope's messenger,
|
||
bringing his holy declaration that all the nobility who had
|
||
acquired Church property, should keep it - which was done to enlist
|
||
their selfish interest on the Pope's side. Then a great scene was
|
||
enacted, which was the triumph of the Queen's plans. Cardinal Pole
|
||
arrived in great splendour and dignity, and was received with great
|
||
pomp. The Parliament joined in a petition expressive of their
|
||
sorrow at the change in the national religion, and praying him to
|
||
receive the country again into the Popish Church. With the Queen
|
||
sitting on her throne, and the King on one side of her, and the
|
||
Cardinal on the other, and the Parliament present, Gardiner read
|
||
the petition aloud. The Cardinal then made a great speech, and was
|
||
so obliging as to say that all was forgotten and forgiven, and that
|
||
the kingdom was solemnly made Roman Catholic again.
|
||
|
||
Everything was now ready for the lighting of the terrible bonfires.
|
||
The Queen having declared to the Council, in writing, that she
|
||
would wish none of her subjects to be burnt without some of the
|
||
Council being present, and that she would particularly wish there
|
||
to be good sermons at all burnings, the Council knew pretty well
|
||
what was to be done next. So, after the Cardinal had blessed all
|
||
the bishops as a preface to the burnings, the Chancellor Gardiner
|
||
opened a High Court at Saint Mary Overy, on the Southwark side of
|
||
London Bridge, for the trial of heretics. Here, two of the late
|
||
Protestant clergymen, HOOPER, Bishop of Gloucester, and ROGERS, a
|
||
Prebendary of St. Paul's, were brought to be tried. Hooper was
|
||
tried first for being married, though a priest, and for not
|
||
believing in the mass. He admitted both of these accusations, and
|
||
said that the mass was a wicked imposition. Then they tried
|
||
Rogers, who said the same. Next morning the two were brought up to
|
||
be sentenced; and then Rogers said that his poor wife, being a
|
||
German woman and a stranger in the land, he hoped might be allowed
|
||
to come to speak to him before he died. To this the inhuman
|
||
Gardiner replied, that she was not his wife. 'Yea, but she is, my
|
||
lord,' said Rogers, 'and she hath been my wife these eighteen
|
||
years.' His request was still refused, and they were both sent to
|
||
Newgate; all those who stood in the streets to sell things, being
|
||
ordered to put out their lights that the people might not see them.
|
||
But, the people stood at their doors with candles in their hands,
|
||
and prayed for them as they went by. Soon afterwards, Rogers was
|
||
taken out of jail to be burnt in Smithfield; and, in the crowd as
|
||
he went along, he saw his poor wife and his ten children, of whom
|
||
the youngest was a little baby. And so he was burnt to death.
|
||
|
||
The next day, Hooper, who was to be burnt at Gloucester, was
|
||
brought out to take his last journey, and was made to wear a hood
|
||
over his face that he might not be known by the people. But, they
|
||
did know him for all that, down in his own part of the country;
|
||
and, when he came near Gloucester, they lined the road, making
|
||
prayers and lamentations. His guards took him to a lodging, where
|
||
he slept soundly all night. At nine o'clock next morning, he was
|
||
brought forth leaning on a staff; for he had taken cold in prison,
|
||
and was infirm. The iron stake, and the iron chain which was to
|
||
bind him to it, were fixed up near a great elm-tree in a pleasant
|
||
open place before the cathedral, where, on peaceful Sundays, he had
|
||
been accustomed to preach and to pray, when he was bishop of
|
||
Gloucester. This tree, which had no leaves then, it being
|
||
February, was filled with people; and the priests of Gloucester
|
||
College were looking complacently on from a window, and there was a
|
||
great concourse of spectators in every spot from which a glimpse of
|
||
the dreadful sight could be beheld. When the old man kneeled down
|
||
on the small platform at the foot of the stake, and prayed aloud,
|
||
the nearest people were observed to be so attentive to his prayers
|
||
that they were ordered to stand farther back; for it did not suit
|
||
the Romish Church to have those Protestant words heard. His
|
||
prayers concluded, he went up to the stake and was stripped to his
|
||
shirt, and chained ready for the fire. One of his guards had such
|
||
compassion on him that, to shorten his agonies, he tied some
|
||
packets of gunpowder about him. Then they heaped up wood and straw
|
||
and reeds, and set them all alight. But, unhappily, the wood was
|
||
green and damp, and there was a wind blowing that blew what flame
|
||
there was, away. Thus, through three-quarters of an hour, the good
|
||
old man was scorched and roasted and smoked, as the fire rose and
|
||
sank; and all that time they saw him, as he burned, moving his lips
|
||
in prayer, and beating his breast with one hand, even after the
|
||
other was burnt away and had fallen off.
|
||
|
||
Cranmer, Ridley, and Latimer, were taken to Oxford to dispute with
|
||
a commission of priests and doctors about the mass. They were
|
||
shamefully treated; and it is recorded that the Oxford scholars
|
||
hissed and howled and groaned, and misconducted themselves in an
|
||
anything but a scholarly way. The prisoners were taken back to
|
||
jail, and afterwards tried in St. Mary's Church. They were all
|
||
found guilty. On the sixteenth of the month of October, Ridley and
|
||
Latimer were brought out, to make another of the dreadful bonfires.
|
||
|
||
The scene of the suffering of these two good Protestant men was in
|
||
the City ditch, near Baliol College. On coming to the dreadful
|
||
spot, they kissed the stakes, and then embraced each other. And
|
||
then a learned doctor got up into a pulpit which was placed there,
|
||
and preached a sermon from the text, 'Though I give my body to be
|
||
burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing.' When you
|
||
think of the charity of burning men alive, you may imagine that
|
||
this learned doctor had a rather brazen face. Ridley would have
|
||
answered his sermon when it came to an end, but was not allowed.
|
||
When Latimer was stripped, it appeared that he had dressed himself
|
||
under his other clothes, in a new shroud; and, as he stood in it
|
||
before all the people, it was noted of him, and long remembered,
|
||
that, whereas he had been stooping and feeble but a few minutes
|
||
before, he now stood upright and handsome, in the knowledge that he
|
||
was dying for a just and a great cause. Ridley's brother-in-law
|
||
was there with bags of gunpowder; and when they were both chained
|
||
up, he tied them round their bodies. Then, a light was thrown upon
|
||
the pile to fire it. 'Be of good comfort, Master Ridley,' said
|
||
Latimer, at that awful moment, 'and play the man! We shall this
|
||
day light such a candle, by God's grace, in England, as I trust
|
||
shall never be put out.' And then he was seen to make motions with
|
||
his hands as if he were washing them in the flames, and to stroke
|
||
his aged face with them, and was heard to cry, 'Father of Heaven,
|
||
receive my soul!' He died quickly, but the fire, after having
|
||
burned the legs of Ridley, sunk. There he lingered, chained to the
|
||
iron post, and crying, 'O! I cannot burn! O! for Christ's sake
|
||
let the fire come unto me!' And still, when his brother-in-law had
|
||
heaped on more wood, he was heard through the blinding smoke, still
|
||
dismally crying, 'O! I cannot burn, I cannot burn!' At last, the
|
||
gunpowder caught fire, and ended his miseries.
|
||
|
||
Five days after this fearful scene, Gardiner went to his tremendous
|
||
account before God, for the cruelties he had so much assisted in
|
||
committing.
|
||
|
||
Cranmer remained still alive and in prison. He was brought out
|
||
again in February, for more examining and trying, by Bonner, Bishop
|
||
of London: another man of blood, who had succeeded to Gardiner's
|
||
work, even in his lifetime, when Gardiner was tired of it. Cranmer
|
||
was now degraded as a priest, and left for death; but, if the Queen
|
||
hated any one on earth, she hated him, and it was resolved that he
|
||
should be ruined and disgraced to the utmost. There is no doubt
|
||
that the Queen and her husband personally urged on these deeds,
|
||
because they wrote to the Council, urging them to be active in the
|
||
kindling of the fearful fires. As Cranmer was known not to be a
|
||
firm man, a plan was laid for surrounding him with artful people,
|
||
and inducing him to recant to the unreformed religion. Deans and
|
||
friars visited him, played at bowls with him, showed him various
|
||
attentions, talked persuasively with him, gave him money for his
|
||
prison comforts, and induced him to sign, I fear, as many as six
|
||
recantations. But when, after all, he was taken out to be burnt,
|
||
he was nobly true to his better self, and made a glorious end.
|
||
|
||
After prayers and a sermon, Dr. Cole, the preacher of the day (who
|
||
had been one of the artful priests about Cranmer in prison),
|
||
required him to make a public confession of his faith before the
|
||
people. This, Cole did, expecting that he would declare himself a
|
||
Roman Catholic. 'I will make a profession of my faith,' said
|
||
Cranmer, 'and with a good will too.'
|
||
|
||
Then, he arose before them all, and took from the sleeve of his
|
||
robe a written prayer and read it aloud. That done, he kneeled and
|
||
said the Lord's Prayer, all the people joining; and then he arose
|
||
again and told them that he believed in the Bible, and that in what
|
||
he had lately written, he had written what was not the truth, and
|
||
that, because his right hand had signed those papers, he would burn
|
||
his right hand first when he came to the fire. As for the Pope, he
|
||
did refuse him and denounce him as the enemy of Heaven. Hereupon
|
||
the pious Dr. Cole cried out to the guards to stop that heretic's
|
||
mouth and take him away.
|
||
|
||
So they took him away, and chained him to the stake, where he
|
||
hastily took off his own clothes to make ready for the flames. And
|
||
he stood before the people with a bald head and a white and flowing
|
||
beard. He was so firm now when the worst was come, that he again
|
||
declared against his recantation, and was so impressive and so
|
||
undismayed, that a certain lord, who was one of the directors of
|
||
the execution, called out to the men to make haste! When the fire
|
||
was lighted, Cranmer, true to his latest word, stretched out his
|
||
right hand, and crying out, 'This hand hath offended!' held it
|
||
among the flames, until it blazed and burned away. His heart was
|
||
found entire among his ashes, and he left at last a memorable name
|
||
in English history. Cardinal Pole celebrated the day by saying his
|
||
first mass, and next day he was made Archbishop of Canterbury in
|
||
Cranmer's place.
|
||
|
||
The Queen's husband, who was now mostly abroad in his own
|
||
dominions, and generally made a coarse jest of her to his more
|
||
familiar courtiers, was at war with France, and came over to seek
|
||
the assistance of England. England was very unwilling to engage in
|
||
a French war for his sake; but it happened that the King of France,
|
||
at this very time, aided a descent upon the English coast. Hence,
|
||
war was declared, greatly to Philip's satisfaction; and the Queen
|
||
raised a sum of money with which to carry it on, by every
|
||
unjustifiable means in her power. It met with no profitable
|
||
return, for the French Duke of Guise surprised Calais, and the
|
||
English sustained a complete defeat. The losses they met with in
|
||
France greatly mortified the national pride, and the Queen never
|
||
recovered the blow.
|
||
|
||
There was a bad fever raging in England at this time, and I am glad
|
||
to write that the Queen took it, and the hour of her death came.
|
||
'When I am dead and my body is opened,' she said to those around
|
||
those around her, 'ye shall find CALAIS written on my heart.' I
|
||
should have thought, if anything were written on it, they would
|
||
have found the words - JANE GREY, HOOPER, ROGERS, RIDLEY, LATIMER,
|
||
CRANMER, AND THREE HUNDRED PEOPLE BURNT ALIVE WITHIN FOUR YEARS OF
|
||
MY WICKED REIGN, INCLUDING SIXTY WOMEN AND FORTY LITTLE CHILDREN.
|
||
But it is enough that their deaths were written in Heaven.
|
||
|
||
The Queen died on the seventeenth of November, fifteen hundred and
|
||
fifty-eight, after reigning not quite five years and a half, and in
|
||
the forty-fourth year of her age. Cardinal Pole died of the same
|
||
fever next day.
|
||
|
||
As BLOODY QUEEN MARY, this woman has become famous, and as BLOODY
|
||
QUEEN MARY, she will ever be justly remembered with horror and
|
||
detestation in Great Britain. Her memory has been held in such
|
||
abhorrence that some writers have arisen in later years to take her
|
||
part, and to show that she was, upon the whole, quite an amiable
|
||
and cheerful sovereign! 'By their fruits ye shall know them,' said
|
||
OUR SAVIOUR. The stake and the fire were the fruits of this reign,
|
||
and you will judge this Queen by nothing else.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXI - ENGLAND UNDER ELIZABETH
|
||
|
||
THERE was great rejoicing all over the land when the Lords of the
|
||
Council went down to Hatfield, to hail the Princess Elizabeth as
|
||
the new Queen of England. Weary of the barbarities of Mary's
|
||
reign, the people looked with hope and gladness to the new
|
||
Sovereign. The nation seemed to wake from a horrible dream; and
|
||
Heaven, so long hidden by the smoke of the fires that roasted men
|
||
and women to death, appeared to brighten once more.
|
||
|
||
Queen Elizabeth was five-and-twenty years of age when she rode
|
||
through the streets of London, from the Tower to Westminster Abbey,
|
||
to be crowned. Her countenance was strongly marked, but on the
|
||
whole, commanding and dignified; her hair was red, and her nose
|
||
something too long and sharp for a woman's. She was not the
|
||
beautiful creature her courtiers made out; but she was well enough,
|
||
and no doubt looked all the better for coming after the dark and
|
||
gloomy Mary. She was well educated, but a roundabout writer, and
|
||
rather a hard swearer and coarse talker. She was clever, but
|
||
cunning and deceitful, and inherited much of her father's violent
|
||
temper. I mention this now, because she has been so over-praised
|
||
by one party, and so over-abused by another, that it is hardly
|
||
possible to understand the greater part of her reign without first
|
||
understanding what kind of woman she really was.
|
||
|
||
She began her reign with the great advantage of having a very wise
|
||
and careful Minister, SIR WILLIAM CECIL, whom she afterwards made
|
||
LORD BURLEIGH. Altogether, the people had greater reason for
|
||
rejoicing than they usually had, when there were processions in the
|
||
streets; and they were happy with some reason. All kinds of shows
|
||
and images were set up; GOG and MAGOG were hoisted to the top of
|
||
Temple Bar, and (which was more to the purpose) the Corporation
|
||
dutifully presented the young Queen with the sum of a thousand
|
||
marks in gold - so heavy a present, that she was obliged to take it
|
||
into her carriage with both hands. The coronation was a great
|
||
success; and, on the next day, one of the courtiers presented a
|
||
petition to the new Queen, praying that as it was the custom to
|
||
release some prisoners on such occasions, she would have the
|
||
goodness to release the four Evangelists, Matthew, Mark, Luke, and
|
||
John, and also the Apostle Saint Paul, who had been for some time
|
||
shut up in a strange language so that the people could not get at
|
||
them.
|
||
|
||
To this, the Queen replied that it would be better first to inquire
|
||
of themselves whether they desired to be released or not; and, as a
|
||
means of finding out, a great public discussion - a sort of
|
||
religious tournament - was appointed to take place between certain
|
||
champions of the two religions, in Westminster Abbey. You may
|
||
suppose that it was soon made pretty clear to common sense, that
|
||
for people to benefit by what they repeat or read, it is rather
|
||
necessary they should understand something about it. Accordingly,
|
||
a Church Service in plain English was settled, and other laws and
|
||
regulations were made, completely establishing the great work of
|
||
the Reformation. The Romish bishops and champions were not harshly
|
||
dealt with, all things considered; and the Queen's Ministers were
|
||
both prudent and merciful.
|
||
|
||
The one great trouble of this reign, and the unfortunate cause of
|
||
the greater part of such turmoil and bloodshed as occurred in it,
|
||
was MARY STUART, QUEEN OF SCOTS. We will try to understand, in as
|
||
few words as possible, who Mary was, what she was, and how she came
|
||
to be a thorn in the royal pillow of Elizabeth.
|
||
|
||
She was the daughter of the Queen Regent of Scotland, MARY OF
|
||
GUISE. She had been married, when a mere child, to the Dauphin,
|
||
the son and heir of the King of France. The Pope, who pretended
|
||
that no one could rightfully wear the crown of England without his
|
||
gracious permission, was strongly opposed to Elizabeth, who had not
|
||
asked for the said gracious permission. And as Mary Queen of Scots
|
||
would have inherited the English crown in right of her birth,
|
||
supposing the English Parliament not to have altered the
|
||
succession, the Pope himself, and most of the discontented who were
|
||
followers of his, maintained that Mary was the rightful Queen of
|
||
England, and Elizabeth the wrongful Queen. Mary being so closely
|
||
connected with France, and France being jealous of England, there
|
||
was far greater danger in this than there would have been if she
|
||
had had no alliance with that great power. And when her young
|
||
husband, on the death of his father, became FRANCIS THE SECOND,
|
||
King of France, the matter grew very serious. For, the young
|
||
couple styled themselves King and Queen of England, and the Pope
|
||
was disposed to help them by doing all the mischief he could.
|
||
|
||
Now, the reformed religion, under the guidance of a stern and
|
||
powerful preacher, named JOHN KNOX, and other such men, had been
|
||
making fierce progress in Scotland. It was still a half savage
|
||
country, where there was a great deal of murdering and rioting
|
||
continually going on; and the Reformers, instead of reforming those
|
||
evils as they should have done, went to work in the ferocious old
|
||
Scottish spirit, laying churches and chapels waste, pulling down
|
||
pictures and altars, and knocking about the Grey Friars, and the
|
||
Black Friars, and the White Friars, and the friars of all sorts of
|
||
colours, in all directions. This obdurate and harsh spirit of the
|
||
Scottish Reformers (the Scotch have always been rather a sullen and
|
||
frowning people in religious matters) put up the blood of the
|
||
Romish French court, and caused France to send troops over to
|
||
Scotland, with the hope of setting the friars of all sorts of
|
||
colours on their legs again; of conquering that country first, and
|
||
England afterwards; and so crushing the Reformation all to pieces.
|
||
The Scottish Reformers, who had formed a great league which they
|
||
called The Congregation of the Lord, secretly represented to
|
||
Elizabeth that, if the reformed religion got the worst of it with
|
||
them, it would be likely to get the worst of it in England too; and
|
||
thus, Elizabeth, though she had a high notion of the rights of
|
||
Kings and Queens to do anything they liked, sent an army to
|
||
Scotland to support the Reformers, who were in arms against their
|
||
sovereign. All these proceedings led to a treaty of peace at
|
||
Edinburgh, under which the French consented to depart from the
|
||
kingdom. By a separate treaty, Mary and her young husband engaged
|
||
to renounce their assumed title of King and Queen of England. But
|
||
this treaty they never fulfilled.
|
||
|
||
It happened, soon after matters had got to this state, that the
|
||
young French King died, leaving Mary a young widow. She was then
|
||
invited by her Scottish subjects to return home and reign over
|
||
them; and as she was not now happy where she was, she, after a
|
||
little time, complied.
|
||
|
||
Elizabeth had been Queen three years, when Mary Queen of Scots
|
||
embarked at Calais for her own rough, quarrelling country. As she
|
||
came out of the harbour, a vessel was lost before her eyes, and she
|
||
said, 'O! good God! what an omen this is for such a voyage!' She
|
||
was very fond of France, and sat on the deck, looking back at it
|
||
and weeping, until it was quite dark. When she went to bed, she
|
||
directed to be called at daybreak, if the French coast were still
|
||
visible, that she might behold it for the last time. As it proved
|
||
to be a clear morning, this was done, and she again wept for the
|
||
country she was leaving, and said many times, ' Farewell, France!
|
||
Farewell, France! I shall never see thee again!' All this was
|
||
long remembered afterwards, as sorrowful and interesting in a fair
|
||
young princess of nineteen. Indeed, I am afraid it gradually came,
|
||
together with her other distresses, to surround her with greater
|
||
sympathy than she deserved.
|
||
|
||
When she came to Scotland, and took up her abode at the palace of
|
||
Holyrood in Edinburgh, she found herself among uncouth strangers
|
||
and wild uncomfortable customs very different from her experiences
|
||
in the court of France. The very people who were disposed to love
|
||
her, made her head ache when she was tired out by her voyage, with
|
||
a serenade of discordant music - a fearful concert of bagpipes, I
|
||
suppose - and brought her and her train home to her palace on
|
||
miserable little Scotch horses that appeared to be half starved.
|
||
Among the people who were not disposed to love her, she found the
|
||
powerful leaders of the Reformed Church, who were bitter upon her
|
||
amusements, however innocent, and denounced music and dancing as
|
||
works of the devil. John Knox himself often lectured her,
|
||
violently and angrily, and did much to make her life unhappy. All
|
||
these reasons confirmed her old attachment to the Romish religion,
|
||
and caused her, there is no doubt, most imprudently and dangerously
|
||
both for herself and for England too, to give a solemn pledge to
|
||
the heads of the Romish Church that if she ever succeeded to the
|
||
English crown, she would set up that religion again. In reading
|
||
her unhappy history, you must always remember this; and also that
|
||
during her whole life she was constantly put forward against the
|
||
Queen, in some form or other, by the Romish party.
|
||
|
||
That Elizabeth, on the other hand, was not inclined to like her, is
|
||
pretty certain. Elizabeth was very vain and jealous, and had an
|
||
extraordinary dislike to people being married. She treated Lady
|
||
Catherine Grey, sister of the beheaded Lady Jane, with such
|
||
shameful severity, for no other reason than her being secretly
|
||
married, that she died and her husband was ruined; so, when a
|
||
second marriage for Mary began to be talked about, probably
|
||
Elizabeth disliked her more. Not that Elizabeth wanted suitors of
|
||
her own, for they started up from Spain, Austria, Sweden, and
|
||
England. Her English lover at this time, and one whom she much
|
||
favoured too, was LORD ROBERT DUDLEY, Earl of Leicester - himself
|
||
secretly married to AMY ROBSART, the daughter of an English
|
||
gentleman, whom he was strongly suspected of causing to be
|
||
murdered, down at his country seat, Cumnor Hall in Berkshire, that
|
||
he might be free to marry the Queen. Upon this story, the great
|
||
writer, SIR WALTER SCOTT, has founded one of his best romances.
|
||
But if Elizabeth knew how to lead her handsome favourite on, for
|
||
her own vanity and pleasure, she knew how to stop him for her own
|
||
pride; and his love, and all the other proposals, came to nothing.
|
||
The Queen always declared in good set speeches, that she would
|
||
never be married at all, but would live and die a Maiden Queen. It
|
||
was a very pleasant and meritorious declaration, I suppose; but it
|
||
has been puffed and trumpeted so much, that I am rather tired of it
|
||
myself.
|
||
|
||
Divers princes proposed to marry Mary, but the English court had
|
||
reasons for being jealous of them all, and even proposed as a
|
||
matter of policy that she should marry that very Earl of Leicester
|
||
who had aspired to be the husband of Elizabeth. At last, LORD
|
||
DARNLEY, son of the Earl of Lennox, and himself descended from the
|
||
Royal Family of Scotland, went over with Elizabeth's consent to try
|
||
his fortune at Holyrood. He was a tall simpleton; and could dance
|
||
and play the guitar; but I know of nothing else he could do, unless
|
||
it were to get very drunk, and eat gluttonously, and make a
|
||
contemptible spectacle of himself in many mean and vain ways.
|
||
However, he gained Mary's heart, not disdaining in the pursuit of
|
||
his object to ally himself with one of her secretaries, DAVID
|
||
RIZZIO, who had great influence with her. He soon married the
|
||
Queen. This marriage does not say much for her, but what followed
|
||
will presently say less.
|
||
|
||
Mary's brother, the EARL OF MURRAY, and head of the Protestant
|
||
party in Scotland, had opposed this marriage, partly on religious
|
||
grounds, and partly perhaps from personal dislike of the very
|
||
contemptible bridegroom. When it had taken place, through Mary's
|
||
gaining over to it the more powerful of the lords about her, she
|
||
banished Murray for his pains; and, when he and some other nobles
|
||
rose in arms to support the reformed religion, she herself, within
|
||
a month of her wedding day, rode against them in armour with loaded
|
||
pistols in her saddle. Driven out of Scotland, they presented
|
||
themselves before Elizabeth - who called them traitors in public,
|
||
and assisted them in private, according to her crafty nature.
|
||
|
||
Mary had been married but a little while, when she began to hate
|
||
her husband, who, in his turn, began to hate that David Rizzio,
|
||
with whom he had leagued to gain her favour, and whom he now
|
||
believed to be her lover. He hated Rizzio to that extent, that he
|
||
made a compact with LORD RUTHVEN and three other lords to get rid
|
||
of him by murder. This wicked agreement they made in solemn
|
||
secrecy upon the first of March, fifteen hundred and sixty-six, and
|
||
on the night of Saturday the ninth, the conspirators were brought
|
||
by Darnley up a private staircase, dark and steep, into a range of
|
||
rooms where they knew that Mary was sitting at supper with her
|
||
sister, Lady Argyle, and this doomed man. When they went into the
|
||
room, Darnley took the Queen round the waist, and Lord Ruthven, who
|
||
had risen from a bed of sickness to do this murder, came in, gaunt
|
||
and ghastly, leaning on two men. Rizzio ran behind the Queen for
|
||
shelter and protection. 'Let him come out of the room,' said
|
||
Ruthven. 'He shall not leave the room,' replied the Queen; 'I read
|
||
his danger in your face, and it is my will that he remain here.'
|
||
They then set upon him, struggled with him, overturned the table,
|
||
dragged him out, and killed him with fifty-six stabs. When the
|
||
Queen heard that he was dead, she said, 'No more tears. I will
|
||
think now of revenge!'
|
||
|
||
Within a day or two, she gained her husband over, and prevailed on
|
||
the tall idiot to abandon the conspirators and fly with her to
|
||
Dunbar. There, he issued a proclamation, audaciously and falsely
|
||
denying that he had any knowledge of the late bloody business; and
|
||
there they were joined by the EARL BOTHWELL and some other nobles.
|
||
With their help, they raised eight thousand men; returned to
|
||
Edinburgh, and drove the assassins into England. Mary soon
|
||
afterwards gave birth to a son - still thinking of revenge.
|
||
|
||
That she should have had a greater scorn for her husband after his
|
||
late cowardice and treachery than she had had before, was natural
|
||
enough. There is little doubt that she now began to love Bothwell
|
||
instead, and to plan with him means of getting rid of Darnley.
|
||
Bothwell had such power over her that he induced her even to pardon
|
||
the assassins of Rizzio. The arrangements for the Christening of
|
||
the young Prince were entrusted to him, and he was one of the most
|
||
important people at the ceremony, where the child was named JAMES:
|
||
Elizabeth being his godmother, though not present on the occasion.
|
||
A week afterwards, Darnley, who had left Mary and gone to his
|
||
father's house at Glasgow, being taken ill with the small-pox, she
|
||
sent her own physician to attend him. But there is reason to
|
||
apprehend that this was merely a show and a pretence, and that she
|
||
knew what was doing, when Bothwell within another month proposed to
|
||
one of the late conspirators against Rizzio, to murder Darnley,
|
||
'for that it was the Queen's mind that he should be taken away.'
|
||
It is certain that on that very day she wrote to her ambassador in
|
||
France, complaining of him, and yet went immediately to Glasgow,
|
||
feigning to be very anxious about him, and to love him very much.
|
||
If she wanted to get him in her power, she succeeded to her heart's
|
||
content; for she induced him to go back with her to Edinburgh, and
|
||
to occupy, instead of the palace, a lone house outside the city
|
||
called the Kirk of Field. Here, he lived for about a week. One
|
||
Sunday night, she remained with him until ten o'clock, and then
|
||
left him, to go to Holyrood to be present at an entertainment given
|
||
in celebration of the marriage of one of her favourite servants.
|
||
At two o'clock in the morning the city was shaken by a great
|
||
explosion, and the Kirk of Field was blown to atoms.
|
||
|
||
Darnley's body was found next day lying under a tree at some
|
||
distance. How it came there, undisfigured and unscorched by
|
||
gunpowder, and how this crime came to be so clumsily and strangely
|
||
committed, it is impossible to discover. The deceitful character
|
||
of Mary, and the deceitful character of Elizabeth, have rendered
|
||
almost every part of their joint history uncertain and obscure.
|
||
But, I fear that Mary was unquestionably a party to her husband's
|
||
murder, and that this was the revenge she had threatened. The
|
||
Scotch people universally believed it. Voices cried out in the
|
||
streets of Edinburgh in the dead of the night, for justice on the
|
||
murderess. Placards were posted by unknown hands in the public
|
||
places denouncing Bothwell as the murderer, and the Queen as his
|
||
accomplice; and, when he afterwards married her (though himself
|
||
already married), previously making a show of taking her prisoner
|
||
by force, the indignation of the people knew no bounds. The women
|
||
particularly are described as having been quite frantic against the
|
||
Queen, and to have hooted and cried after her in the streets with
|
||
terrific vehemence.
|
||
|
||
Such guilty unions seldom prosper. This husband and wife had lived
|
||
together but a month, when they were separated for ever by the
|
||
successes of a band of Scotch nobles who associated against them
|
||
for the protection of the young Prince: whom Bothwell had vainly
|
||
endeavoured to lay hold of, and whom he would certainly have
|
||
murdered, if the EARL OF MAR, in whose hands the boy was, had not
|
||
been firmly and honourably faithful to his trust. Before this
|
||
angry power, Bothwell fled abroad, where he died, a prisoner and
|
||
mad, nine miserable years afterwards. Mary being found by the
|
||
associated lords to deceive them at every turn, was sent a prisoner
|
||
to Lochleven Castle; which, as it stood in the midst of a lake,
|
||
could only be approached by boat. Here, one LORD LINDSAY, who was
|
||
so much of a brute that the nobles would have done better if they
|
||
had chosen a mere gentleman for their messenger, made her sign her
|
||
abdication, and appoint Murray, Regent of Scotland. Here, too,
|
||
Murray saw her in a sorrowing and humbled state.
|
||
|
||
She had better have remained in the castle of Lochleven, dull
|
||
prison as it was, with the rippling of the lake against it, and the
|
||
moving shadows of the water on the room walls; but she could not
|
||
rest there, and more than once tried to escape. The first time she
|
||
had nearly succeeded, dressed in the clothes of her own washer-
|
||
woman, but, putting up her hand to prevent one of the boatmen from
|
||
lifting her veil, the men suspected her, seeing how white it was,
|
||
and rowed her back again. A short time afterwards, her fascinating
|
||
manners enlisted in her cause a boy in the Castle, called the
|
||
little DOUGLAS, who, while the family were at supper, stole the
|
||
keys of the great gate, went softly out with the Queen, locked the
|
||
gate on the outside, and rowed her away across the lake, sinking
|
||
the keys as they went along. On the opposite shore she was met by
|
||
another Douglas, and some few lords; and, so accompanied, rode away
|
||
on horseback to Hamilton, where they raised three thousand men.
|
||
Here, she issued a proclamation declaring that the abdication she
|
||
had signed in her prison was illegal, and requiring the Regent to
|
||
yield to his lawful Queen. Being a steady soldier, and in no way
|
||
discomposed although he was without an army, Murray pretended to
|
||
treat with her, until he had collected a force about half equal to
|
||
her own, and then he gave her battle. In one quarter of an hour he
|
||
cut down all her hopes. She had another weary ride on horse-back
|
||
of sixty long Scotch miles, and took shelter at Dundrennan Abbey,
|
||
whence she fled for safety to Elizabeth's dominions.
|
||
|
||
Mary Queen of Scots came to England - to her own ruin, the trouble
|
||
of the kingdom, and the misery and death of many - in the year one
|
||
thousand five hundred and sixty-eight. How she left it and the
|
||
world, nineteen years afterwards, we have now to see.
|
||
|
||
SECOND PART
|
||
|
||
WHEN Mary Queen of Scots arrived in England, without money and even
|
||
without any other clothes than those she wore, she wrote to
|
||
Elizabeth, representing herself as an innocent and injured piece of
|
||
Royalty, and entreating her assistance to oblige her Scottish
|
||
subjects to take her back again and obey her. But, as her
|
||
character was already known in England to be a very different one
|
||
from what she made it out to be, she was told in answer that she
|
||
must first clear herself. Made uneasy by this condition, Mary,
|
||
rather than stay in England, would have gone to Spain, or to
|
||
France, or would even have gone back to Scotland. But, as her
|
||
doing either would have been likely to trouble England afresh, it
|
||
was decided that she should be detained here. She first came to
|
||
Carlisle, and, after that, was moved about from castle to castle,
|
||
as was considered necessary; but England she never left again.
|
||
|
||
After trying very hard to get rid of the necessity of clearing
|
||
herself, Mary, advised by LORD HERRIES, her best friend in England,
|
||
agreed to answer the charges against her, if the Scottish noblemen
|
||
who made them would attend to maintain them before such English
|
||
noblemen as Elizabeth might appoint for that purpose. Accordingly,
|
||
such an assembly, under the name of a conference, met, first at
|
||
York, and afterwards at Hampton Court. In its presence Lord
|
||
Lennox, Darnley's father, openly charged Mary with the murder of
|
||
his son; and whatever Mary's friends may now say or write in her
|
||
behalf, there is no doubt that, when her brother Murray produced
|
||
against her a casket containing certain guilty letters and verses
|
||
which he stated to have passed between her and Bothwell, she
|
||
withdrew from the inquiry. Consequently, it is to be supposed that
|
||
she was then considered guilty by those who had the best
|
||
opportunities of judging of the truth, and that the feeling which
|
||
afterwards arose in her behalf was a very generous but not a very
|
||
reasonable one.
|
||
|
||
However, the DUKE OF NORFOLK, an honourable but rather weak
|
||
nobleman, partly because Mary was captivating, partly because he
|
||
was ambitious, partly because he was over-persuaded by artful
|
||
plotters against Elizabeth, conceived a strong idea that he would
|
||
like to marry the Queen of Scots - though he was a little
|
||
frightened, too, by the letters in the casket. This idea being
|
||
secretly encouraged by some of the noblemen of Elizabeth's court,
|
||
and even by the favourite Earl of Leicester (because it was
|
||
objected to by other favourites who were his rivals), Mary
|
||
expressed her approval of it, and the King of France and the King
|
||
of Spain are supposed to have done the same. It was not so quietly
|
||
planned, though, but that it came to Elizabeth's ears, who warned
|
||
the Duke 'to be careful what sort of pillow he was going to lay his
|
||
head upon.' He made a humble reply at the time; but turned sulky
|
||
soon afterwards, and, being considered dangerous, was sent to the
|
||
Tower.
|
||
|
||
Thus, from the moment of Mary's coming to England she began to be
|
||
the centre of plots and miseries.
|
||
|
||
A rise of the Catholics in the north was the next of these, and it
|
||
was only checked by many executions and much bloodshed. It was
|
||
followed by a great conspiracy of the Pope and some of the Catholic
|
||
sovereigns of Europe to depose Elizabeth, place Mary on the throne,
|
||
and restore the unreformed religion. It is almost impossible to
|
||
doubt that Mary knew and approved of this; and the Pope himself was
|
||
so hot in the matter that he issued a bull, in which he openly
|
||
called Elizabeth the 'pretended Queen' of England, excommunicated
|
||
her, and excommunicated all her subjects who should continue to
|
||
obey her. A copy of this miserable paper got into London, and was
|
||
found one morning publicly posted on the Bishop of London's gate.
|
||
A great hue and cry being raised, another copy was found in the
|
||
chamber of a student of Lincoln's Inn, who confessed, being put
|
||
upon the rack, that he had received it from one JOHN FELTON, a rich
|
||
gentleman who lived across the Thames, near Southwark. This John
|
||
Felton, being put upon the rack too, confessed that he had posted
|
||
the placard on the Bishop's gate. For this offence he was, within
|
||
four days, taken to St. Paul's Churchyard, and there hanged and
|
||
quartered. As to the Pope's bull, the people by the reformation
|
||
having thrown off the Pope, did not care much, you may suppose, for
|
||
the Pope's throwing off them. It was a mere dirty piece of paper,
|
||
and not half so powerful as a street ballad.
|
||
|
||
On the very day when Felton was brought to his trial, the poor Duke
|
||
of Norfolk was released. It would have been well for him if he had
|
||
kept away from the Tower evermore, and from the snares that had
|
||
taken him there. But, even while he was in that dismal place he
|
||
corresponded with Mary, and as soon as he was out of it, he began
|
||
to plot again. Being discovered in correspondence with the Pope,
|
||
with a view to a rising in England which should force Elizabeth to
|
||
consent to his marriage with Mary and to repeal the laws against
|
||
the Catholics, he was re-committed to the Tower and brought to
|
||
trial. He was found guilty by the unanimous verdict of the Lords
|
||
who tried him, and was sentenced to the block.
|
||
|
||
It is very difficult to make out, at this distance of time, and
|
||
between opposite accounts, whether Elizabeth really was a humane
|
||
woman, or desired to appear so, or was fearful of shedding the
|
||
blood of people of great name who were popular in the country.
|
||
Twice she commanded and countermanded the execution of this Duke,
|
||
and it did not take place until five months after his trial. The
|
||
scaffold was erected on Tower Hill, and there he died like a brave
|
||
man. He refused to have his eyes bandaged, saying that he was not
|
||
at all afraid of death; and he admitted the justice of his
|
||
sentence, and was much regretted by the people.
|
||
|
||
Although Mary had shrunk at the most important time from disproving
|
||
her guilt, she was very careful never to do anything that would
|
||
admit it. All such proposals as were made to her by Elizabeth for
|
||
her release, required that admission in some form or other, and
|
||
therefore came to nothing. Moreover, both women being artful and
|
||
treacherous, and neither ever trusting the other, it was not likely
|
||
that they could ever make an agreement. So, the Parliament,
|
||
aggravated by what the Pope had done, made new and strong laws
|
||
against the spreading of the Catholic religion in England, and
|
||
declared it treason in any one to say that the Queen and her
|
||
successors were not the lawful sovereigns of England. It would
|
||
have done more than this, but for Elizabeth's moderation.
|
||
|
||
Since the Reformation, there had come to be three great sects of
|
||
religious people - or people who called themselves so - in England;
|
||
that is to say, those who belonged to the Reformed Church, those
|
||
who belonged to the Unreformed Church, and those who were called
|
||
the Puritans, because they said that they wanted to have everything
|
||
very pure and plain in all the Church service. These last were for
|
||
the most part an uncomfortable people, who thought it highly
|
||
meritorious to dress in a hideous manner, talk through their noses,
|
||
and oppose all harmless enjoyments. But they were powerful too,
|
||
and very much in earnest, and they were one and all the determined
|
||
enemies of the Queen of Scots. The Protestant feeling in England
|
||
was further strengthened by the tremendous cruelties to which
|
||
Protestants were exposed in France and in the Netherlands. Scores
|
||
of thousands of them were put to death in those countries with
|
||
every cruelty that can be imagined, and at last, in the autumn of
|
||
the year one thousand five hundred and seventy-two, one of the
|
||
greatest barbarities ever committed in the world took place at
|
||
Paris.
|
||
|
||
It is called in history, THE MASSACRE OF SAINT BARTHOLOMEW, because
|
||
it took place on Saint Bartholomew's Eve. The day fell on Saturday
|
||
the twenty-third of August. On that day all the great leaders of
|
||
the Protestants (who were there called HUGUENOTS) were assembled
|
||
together, for the purpose, as was represented to them, of doing
|
||
honour to the marriage of their chief, the young King of Navarre,
|
||
with the sister of CHARLES THE NINTH: a miserable young King who
|
||
then occupied the French throne. This dull creature was made to
|
||
believe by his mother and other fierce Catholics about him that the
|
||
Huguenots meant to take his life; and he was persuaded to give
|
||
secret orders that, on the tolling of a great bell, they should be
|
||
fallen upon by an overpowering force of armed men, and slaughtered
|
||
wherever they could be found. When the appointed hour was close at
|
||
hand, the stupid wretch, trembling from head to foot, was taken
|
||
into a balcony by his mother to see the atrocious work begun. The
|
||
moment the bell tolled, the murderers broke forth. During all that
|
||
night and the two next days, they broke into the houses, fired the
|
||
houses, shot and stabbed the Protestants, men, women, and children,
|
||
and flung their bodies into the streets. They were shot at in the
|
||
streets as they passed along, and their blood ran down the gutters.
|
||
Upwards of ten thousand Protestants were killed in Paris alone; in
|
||
all France four or five times that number. To return thanks to
|
||
Heaven for these diabolical murders, the Pope and his train
|
||
actually went in public procession at Rome, and as if this were not
|
||
shame enough for them, they had a medal struck to commemorate the
|
||
event. But, however comfortable the wholesale murders were to
|
||
these high authorities, they had not that soothing effect upon the
|
||
doll-King. I am happy to state that he never knew a moment's peace
|
||
afterwards; that he was continually crying out that he saw the
|
||
Huguenots covered with blood and wounds falling dead before him;
|
||
and that he died within a year, shrieking and yelling and raving to
|
||
that degree, that if all the Popes who had ever lived had been
|
||
rolled into one, they would not have afforded His guilty Majesty
|
||
the slightest consolation.
|
||
|
||
When the terrible news of the massacre arrived in England, it made
|
||
a powerful impression indeed upon the people. If they began to run
|
||
a little wild against the Catholics at about this time, this
|
||
fearful reason for it, coming so soon after the days of bloody
|
||
Queen Mary, must be remembered in their excuse. The Court was not
|
||
quite so honest as the people - but perhaps it sometimes is not.
|
||
It received the French ambassador, with all the lords and ladies
|
||
dressed in deep mourning, and keeping a profound silence.
|
||
Nevertheless, a proposal of marriage which he had made to Elizabeth
|
||
only two days before the eve of Saint Bartholomew, on behalf of the
|
||
Duke of Alen<65>on, the French King's brother, a boy of seventeen,
|
||
still went on; while on the other hand, in her usual crafty way,
|
||
the Queen secretly supplied the Huguenots with money and weapons.
|
||
|
||
I must say that for a Queen who made all those fine speeches, of
|
||
which I have confessed myself to be rather tired, about living and
|
||
dying a Maiden Queen, Elizabeth was 'going' to be married pretty
|
||
often. Besides always having some English favourite or other whom
|
||
she by turns encouraged and swore at and knocked about - for the
|
||
maiden Queen was very free with her fists - she held this French
|
||
Duke off and on through several years. When he at last came over
|
||
to England, the marriage articles were actually drawn up, and it
|
||
was settled that the wedding should take place in six weeks. The
|
||
Queen was then so bent upon it, that she prosecuted a poor Puritan
|
||
named STUBBS, and a poor bookseller named PAGE, for writing and
|
||
publishing a pamphlet against it. Their right hands were chopped
|
||
off for this crime; and poor Stubbs - more loyal than I should have
|
||
been myself under the circumstances - immediately pulled off his
|
||
hat with his left hand, and cried, 'God save the Queen!' Stubbs
|
||
was cruelly treated; for the marriage never took place after all,
|
||
though the Queen pledged herself to the Duke with a ring from her
|
||
own finger. He went away, no better than he came, when the
|
||
courtship had lasted some ten years altogether; and he died a
|
||
couple of years afterwards, mourned by Elizabeth, who appears to
|
||
have been really fond of him. It is not much to her credit, for he
|
||
was a bad enough member of a bad family.
|
||
|
||
To return to the Catholics. There arose two orders of priests, who
|
||
were very busy in England, and who were much dreaded. These were
|
||
the JESUITS (who were everywhere in all sorts of disguises), and
|
||
the SEMINARY PRIESTS. The people had a great horror of the first,
|
||
because they were known to have taught that murder was lawful if it
|
||
were done with an object of which they approved; and they had a
|
||
great horror of the second, because they came to teach the old
|
||
religion, and to be the successors of 'Queen Mary's priests,' as
|
||
those yet lingering in England were called, when they should die
|
||
out. The severest laws were made against them, and were most
|
||
unmercifully executed. Those who sheltered them in their houses
|
||
often suffered heavily for what was an act of humanity; and the
|
||
rack, that cruel torture which tore men's limbs asunder, was
|
||
constantly kept going. What these unhappy men confessed, or what
|
||
was ever confessed by any one under that agony, must always be
|
||
received with great doubt, as it is certain that people have
|
||
frequently owned to the most absurd and impossible crimes to escape
|
||
such dreadful suffering. But I cannot doubt it to have been proved
|
||
by papers, that there were many plots, both among the Jesuits, and
|
||
with France, and with Scotland, and with Spain, for the destruction
|
||
of Queen Elizabeth, for the placing of Mary on the throne, and for
|
||
the revival of the old religion.
|
||
|
||
If the English people were too ready to believe in plots, there
|
||
were, as I have said, good reasons for it. When the massacre of
|
||
Saint Bartholomew was yet fresh in their recollection, a great
|
||
Protestant Dutch hero, the PRINCE OF ORANGE, was shot by an
|
||
assassin, who confessed that he had been kept and trained for the
|
||
purpose in a college of Jesuits. The Dutch, in this surprise and
|
||
distress, offered to make Elizabeth their sovereign, but she
|
||
declined the honour, and sent them a small army instead, under the
|
||
command of the Earl of Leicester, who, although a capital Court
|
||
favourite, was not much of a general. He did so little in Holland,
|
||
that his campaign there would probably have been forgotten, but for
|
||
its occasioning the death of one of the best writers, the best
|
||
knights, and the best gentlemen, of that or any age. This was SIR
|
||
PHILIP SIDNEY, who was wounded by a musket ball in the thigh as he
|
||
mounted a fresh horse, after having had his own killed under him.
|
||
He had to ride back wounded, a long distance, and was very faint
|
||
with fatigue and loss of blood, when some water, for which he had
|
||
eagerly asked, was handed to him. But he was so good and gentle
|
||
even then, that seeing a poor badly wounded common soldier lying on
|
||
the ground, looking at the water with longing eyes, he said, 'Thy
|
||
necessity is greater than mine,' and gave it up to him. This
|
||
touching action of a noble heart is perhaps as well known as any
|
||
incident in history - is as famous far and wide as the blood-
|
||
stained Tower of London, with its axe, and block, and murders out
|
||
of number. So delightful is an act of true humanity, and so glad
|
||
are mankind to remember it.
|
||
|
||
At home, intelligence of plots began to thicken every day. I
|
||
suppose the people never did live under such continual terrors as
|
||
those by which they were possessed now, of Catholic risings, and
|
||
burnings, and poisonings, and I don't know what. Still, we must
|
||
always remember that they lived near and close to awful realities
|
||
of that kind, and that with their experience it was not difficult
|
||
to believe in any enormity. The government had the same fear, and
|
||
did not take the best means of discovering the truth - for, besides
|
||
torturing the suspected, it employed paid spies, who will always
|
||
lie for their own profit. It even made some of the conspiracies it
|
||
brought to light, by sending false letters to disaffected people,
|
||
inviting them to join in pretended plots, which they too readily
|
||
did.
|
||
|
||
But, one great real plot was at length discovered, and it ended the
|
||
career of Mary, Queen of Scots. A seminary priest named BALLARD,
|
||
and a Spanish soldier named SAVAGE, set on and encouraged by
|
||
certain French priests, imparted a design to one ANTONY BABINGTON -
|
||
a gentleman of fortune in Derbyshire, who had been for some time a
|
||
secret agent of Mary's - for murdering the Queen. Babington then
|
||
confided the scheme to some other Catholic gentlemen who were his
|
||
friends, and they joined in it heartily. They were vain, weak-
|
||
headed young men, ridiculously confident, and preposterously proud
|
||
of their plan; for they got a gimcrack painting made, of the six
|
||
choice spirits who were to murder Elizabeth, with Babington in an
|
||
attitude for the centre figure. Two of their number, however, one
|
||
of whom was a priest, kept Elizabeth's wisest minister, SIR FRANCIS
|
||
WALSINGHAM, acquainted with the whole project from the first. The
|
||
conspirators were completely deceived to the final point, when
|
||
Babington gave Savage, because he was shabby, a ring from his
|
||
finger, and some money from his purse, wherewith to buy himself new
|
||
clothes in which to kill the Queen. Walsingham, having then full
|
||
evidence against the whole band, and two letters of Mary's besides,
|
||
resolved to seize them. Suspecting something wrong, they stole out
|
||
of the city, one by one, and hid themselves in St. John's Wood, and
|
||
other places which really were hiding places then; but they were
|
||
all taken, and all executed. When they were seized, a gentleman
|
||
was sent from Court to inform Mary of the fact, and of her being
|
||
involved in the discovery. Her friends have complained that she
|
||
was kept in very hard and severe custody. It does not appear very
|
||
likely, for she was going out a hunting that very morning.
|
||
|
||
Queen Elizabeth had been warned long ago, by one in France who had
|
||
good information of what was secretly doing, that in holding Mary
|
||
alive, she held 'the wolf who would devour her.' The Bishop of
|
||
London had, more lately, given the Queen's favourite minister the
|
||
advice in writing, 'forthwith to cut off the Scottish Queen's
|
||
head.' The question now was, what to do with her? The Earl of
|
||
Leicester wrote a little note home from Holland, recommending that
|
||
she should be quietly poisoned; that noble favourite having
|
||
accustomed his mind, it is possible, to remedies of that nature.
|
||
His black advice, however, was disregarded, and she was brought to
|
||
trial at Fotheringay Castle in Northamptonshire, before a tribunal
|
||
of forty, composed of both religions. There, and in the Star
|
||
Chamber at Westminster, the trial lasted a fortnight. She defended
|
||
herself with great ability, but could only deny the confessions
|
||
that had been made by Babington and others; could only call her own
|
||
letters, produced against her by her own secretaries, forgeries;
|
||
and, in short, could only deny everything. She was found guilty,
|
||
and declared to have incurred the penalty of death. The Parliament
|
||
met, approved the sentence, and prayed the Queen to have it
|
||
executed. The Queen replied that she requested them to consider
|
||
whether no means could be found of saving Mary's life without
|
||
endangering her own. The Parliament rejoined, No; and the citizens
|
||
illuminated their houses and lighted bonfires, in token of their
|
||
joy that all these plots and troubles were to be ended by the death
|
||
of the Queen of Scots.
|
||
|
||
She, feeling sure that her time was now come, wrote a letter to the
|
||
Queen of England, making three entreaties; first, that she might be
|
||
buried in France; secondly, that she might not be executed in
|
||
secret, but before her servants and some others; thirdly, that
|
||
after her death, her servants should not be molested, but should be
|
||
suffered to go home with the legacies she left them. It was an
|
||
affecting letter, and Elizabeth shed tears over it, but sent no
|
||
answer. Then came a special ambassador from France, and another
|
||
from Scotland, to intercede for Mary's life; and then the nation
|
||
began to clamour, more and more, for her death.
|
||
|
||
What the real feelings or intentions of Elizabeth were, can never
|
||
be known now; but I strongly suspect her of only wishing one thing
|
||
more than Mary's death, and that was to keep free of the blame of
|
||
it. On the first of February, one thousand five hundred and
|
||
eighty-seven, Lord Burleigh having drawn out the warrant for the
|
||
execution, the Queen sent to the secretary DAVISON to bring it to
|
||
her, that she might sign it: which she did. Next day, when
|
||
Davison told her it was sealed, she angrily asked him why such
|
||
haste was necessary? Next day but one, she joked about it, and
|
||
swore a little. Again, next day but one, she seemed to complain
|
||
that it was not yet done, but still she would not be plain with
|
||
those about her. So, on the seventh, the Earls of Kent and
|
||
Shrewsbury, with the Sheriff of Northamptonshire, came with the
|
||
warrant to Fotheringay, to tell the Queen of Scots to prepare for
|
||
death.
|
||
|
||
When those messengers of ill omen were gone, Mary made a frugal
|
||
supper, drank to her servants, read over her will, went to bed,
|
||
slept for some hours, and then arose and passed the remainder of
|
||
the night saying prayers. In the morning she dressed herself in
|
||
her best clothes; and, at eight o'clock when the sheriff came for
|
||
her to her chapel, took leave of her servants who were there
|
||
assembled praying with her, and went down-stairs, carrying a Bible
|
||
in one hand and a crucifix in the other. Two of her women and four
|
||
of her men were allowed to be present in the hall; where a low
|
||
scaffold, only two feet from the ground, was erected and covered
|
||
with black; and where the executioner from the Tower, and his
|
||
assistant, stood, dressed in black velvet. The hall was full of
|
||
people. While the sentence was being read she sat upon a stool;
|
||
and, when it was finished, she again denied her guilt, as she had
|
||
done before. The Earl of Kent and the Dean of Peterborough, in
|
||
their Protestant zeal, made some very unnecessary speeches to her;
|
||
to which she replied that she died in the Catholic religion, and
|
||
they need not trouble themselves about that matter. When her head
|
||
and neck were uncovered by the executioners, she said that she had
|
||
not been used to be undressed by such hands, or before so much
|
||
company. Finally, one of her women fastened a cloth over her face,
|
||
and she laid her neck upon the block, and repeated more than once
|
||
in Latin, 'Into thy hands, O Lord, I commend my spirit!' Some say
|
||
her head was struck off in two blows, some say in three. However
|
||
that be, when it was held up, streaming with blood, the real hair
|
||
beneath the false hair she had long worn was seen to be as grey as
|
||
that of a woman of seventy, though she was at that time only in her
|
||
forty-sixth year. All her beauty was gone.
|
||
|
||
But she was beautiful enough to her little dog, who cowered under
|
||
her dress, frightened, when she went upon the scaffold, and who lay
|
||
down beside her headless body when all her earthly sorrows were
|
||
over.
|
||
|
||
THIRD PART
|
||
|
||
ON its being formally made known to Elizabeth that the sentence had
|
||
been executed on the Queen of Scots, she showed the utmost grief
|
||
and rage, drove her favourites from her with violent indignation,
|
||
and sent Davison to the Tower; from which place he was only
|
||
released in the end by paying an immense fine which completely
|
||
ruined him. Elizabeth not only over-acted her part in making these
|
||
pretences, but most basely reduced to poverty one of her faithful
|
||
servants for no other fault than obeying her commands.
|
||
|
||
James, King of Scotland, Mary's son, made a show likewise of being
|
||
very angry on the occasion; but he was a pensioner of England to
|
||
the amount of five thousand pounds a year, and he had known very
|
||
little of his mother, and he possibly regarded her as the murderer
|
||
of his father, and he soon took it quietly.
|
||
|
||
Philip, King of Spain, however, threatened to do greater things
|
||
than ever had been done yet, to set up the Catholic religion and
|
||
punish Protestant England. Elizabeth, hearing that he and the
|
||
Prince of Parma were making great preparations for this purpose, in
|
||
order to be beforehand with them sent out ADMIRAL DRAKE (a famous
|
||
navigator, who had sailed about the world, and had already brought
|
||
great plunder from Spain) to the port of Cadiz, where he burnt a
|
||
hundred vessels full of stores. This great loss obliged the
|
||
Spaniards to put off the invasion for a year; but it was none the
|
||
less formidable for that, amounting to one hundred and thirty
|
||
ships, nineteen thousand soldiers, eight thousand sailors, two
|
||
thousand slaves, and between two and three thousand great guns.
|
||
England was not idle in making ready to resist this great force.
|
||
All the men between sixteen years old and sixty, were trained and
|
||
drilled; the national fleet of ships (in number only thirty-four at
|
||
first) was enlarged by public contributions and by private ships,
|
||
fitted out by noblemen; the city of London, of its own accord,
|
||
furnished double the number of ships and men that it was required
|
||
to provide; and, if ever the national spirit was up in England, it
|
||
was up all through the country to resist the Spaniards. Some of
|
||
the Queen's advisers were for seizing the principal English
|
||
Catholics, and putting them to death; but the Queen - who, to her
|
||
honour, used to say, that she would never believe any ill of her
|
||
subjects, which a parent would not believe of her own children -
|
||
rejected the advice, and only confined a few of those who were the
|
||
most suspected, in the fens in Lincolnshire. The great body of
|
||
Catholics deserved this confidence; for they behaved most loyally,
|
||
nobly, and bravely.
|
||
|
||
So, with all England firing up like one strong, angry man, and with
|
||
both sides of the Thames fortified, and with the soldiers under
|
||
arms, and with the sailors in their ships, the country waited for
|
||
the coming of the proud Spanish fleet, which was called THE
|
||
INVINCIBLE ARMADA. The Queen herself, riding in armour on a white
|
||
horse, and the Earl of Essex and the Earl of Leicester holding her
|
||
bridal rein, made a brave speech to the troops at Tilbury Fort
|
||
opposite Gravesend, which was received with such enthusiasm as is
|
||
seldom known. Then came the Spanish Armada into the English
|
||
Channel, sailing along in the form of a half moon, of such great
|
||
size that it was seven miles broad. But the English were quickly
|
||
upon it, and woe then to all the Spanish ships that dropped a
|
||
little out of the half moon, for the English took them instantly!
|
||
And it soon appeared that the great Armada was anything but
|
||
invincible, for on a summer night, bold Drake sent eight blazing
|
||
fire-ships right into the midst of it. In terrible consternation
|
||
the Spaniards tried to get out to sea, and so became dispersed; the
|
||
English pursued them at a great advantage; a storm came on, and
|
||
drove the Spaniards among rocks and shoals; and the swift end of
|
||
the Invincible fleet was, that it lost thirty great ships and ten
|
||
thousand men, and, defeated and disgraced, sailed home again.
|
||
Being afraid to go by the English Channel, it sailed all round
|
||
Scotland and Ireland; some of the ships getting cast away on the
|
||
latter coast in bad weather, the Irish, who were a kind of savages,
|
||
plundered those vessels and killed their crews. So ended this
|
||
great attempt to invade and conquer England. And I think it will
|
||
be a long time before any other invincible fleet coming to England
|
||
with the same object, will fare much better than the Spanish
|
||
Armada.
|
||
|
||
Though the Spanish king had had this bitter taste of English
|
||
bravery, he was so little the wiser for it, as still to entertain
|
||
his old designs, and even to conceive the absurd idea of placing
|
||
his daughter on the English throne. But the Earl of Essex, SIR
|
||
WALTER RALEIGH, SIR THOMAS HOWARD, and some other distinguished
|
||
leaders, put to sea from Plymouth, entered the port of Cadiz once
|
||
more, obtained a complete victory over the shipping assembled
|
||
there, and got possession of the town. In obedience to the Queen's
|
||
express instructions, they behaved with great humanity; and the
|
||
principal loss of the Spaniards was a vast sum of money which they
|
||
had to pay for ransom. This was one of many gallant achievements
|
||
on the sea, effected in this reign. Sir Walter Raleigh himself,
|
||
after marrying a maid of honour and giving offence to the Maiden
|
||
Queen thereby, had already sailed to South America in search of
|
||
gold.
|
||
|
||
The Earl of Leicester was now dead, and so was Sir Thomas
|
||
Walsingham, whom Lord Burleigh was soon to follow. The principal
|
||
favourite was the EARL OF ESSEX, a spirited and handsome man, a
|
||
favourite with the people too as well as with the Queen, and
|
||
possessed of many admirable qualities. It was much debated at
|
||
Court whether there should be peace with Spain or no, and he was
|
||
very urgent for war. He also tried hard to have his own way in the
|
||
appointment of a deputy to govern in Ireland. One day, while this
|
||
question was in dispute, he hastily took offence, and turned his
|
||
back upon the Queen; as a gentle reminder of which impropriety, the
|
||
Queen gave him a tremendous box on the ear, and told him to go to
|
||
the devil. He went home instead, and did not reappear at Court for
|
||
half a year or so, when he and the Queen were reconciled, though
|
||
never (as some suppose) thoroughly.
|
||
|
||
From this time the fate of the Earl of Essex and that of the Queen
|
||
seemed to be blended together. The Irish were still perpetually
|
||
quarrelling and fighting among themselves, and he went over to
|
||
Ireland as Lord Lieutenant, to the great joy of his enemies (Sir
|
||
Walter Raleigh among the rest), who were glad to have so dangerous
|
||
a rival far off. Not being by any means successful there, and
|
||
knowing that his enemies would take advantage of that circumstance
|
||
to injure him with the Queen, he came home again, though against
|
||
her orders. The Queen being taken by surprise when he appeared
|
||
before her, gave him her hand to kiss, and he was overjoyed -
|
||
though it was not a very lovely hand by this time - but in the
|
||
course of the same day she ordered him to confine himself to his
|
||
room, and two or three days afterwards had him taken into custody.
|
||
With the same sort of caprice - and as capricious an old woman she
|
||
now was, as ever wore a crown or a head either - she sent him broth
|
||
from her own table on his falling ill from anxiety, and cried about
|
||
him.
|
||
|
||
He was a man who could find comfort and occupation in his books,
|
||
and he did so for a time; not the least happy time, I dare say, of
|
||
his life. But it happened unfortunately for him, that he held a
|
||
monopoly in sweet wines: which means that nobody could sell them
|
||
without purchasing his permission. This right, which was only for
|
||
a term, expiring, he applied to have it renewed. The Queen
|
||
refused, with the rather strong observation - but she DID make
|
||
strong observations - that an unruly beast must be stinted in his
|
||
food. Upon this, the angry Earl, who had been already deprived of
|
||
many offices, thought himself in danger of complete ruin, and
|
||
turned against the Queen, whom he called a vain old woman who had
|
||
grown as crooked in her mind as she had in her figure. These
|
||
uncomplimentary expressions the ladies of the Court immediately
|
||
snapped up and carried to the Queen, whom they did not put in a
|
||
better tempter, you may believe. The same Court ladies, when they
|
||
had beautiful dark hair of their own, used to wear false red hair,
|
||
to be like the Queen. So they were not very high-spirited ladies,
|
||
however high in rank.
|
||
|
||
The worst object of the Earl of Essex, and some friends of his who
|
||
used to meet at LORD SOUTHAMPTON'S house, was to obtain possession
|
||
of the Queen, and oblige her by force to dismiss her ministers and
|
||
change her favourites. On Saturday the seventh of February, one
|
||
thousand six hundred and one, the council suspecting this, summoned
|
||
the Earl to come before them. He, pretending to be ill, declined;
|
||
it was then settled among his friends, that as the next day would
|
||
be Sunday, when many of the citizens usually assembled at the Cross
|
||
by St. Paul's Cathedral, he should make one bold effort to induce
|
||
them to rise and follow him to the Palace.
|
||
|
||
So, on the Sunday morning, he and a small body of adherents started
|
||
out of his house - Essex House by the Strand, with steps to the
|
||
river - having first shut up in it, as prisoners, some members of
|
||
the council who came to examine him - and hurried into the City
|
||
with the Earl at their head crying out 'For the Queen! For the
|
||
Queen! A plot is laid for my life!' No one heeded them, however,
|
||
and when they came to St. Paul's there were no citizens there. In
|
||
the meantime the prisoners at Essex House had been released by one
|
||
of the Earl's own friends; he had been promptly proclaimed a
|
||
traitor in the City itself; and the streets were barricaded with
|
||
carts and guarded by soldiers. The Earl got back to his house by
|
||
water, with difficulty, and after an attempt to defend his house
|
||
against the troops and cannon by which it was soon surrounded, gave
|
||
himself up that night. He was brought to trial on the nineteenth,
|
||
and found guilty; on the twenty-fifth, he was executed on Tower
|
||
Hill, where he died, at thirty-four years old, both courageously
|
||
and penitently. His step-father suffered with him. His enemy, Sir
|
||
Walter Raleigh, stood near the scaffold all the time - but not so
|
||
near it as we shall see him stand, before we finish his history.
|
||
|
||
In this case, as in the cases of the Duke of Norfolk and Mary Queen
|
||
of Scots, the Queen had commanded, and countermanded, and again
|
||
commanded, the execution. It is probable that the death of her
|
||
young and gallant favourite in the prime of his good qualities, was
|
||
never off her mind afterwards, but she held out, the same vain,
|
||
obstinate and capricious woman, for another year. Then she danced
|
||
before her Court on a state occasion - and cut, I should think, a
|
||
mighty ridiculous figure, doing so in an immense ruff, stomacher
|
||
and wig, at seventy years old. For another year still, she held
|
||
out, but, without any more dancing, and as a moody, sorrowful,
|
||
broken creature. At last, on the tenth of March, one thousand six
|
||
hundred and three, having been ill of a very bad cold, and made
|
||
worse by the death of the Countess of Nottingham who was her
|
||
intimate friend, she fell into a stupor and was supposed to be
|
||
dead. She recovered her consciousness, however, and then nothing
|
||
would induce her to go to bed; for she said that she knew that if
|
||
she did, she should never get up again. There she lay for ten
|
||
days, on cushions on the floor, without any food, until the Lord
|
||
Admiral got her into bed at last, partly by persuasions and partly
|
||
by main force. When they asked her who should succeed her, she
|
||
replied that her seat had been the seat of Kings, and that she
|
||
would have for her successor, 'No rascal's son, but a King's.'
|
||
Upon this, the lords present stared at one another, and took the
|
||
liberty of asking whom she meant; to which she replied, 'Whom
|
||
should I mean, but our cousin of Scotland!' This was on the
|
||
twenty-third of March. They asked her once again that day, after
|
||
she was speechless, whether she was still in the same mind? She
|
||
struggled up in bed, and joined her hands over her head in the form
|
||
of a crown, as the only reply she could make. At three o'clock
|
||
next morning, she very quietly died, in the forty-fifth year of her
|
||
reign.
|
||
|
||
That reign had been a glorious one, and is made for ever memorable
|
||
by the distinguished men who flourished in it. Apart from the
|
||
great voyagers, statesmen, and scholars, whom it produced, the
|
||
names of BACON, SPENSER, and SHAKESPEARE, will always be remembered
|
||
with pride and veneration by the civilised world, and will always
|
||
impart (though with no great reason, perhaps) some portion of their
|
||
lustre to the name of Elizabeth herself. It was a great reign for
|
||
discovery, for commerce, and for English enterprise and spirit in
|
||
general. It was a great reign for the Protestant religion and for
|
||
the Reformation which made England free. The Queen was very
|
||
popular, and in her progresses, or journeys about her dominions,
|
||
was everywhere received with the liveliest joy. I think the truth
|
||
is, that she was not half so good as she has been made out, and not
|
||
half so bad as she has been made out. She had her fine qualities,
|
||
but she was coarse, capricious, and treacherous, and had all the
|
||
faults of an excessively vain young woman long after she was an old
|
||
one. On the whole, she had a great deal too much of her father in
|
||
her, to please me.
|
||
|
||
Many improvements and luxuries were introduced in the course of
|
||
these five-and-forty years in the general manner of living; but
|
||
cock-fighting, bull-baiting, and bear-baiting, were still the
|
||
national amusements; and a coach was so rarely seen, and was such
|
||
an ugly and cumbersome affair when it was seen, that even the Queen
|
||
herself, on many high occasions, rode on horseback on a pillion
|
||
behind the Lord Chancellor.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXII - ENGLAND UNDER JAMES THE FIRST
|
||
|
||
'OUR cousin of Scotland' was ugly, awkward, and shuffling both in
|
||
mind and person. His tongue was much too large for his mouth, his
|
||
legs were much too weak for his body, and his dull goggle-eyes
|
||
stared and rolled like an idiot's. He was cunning, covetous,
|
||
wasteful, idle, drunken, greedy, dirty, cowardly, a great swearer,
|
||
and the most conceited man on earth. His figure - what is commonly
|
||
called rickety from his birth - presented a most ridiculous
|
||
appearance, dressed in thick padded clothes, as a safeguard against
|
||
being stabbed (of which he lived in continual fear), of a grass-
|
||
green colour from head to foot, with a hunting-horn dangling at his
|
||
side instead of a sword, and his hat and feather sticking over one
|
||
eye, or hanging on the back of his head, as he happened to toss it
|
||
on. He used to loll on the necks of his favourite courtiers, and
|
||
slobber their faces, and kiss and pinch their cheeks; and the
|
||
greatest favourite he ever had, used to sign himself in his letters
|
||
to his royal master, His Majesty's 'dog and slave,' and used to
|
||
address his majesty as 'his Sowship.' His majesty was the worst
|
||
rider ever seen, and thought himself the best. He was one of the
|
||
most impertinent talkers (in the broadest Scotch) ever heard, and
|
||
boasted of being unanswerable in all manner of argument. He wrote
|
||
some of the most wearisome treatises ever read - among others, a
|
||
book upon witchcraft, in which he was a devout believer - and
|
||
thought himself a prodigy of authorship. He thought, and wrote,
|
||
and said, that a king had a right to make and unmake what laws he
|
||
pleased, and ought to be accountable to nobody on earth. This is
|
||
the plain, true character of the personage whom the greatest men
|
||
about the court praised and flattered to that degree, that I doubt
|
||
if there be anything much more shameful in the annals of human
|
||
nature.
|
||
|
||
He came to the English throne with great ease. The miseries of a
|
||
disputed succession had been felt so long, and so dreadfully, that
|
||
he was proclaimed within a few hours of Elizabeth's death, and was
|
||
accepted by the nation, even without being asked to give any pledge
|
||
that he would govern well, or that he would redress crying
|
||
grievances. He took a month to come from Edinburgh to London; and,
|
||
by way of exercising his new power, hanged a pickpocket on the
|
||
journey without any trial, and knighted everybody he could lay hold
|
||
of. He made two hundred knights before he got to his palace in
|
||
London, and seven hundred before he had been in it three months.
|
||
He also shovelled sixty-two new peers into the House of Lords - and
|
||
there was a pretty large sprinkling of Scotchmen among them, you
|
||
may believe.
|
||
|
||
His Sowship's prime Minister, CECIL (for I cannot do better than
|
||
call his majesty what his favourite called him), was the enemy of
|
||
Sir Walter Raleigh, and also of Sir Walter's political friend, LORD
|
||
COBHAM; and his Sowship's first trouble was a plot originated by
|
||
these two, and entered into by some others, with the old object of
|
||
seizing the King and keeping him in imprisonment until he should
|
||
change his ministers. There were Catholic priests in the plot, and
|
||
there were Puritan noblemen too; for, although the Catholics and
|
||
Puritans were strongly opposed to each other, they united at this
|
||
time against his Sowship, because they knew that he had a design
|
||
against both, after pretending to be friendly to each; this design
|
||
being to have only one high and convenient form of the Protestant
|
||
religion, which everybody should be bound to belong to, whether
|
||
they liked it or not. This plot was mixed up with another, which
|
||
may or may not have had some reference to placing on the throne, at
|
||
some time, the LADY ARABELLA STUART; whose misfortune it was, to be
|
||
the daughter of the younger brother of his Sowship's father, but
|
||
who was quite innocent of any part in the scheme. Sir Walter
|
||
Raleigh was accused on the confession of Lord Cobham - a miserable
|
||
creature, who said one thing at one time, and another thing at
|
||
another time, and could be relied upon in nothing. The trial of
|
||
Sir Walter Raleigh lasted from eight in the morning until nearly
|
||
midnight; he defended himself with such eloquence, genius, and
|
||
spirit against all accusations, and against the insults of COKE,
|
||
the Attorney-General - who, according to the custom of the time,
|
||
foully abused him - that those who went there detesting the
|
||
prisoner, came away admiring him, and declaring that anything so
|
||
wonderful and so captivating was never heard. He was found guilty,
|
||
nevertheless, and sentenced to death. Execution was deferred, and
|
||
he was taken to the Tower. The two Catholic priests, less
|
||
fortunate, were executed with the usual atrocity; and Lord Cobham
|
||
and two others were pardoned on the scaffold. His Sowship thought
|
||
it wonderfully knowing in him to surprise the people by pardoning
|
||
these three at the very block; but, blundering, and bungling, as
|
||
usual, he had very nearly overreached himself. For, the messenger
|
||
on horseback who brought the pardon, came so late, that he was
|
||
pushed to the outside of the crowd, and was obliged to shout and
|
||
roar out what he came for. The miserable Cobham did not gain much
|
||
by being spared that day. He lived, both as a prisoner and a
|
||
beggar, utterly despised, and miserably poor, for thirteen years,
|
||
and then died in an old outhouse belonging to one of his former
|
||
servants.
|
||
|
||
This plot got rid of, and Sir Walter Raleigh safely shut up in the
|
||
Tower, his Sowship held a great dispute with the Puritans on their
|
||
presenting a petition to him, and had it all his own way - not so
|
||
very wonderful, as he would talk continually, and would not hear
|
||
anybody else - and filled the Bishops with admiration. It was
|
||
comfortably settled that there was to be only one form of religion,
|
||
and that all men were to think exactly alike. But, although this
|
||
was arranged two centuries and a half ago, and although the
|
||
arrangement was supported by much fining and imprisonment, I do not
|
||
find that it is quite successful, even yet.
|
||
|
||
His Sowship, having that uncommonly high opinion of himself as a
|
||
king, had a very low opinion of Parliament as a power that
|
||
audaciously wanted to control him. When he called his first
|
||
Parliament after he had been king a year, he accordingly thought he
|
||
would take pretty high ground with them, and told them that he
|
||
commanded them 'as an absolute king.' The Parliament thought those
|
||
strong words, and saw the necessity of upholding their authority.
|
||
His Sowship had three children: Prince Henry, Prince Charles, and
|
||
the Princess Elizabeth. It would have been well for one of these,
|
||
and we shall too soon see which, if he had learnt a little wisdom
|
||
concerning Parliaments from his father's obstinacy.
|
||
|
||
Now, the people still labouring under their old dread of the
|
||
Catholic religion, this Parliament revived and strengthened the
|
||
severe laws against it. And this so angered ROBERT CATESBY, a
|
||
restless Catholic gentleman of an old family, that he formed one of
|
||
the most desperate and terrible designs ever conceived in the mind
|
||
of man; no less a scheme than the Gunpowder Plot.
|
||
|
||
His object was, when the King, lords, and commons, should be
|
||
assembled at the next opening of Parliament, to blow them up, one
|
||
and all, with a great mine of gunpowder. The first person to whom
|
||
he confided this horrible idea was THOMAS WINTER, a Worcestershire
|
||
gentleman who had served in the army abroad, and had been secretly
|
||
employed in Catholic projects. While Winter was yet undecided, and
|
||
when he had gone over to the Netherlands, to learn from the Spanish
|
||
Ambassador there whether there was any hope of Catholics being
|
||
relieved through the intercession of the King of Spain with his
|
||
Sowship, he found at Ostend a tall, dark, daring man, whom he had
|
||
known when they were both soldiers abroad, and whose name was GUIDO
|
||
- or GUY - FAWKES. Resolved to join the plot, he proposed it to
|
||
this man, knowing him to be the man for any desperate deed, and
|
||
they two came back to England together. Here, they admitted two
|
||
other conspirators; THOMAS PERCY, related to the Earl of
|
||
Northumberland, and JOHN WRIGHT, his brother-in-law. All these met
|
||
together in a solitary house in the open fields which were then
|
||
near Clement's Inn, now a closely blocked-up part of London; and
|
||
when they had all taken a great oath of secrecy, Catesby told the
|
||
rest what his plan was. They then went up-stairs into a garret,
|
||
and received the Sacrament from FATHER GERARD, a Jesuit, who is
|
||
said not to have known actually of the Gunpowder Plot, but who, I
|
||
think, must have had his suspicions that there was something
|
||
desperate afoot.
|
||
|
||
Percy was a Gentleman Pensioner, and as he had occasional duties to
|
||
perform about the Court, then kept at Whitehall, there would be
|
||
nothing suspicious in his living at Westminster. So, having looked
|
||
well about him, and having found a house to let, the back of which
|
||
joined the Parliament House, he hired it of a person named FERRIS,
|
||
for the purpose of undermining the wall. Having got possession of
|
||
this house, the conspirators hired another on the Lambeth side of
|
||
the Thames, which they used as a storehouse for wood, gunpowder,
|
||
and other combustible matters. These were to be removed at night
|
||
(and afterwards were removed), bit by bit, to the house at
|
||
Westminster; and, that there might be some trusty person to keep
|
||
watch over the Lambeth stores, they admitted another conspirator,
|
||
by name ROBERT KAY, a very poor Catholic gentleman.
|
||
|
||
All these arrangements had been made some months, and it was a
|
||
dark, wintry, December night, when the conspirators, who had been
|
||
in the meantime dispersed to avoid observation, met in the house at
|
||
Westminster, and began to dig. They had laid in a good stock of
|
||
eatables, to avoid going in and out, and they dug and dug with
|
||
great ardour. But, the wall being tremendously thick, and the work
|
||
very severe, they took into their plot CHRISTOPHER WRIGHT, a
|
||
younger brother of John Wright, that they might have a new pair of
|
||
hands to help. And Christopher Wright fell to like a fresh man,
|
||
and they dug and dug by night and by day, and Fawkes stood sentinel
|
||
all the time. And if any man's heart seemed to fail him at all,
|
||
Fawkes said, 'Gentlemen, we have abundance of powder and shot here,
|
||
and there is no fear of our being taken alive, even if discovered.'
|
||
The same Fawkes, who, in the capacity of sentinel, was always
|
||
prowling about, soon picked up the intelligence that the King had
|
||
prorogued the Parliament again, from the seventh of February, the
|
||
day first fixed upon, until the third of October. When the
|
||
conspirators knew this, they agreed to separate until after the
|
||
Christmas holidays, and to take no notice of each other in the
|
||
meanwhile, and never to write letters to one another on any
|
||
account. So, the house in Westminster was shut up again, and I
|
||
suppose the neighbours thought that those strange-looking men who
|
||
lived there so gloomily, and went out so seldom, were gone away to
|
||
have a merry Christmas somewhere.
|
||
|
||
It was the beginning of February, sixteen hundred and five, when
|
||
Catesby met his fellow-conspirators again at this Westminster
|
||
house. He had now admitted three more; JOHN GRANT, a Warwickshire
|
||
gentleman of a melancholy temper, who lived in a doleful house near
|
||
Stratford-upon-Avon, with a frowning wall all round it, and a deep
|
||
moat; ROBERT WINTER, eldest brother of Thomas; and Catesby's own
|
||
servant, THOMAS BATES, who, Catesby thought, had had some suspicion
|
||
of what his master was about. These three had all suffered more or
|
||
less for their religion in Elizabeth's time. And now, they all
|
||
began to dig again, and they dug and dug by night and by day.
|
||
|
||
They found it dismal work alone there, underground, with such a
|
||
fearful secret on their minds, and so many murders before them.
|
||
They were filled with wild fancies. Sometimes, they thought they
|
||
heard a great bell tolling, deep down in the earth under the
|
||
Parliament House; sometimes, they thought they heard low voices
|
||
muttering about the Gunpowder Plot; once in the morning, they
|
||
really did hear a great rumbling noise over their heads, as they
|
||
dug and sweated in their mine. Every man stopped and looked aghast
|
||
at his neighbour, wondering what had happened, when that bold
|
||
prowler, Fawkes, who had been out to look, came in and told them
|
||
that it was only a dealer in coals who had occupied a cellar under
|
||
the Parliament House, removing his stock in trade to some other
|
||
place. Upon this, the conspirators, who with all their digging and
|
||
digging had not yet dug through the tremendously thick wall,
|
||
changed their plan; hired that cellar, which was directly under the
|
||
House of Lords; put six-and-thirty barrels of gunpowder in it, and
|
||
covered them over with fagots and coals. Then they all dispersed
|
||
again till September, when the following new conspirators were
|
||
admitted; SIR EDWARD BAYNHAM, of Gloucestershire; SIR EVERARD
|
||
DIGBY, of Rutlandshire; AMBROSE ROOKWOOD, of Suffolk; FRANCIS
|
||
TRESHAM, of Northamptonshire. Most of these were rich, and were to
|
||
assist the plot, some with money and some with horses on which the
|
||
conspirators were to ride through the country and rouse the
|
||
Catholics after the Parliament should be blown into air.
|
||
|
||
Parliament being again prorogued from the third of October to the
|
||
fifth of November, and the conspirators being uneasy lest their
|
||
design should have been found out, Thomas Winter said he would go
|
||
up into the House of Lords on the day of the prorogation, and see
|
||
how matters looked. Nothing could be better. The unconscious
|
||
Commissioners were walking about and talking to one another, just
|
||
over the six-and-thirty barrels of gunpowder. He came back and
|
||
told the rest so, and they went on with their preparations. They
|
||
hired a ship, and kept it ready in the Thames, in which Fawkes was
|
||
to sail for Flanders after firing with a slow match the train that
|
||
was to explode the powder. A number of Catholic gentlemen not in
|
||
the secret, were invited, on pretence of a hunting party, to meet
|
||
Sir Everard Digby at Dunchurch on the fatal day, that they might be
|
||
ready to act together. And now all was ready.
|
||
|
||
But, now, the great wickedness and danger which had been all along
|
||
at the bottom of this wicked plot, began to show itself. As the
|
||
fifth of November drew near, most of the conspirators, remembering
|
||
that they had friends and relations who would be in the House of
|
||
Lords that day, felt some natural relenting, and a wish to warn
|
||
them to keep away. They were not much comforted by Catesby's
|
||
declaring that in such a cause he would blow up his own son. LORD
|
||
MOUNTEAGLE, Tresham's brother-in-law, was certain to be in the
|
||
house; and when Tresham found that he could not prevail upon the
|
||
rest to devise any means of sparing their friends, he wrote a
|
||
mysterious letter to this lord and left it at his lodging in the
|
||
dusk, urging him to keep away from the opening of Parliament,
|
||
'since God and man had concurred to punish the wickedness of the
|
||
times.' It contained the words 'that the Parliament should receive
|
||
a terrible blow, and yet should not see who hurt them.' And it
|
||
added, 'the danger is past, as soon as you have burnt the letter.'
|
||
|
||
The ministers and courtiers made out that his Sowship, by a direct
|
||
miracle from Heaven, found out what this letter meant. The truth
|
||
is, that they were not long (as few men would be) in finding out
|
||
for themselves; and it was decided to let the conspirators alone,
|
||
until the very day before the opening of Parliament. That the
|
||
conspirators had their fears, is certain; for, Tresham himself said
|
||
before them all, that they were every one dead men; and, although
|
||
even he did not take flight, there is reason to suppose that he had
|
||
warned other persons besides Lord Mounteagle. However, they were
|
||
all firm; and Fawkes, who was a man of iron, went down every day
|
||
and night to keep watch in the cellar as usual. He was there about
|
||
two in the afternoon of the fourth, when the Lord Chamberlain and
|
||
Lord Mounteagle threw open the door and looked in. 'Who are you,
|
||
friend?' said they. 'Why,' said Fawkes, 'I am Mr. Percy's servant,
|
||
and am looking after his store of fuel here.' 'Your master has
|
||
laid in a pretty good store,' they returned, and shut the door, and
|
||
went away. Fawkes, upon this, posted off to the other conspirators
|
||
to tell them all was quiet, and went back and shut himself up in
|
||
the dark, black cellar again, where he heard the bell go twelve
|
||
o'clock and usher in the fifth of November. About two hours
|
||
afterwards, he slowly opened the door, and came out to look about
|
||
him, in his old prowling way. He was instantly seized and bound,
|
||
by a party of soldiers under SIR THOMAS KNEVETT. He had a watch
|
||
upon him, some touchwood, some tinder, some slow matches; and there
|
||
was a dark lantern with a candle in it, lighted, behind the door.
|
||
He had his boots and spurs on - to ride to the ship, I suppose -
|
||
and it was well for the soldiers that they took him so suddenly.
|
||
If they had left him but a moment's time to light a match, he
|
||
certainly would have tossed it in among the powder, and blown up
|
||
himself and them.
|
||
|
||
They took him to the King's bed-chamber first of all, and there the
|
||
King (causing him to be held very tight, and keeping a good way
|
||
off), asked him how he could have the heart to intend to destroy so
|
||
many innocent people? 'Because,' said Guy Fawkes, 'desperate
|
||
diseases need desperate remedies.' To a little Scotch favourite,
|
||
with a face like a terrier, who asked him (with no particular
|
||
wisdom) why he had collected so much gunpowder, he replied, because
|
||
he had meant to blow Scotchmen back to Scotland, and it would take
|
||
a deal of powder to do that. Next day he was carried to the Tower,
|
||
but would make no confession. Even after being horribly tortured,
|
||
he confessed nothing that the Government did not already know;
|
||
though he must have been in a fearful state - as his signature,
|
||
still preserved, in contrast with his natural hand-writing before
|
||
he was put upon the dreadful rack, most frightfully shows. Bates,
|
||
a very different man, soon said the Jesuits had had to do with the
|
||
plot, and probably, under the torture, would as readily have said
|
||
anything. Tresham, taken and put in the Tower too, made
|
||
confessions and unmade them, and died of an illness that was heavy
|
||
upon him. Rookwood, who had stationed relays of his own horses all
|
||
the way to Dunchurch, did not mount to escape until the middle of
|
||
the day, when the news of the plot was all over London. On the
|
||
road, he came up with the two Wrights, Catesby, and Percy; and they
|
||
all galloped together into Northamptonshire. Thence to Dunchurch,
|
||
where they found the proposed party assembled. Finding, however,
|
||
that there had been a plot, and that it had been discovered, the
|
||
party disappeared in the course of the night, and left them alone
|
||
with Sir Everard Digby. Away they all rode again, through
|
||
Warwickshire and Worcestershire, to a house called Holbeach, on the
|
||
borders of Staffordshire. They tried to raise the Catholics on
|
||
their way, but were indignantly driven off by them. All this time
|
||
they were hotly pursued by the sheriff of Worcester, and a fast
|
||
increasing concourse of riders. At last, resolving to defend
|
||
themselves at Holbeach, they shut themselves up in the house, and
|
||
put some wet powder before the fire to dry. But it blew up, and
|
||
Catesby was singed and blackened, and almost killed, and some of
|
||
the others were sadly hurt. Still, knowing that they must die,
|
||
they resolved to die there, and with only their swords in their
|
||
hands appeared at the windows to be shot at by the sheriff and his
|
||
assistants. Catesby said to Thomas Winter, after Thomas had been
|
||
hit in the right arm which dropped powerless by his side, 'Stand by
|
||
me, Tom, and we will die together!' - which they did, being shot
|
||
through the body by two bullets from one gun. John Wright, and
|
||
Christopher Wright, and Percy, were also shot. Rookwood and Digby
|
||
were taken: the former with a broken arm and a wound in his body
|
||
too.
|
||
|
||
It was the fifteenth of January, before the trial of Guy Fawkes,
|
||
and such of the other conspirators as were left alive, came on.
|
||
They were all found guilty, all hanged, drawn, and quartered:
|
||
some, in St. Paul's Churchyard, on the top of Ludgate-hill; some,
|
||
before the Parliament House. A Jesuit priest, named HENRY GARNET,
|
||
to whom the dreadful design was said to have been communicated, was
|
||
taken and tried; and two of his servants, as well as a poor priest
|
||
who was taken with him, were tortured without mercy. He himself
|
||
was not tortured, but was surrounded in the Tower by tamperers and
|
||
traitors, and so was made unfairly to convict himself out of his
|
||
own mouth. He said, upon his trial, that he had done all he could
|
||
to prevent the deed, and that he could not make public what had
|
||
been told him in confession - though I am afraid he knew of the
|
||
plot in other ways. He was found guilty and executed, after a
|
||
manful defence, and the Catholic Church made a saint of him; some
|
||
rich and powerful persons, who had had nothing to do with the
|
||
project, were fined and imprisoned for it by the Star Chamber; the
|
||
Catholics, in general, who had recoiled with horror from the idea
|
||
of the infernal contrivance, were unjustly put under more severe
|
||
laws than before; and this was the end of the Gunpowder Plot.
|
||
|
||
SECOND PART
|
||
|
||
His Sowship would pretty willingly, I think, have blown the House
|
||
of Commons into the air himself; for, his dread and jealousy of it
|
||
knew no bounds all through his reign. When he was hard pressed for
|
||
money he was obliged to order it to meet, as he could get no money
|
||
without it; and when it asked him first to abolish some of the
|
||
monopolies in necessaries of life which were a great grievance to
|
||
the people, and to redress other public wrongs, he flew into a rage
|
||
and got rid of it again. At one time he wanted it to consent to
|
||
the Union of England with Scotland, and quarrelled about that. At
|
||
another time it wanted him to put down a most infamous Church
|
||
abuse, called the High Commission Court, and he quarrelled with it
|
||
about that. At another time it entreated him not to be quite so
|
||
fond of his archbishops and bishops who made speeches in his praise
|
||
too awful to be related, but to have some little consideration for
|
||
the poor Puritan clergy who were persecuted for preaching in their
|
||
own way, and not according to the archbishops and bishops; and they
|
||
quarrelled about that. In short, what with hating the House of
|
||
Commons, and pretending not to hate it; and what with now sending
|
||
some of its members who opposed him, to Newgate or to the Tower,
|
||
and now telling the rest that they must not presume to make
|
||
speeches about the public affairs which could not possibly concern
|
||
them; and what with cajoling, and bullying, and fighting, and being
|
||
frightened; the House of Commons was the plague of his Sowship's
|
||
existence. It was pretty firm, however, in maintaining its rights,
|
||
and insisting that the Parliament should make the laws, and not the
|
||
King by his own single proclamations (which he tried hard to do);
|
||
and his Sowship was so often distressed for money, in consequence,
|
||
that he sold every sort of title and public office as if they were
|
||
merchandise, and even invented a new dignity called a Baronetcy,
|
||
which anybody could buy for a thousand pounds.
|
||
|
||
These disputes with his Parliaments, and his hunting, and his
|
||
drinking, and his lying in bed - for he was a great sluggard -
|
||
occupied his Sowship pretty well. The rest of his time he chiefly
|
||
passed in hugging and slobbering his favourites. The first of
|
||
these was SIR PHILIP HERBERT, who had no knowledge whatever, except
|
||
of dogs, and horses, and hunting, but whom he soon made EARL OF
|
||
MONTGOMERY. The next, and a much more famous one, was ROBERT CARR,
|
||
or KER (for it is not certain which was his right name), who came
|
||
from the Border country, and whom he soon made VISCOUNT ROCHESTER,
|
||
and afterwards, EARL OF SOMERSET. The way in which his Sowship
|
||
doted on this handsome young man, is even more odious to think of,
|
||
than the way in which the really great men of England condescended
|
||
to bow down before him. The favourite's great friend was a certain
|
||
SIR THOMAS OVERBURY, who wrote his love-letters for him, and
|
||
assisted him in the duties of his many high places, which his own
|
||
ignorance prevented him from discharging. But this same Sir Thomas
|
||
having just manhood enough to dissuade the favourite from a wicked
|
||
marriage with the beautiful Countess of Essex, who was to get a
|
||
divorce from her husband for the purpose, the said Countess, in her
|
||
rage, got Sir Thomas put into the Tower, and there poisoned him.
|
||
Then the favourite and this bad woman were publicly married by the
|
||
King's pet bishop, with as much to-do and rejoicing, as if he had
|
||
been the best man, and she the best woman, upon the face of the
|
||
earth.
|
||
|
||
But, after a longer sunshine than might have been expected - of
|
||
seven years or so, that is to say - another handsome young man
|
||
started up and eclipsed the EARL OF SOMERSET. This was GEORGE
|
||
VILLIERS, the youngest son of a Leicestershire gentleman: who came
|
||
to Court with all the Paris fashions on him, and could dance as
|
||
well as the best mountebank that ever was seen. He soon danced
|
||
himself into the good graces of his Sowship, and danced the other
|
||
favourite out of favour. Then, it was all at once discovered that
|
||
the Earl and Countess of Somerset had not deserved all those great
|
||
promotions and mighty rejoicings, and they were separately tried
|
||
for the murder of Sir Thomas Overbury, and for other crimes. But,
|
||
the King was so afraid of his late favourite's publicly telling
|
||
some disgraceful things he knew of him - which he darkly threatened
|
||
to do - that he was even examined with two men standing, one on
|
||
either side of him, each with a cloak in his hand, ready to throw
|
||
it over his head and stop his mouth if he should break out with
|
||
what he had it in his power to tell. So, a very lame affair was
|
||
purposely made of the trial, and his punishment was an allowance of
|
||
four thousand pounds a year in retirement, while the Countess was
|
||
pardoned, and allowed to pass into retirement too. They hated one
|
||
another by this time, and lived to revile and torment each other
|
||
some years.
|
||
|
||
While these events were in progress, and while his Sowship was
|
||
making such an exhibition of himself, from day to day and from year
|
||
to year, as is not often seen in any sty, three remarkable deaths
|
||
took place in England. The first was that of the Minister, Robert
|
||
Cecil, Earl of Salisbury, who was past sixty, and had never been
|
||
strong, being deformed from his birth. He said at last that he had
|
||
no wish to live; and no Minister need have had, with his experience
|
||
of the meanness and wickedness of those disgraceful times. The
|
||
second was that of the Lady Arabella Stuart, who alarmed his
|
||
Sowship mightily, by privately marrying WILLIAM SEYMOUR, son of
|
||
LORD BEAUCHAMP, who was a descendant of King Henry the Seventh, and
|
||
who, his Sowship thought, might consequently increase and
|
||
strengthen any claim she might one day set up to the throne. She
|
||
was separated from her husband (who was put in the Tower) and
|
||
thrust into a boat to be confined at Durham. She escaped in a
|
||
man's dress to get away in a French ship from Gravesend to France,
|
||
but unhappily missed her husband, who had escaped too, and was soon
|
||
taken. She went raving mad in the miserable Tower, and died there
|
||
after four years. The last, and the most important of these three
|
||
deaths, was that of Prince Henry, the heir to the throne, in the
|
||
nineteenth year of his age. He was a promising young prince, and
|
||
greatly liked; a quiet, well-conducted youth, of whom two very good
|
||
things are known: first, that his father was jealous of him;
|
||
secondly, that he was the friend of Sir Walter Raleigh, languishing
|
||
through all those years in the Tower, and often said that no man
|
||
but his father would keep such a bird in such a cage. On the
|
||
occasion of the preparations for the marriage of his sister the
|
||
Princess Elizabeth with a foreign prince (and an unhappy marriage
|
||
it turned out), he came from Richmond, where he had been very ill,
|
||
to greet his new brother-in-law, at the palace at Whitehall. There
|
||
he played a great game at tennis, in his shirt, though it was very
|
||
cold weather, and was seized with an alarming illness, and died
|
||
within a fortnight of a putrid fever. For this young prince Sir
|
||
Walter Raleigh wrote, in his prison in the Tower, the beginning of
|
||
a History of the World: a wonderful instance how little his
|
||
Sowship could do to confine a great man's mind, however long he
|
||
might imprison his body.
|
||
|
||
And this mention of Sir Walter Raleigh, who had many faults, but
|
||
who never showed so many merits as in trouble and adversity, may
|
||
bring me at once to the end of his sad story. After an
|
||
imprisonment in the Tower of twelve long years, he proposed to
|
||
resume those old sea voyages of his, and to go to South America in
|
||
search of gold. His Sowship, divided between his wish to be on
|
||
good terms with the Spaniards through whose territory Sir Walter
|
||
must pass (he had long had an idea of marrying Prince Henry to a
|
||
Spanish Princess), and his avaricious eagerness to get hold of the
|
||
gold, did not know what to do. But, in the end, he set Sir Walter
|
||
free, taking securities for his return; and Sir Walter fitted out
|
||
an expedition at his own coast and, on the twenty-eighth of March,
|
||
one thousand six hundred and seventeen, sailed away in command of
|
||
one of its ships, which he ominously called the Destiny. The
|
||
expedition failed; the common men, not finding the gold they had
|
||
expected, mutinied; a quarrel broke out between Sir Walter and the
|
||
Spaniards, who hated him for old successes of his against them; and
|
||
he took and burnt a little town called SAINT THOMAS. For this he
|
||
was denounced to his Sowship by the Spanish Ambassador as a pirate;
|
||
and returning almost broken-hearted, with his hopes and fortunes
|
||
shattered, his company of friends dispersed, and his brave son (who
|
||
had been one of them) killed, he was taken - through the treachery
|
||
of SIR LEWIS STUKELY, his near relation, a scoundrel and a Vice-
|
||
Admiral - and was once again immured in his prison-home of so many
|
||
years.
|
||
|
||
His Sowship being mightily disappointed in not getting any gold,
|
||
Sir Walter Raleigh was tried as unfairly, and with as many lies and
|
||
evasions as the judges and law officers and every other authority
|
||
in Church and State habitually practised under such a King. After
|
||
a great deal of prevarication on all parts but his own, it was
|
||
declared that he must die under his former sentence, now fifteen
|
||
years old. So, on the twenty-eighth of October, one thousand six
|
||
hundred and eighteen, he was shut up in the Gate House at
|
||
Westminster to pass his late night on earth, and there he took
|
||
leave of his good and faithful lady who was worthy to have lived in
|
||
better days. At eight o'clock next morning, after a cheerful
|
||
breakfast, and a pipe, and a cup of good wine, he was taken to Old
|
||
Palace Yard in Westminster, where the scaffold was set up, and
|
||
where so many people of high degree were assembled to see him die,
|
||
that it was a matter of some difficulty to get him through the
|
||
crowd. He behaved most nobly, but if anything lay heavy on his
|
||
mind, it was that Earl of Essex, whose head he had seen roll off;
|
||
and he solemnly said that he had had no hand in bringing him to the
|
||
block, and that he had shed tears for him when he died. As the
|
||
morning was very cold, the Sheriff said, would he come down to a
|
||
fire for a little space, and warm himself? But Sir Walter thanked
|
||
him, and said no, he would rather it were done at once, for he was
|
||
ill of fever and ague, and in another quarter of an hour his
|
||
shaking fit would come upon him if he were still alive, and his
|
||
enemies might then suppose that he trembled for fear. With that,
|
||
he kneeled and made a very beautiful and Christian prayer. Before
|
||
he laid his head upon the block he felt the edge of the axe, and
|
||
said, with a smile upon his face, that it was a sharp medicine, but
|
||
would cure the worst disease. When he was bent down ready for
|
||
death, he said to the executioner, finding that he hesitated, 'What
|
||
dost thou fear? Strike, man!' So, the axe came down and struck
|
||
his head off, in the sixty-sixth year of his age.
|
||
|
||
The new favourite got on fast. He was made a viscount, he was made
|
||
Duke of Buckingham, he was made a marquis, he was made Master of
|
||
the Horse, he was made Lord High Admiral - and the Chief Commander
|
||
of the gallant English forces that had dispersed the Spanish
|
||
Armada, was displaced to make room for him. He had the whole
|
||
kingdom at his disposal, and his mother sold all the profits and
|
||
honours of the State, as if she had kept a shop. He blazed all
|
||
over with diamonds and other precious stones, from his hatband and
|
||
his earrings to his shoes. Yet he was an ignorant presumptuous,
|
||
swaggering compound of knave and fool, with nothing but his beauty
|
||
and his dancing to recommend him. This is the gentleman who called
|
||
himself his Majesty's dog and slave, and called his Majesty Your
|
||
Sowship. His Sowship called him STEENIE; it is supposed, because
|
||
that was a nickname for Stephen, and because St. Stephen was
|
||
generally represented in pictures as a handsome saint.
|
||
|
||
His Sowship was driven sometimes to his wits'-end by his trimming
|
||
between the general dislike of the Catholic religion at home, and
|
||
his desire to wheedle and flatter it abroad, as his only means of
|
||
getting a rich princess for his son's wife: a part of whose
|
||
fortune he might cram into his greasy pockets. Prince Charles - or
|
||
as his Sowship called him, Baby Charles - being now PRINCE OF
|
||
WALES, the old project of a marriage with the Spanish King's
|
||
daughter had been revived for him; and as she could not marry a
|
||
Protestant without leave from the Pope, his Sowship himself
|
||
secretly and meanly wrote to his Infallibility, asking for it. The
|
||
negotiation for this Spanish marriage takes up a larger space in
|
||
great books, than you can imagine, but the upshot of it all is,
|
||
that when it had been held off by the Spanish Court for a long
|
||
time, Baby Charles and Steenie set off in disguise as Mr. Thomas
|
||
Smith and Mr. John Smith, to see the Spanish Princess; that Baby
|
||
Charles pretended to be desperately in love with her, and jumped
|
||
off walls to look at her, and made a considerable fool of himself
|
||
in a good many ways; that she was called Princess of Wales and that
|
||
the whole Spanish Court believed Baby Charles to be all but dying
|
||
for her sake, as he expressly told them he was; that Baby Charles
|
||
and Steenie came back to England, and were received with as much
|
||
rapture as if they had been a blessing to it; that Baby Charles had
|
||
actually fallen in love with HENRIETTA MARIA, the French King's
|
||
sister, whom he had seen in Paris; that he thought it a wonderfully
|
||
fine and princely thing to have deceived the Spaniards, all
|
||
through; and that he openly said, with a chuckle, as soon as he was
|
||
safe and sound at home again, that the Spaniards were great fools
|
||
to have believed him.
|
||
|
||
Like most dishonest men, the Prince and the favourite complained
|
||
that the people whom they had deluded were dishonest. They made
|
||
such misrepresentations of the treachery of the Spaniards in this
|
||
business of the Spanish match, that the English nation became eager
|
||
for a war with them. Although the gravest Spaniards laughed at the
|
||
idea of his Sowship in a warlike attitude, the Parliament granted
|
||
money for the beginning of hostilities, and the treaties with Spain
|
||
were publicly declared to be at an end. The Spanish ambassador in
|
||
London - probably with the help of the fallen favourite, the Earl
|
||
of Somerset - being unable to obtain speech with his Sowship,
|
||
slipped a paper into his hand, declaring that he was a prisoner in
|
||
his own house, and was entirely governed by Buckingham and his
|
||
creatures. The first effect of this letter was that his Sowship
|
||
began to cry and whine, and took Baby Charles away from Steenie,
|
||
and went down to Windsor, gabbling all sorts of nonsense. The end
|
||
of it was that his Sowship hugged his dog and slave, and said he
|
||
was quite satisfied.
|
||
|
||
He had given the Prince and the favourite almost unlimited power to
|
||
settle anything with the Pope as to the Spanish marriage; and he
|
||
now, with a view to the French one, signed a treaty that all Roman
|
||
Catholics in England should exercise their religion freely, and
|
||
should never be required to take any oath contrary thereto. In
|
||
return for this, and for other concessions much less to be
|
||
defended, Henrietta Maria was to become the Prince's wife, and was
|
||
to bring him a fortune of eight hundred thousand crowns.
|
||
|
||
His Sowship's eyes were getting red with eagerly looking for the
|
||
money, when the end of a gluttonous life came upon him; and, after
|
||
a fortnight's illness, on Sunday the twenty-seventh of March, one
|
||
thousand six hundred and twenty-five, he died. He had reigned
|
||
twenty-two years, and was fifty-nine years old. I know of nothing
|
||
more abominable in history than the adulation that was lavished on
|
||
this King, and the vice and corruption that such a barefaced habit
|
||
of lying produced in his court. It is much to be doubted whether
|
||
one man of honour, and not utterly self-disgraced, kept his place
|
||
near James the First. Lord Bacon, that able and wise philosopher,
|
||
as the First Judge in the Kingdom in this reign, became a public
|
||
spectacle of dishonesty and corruption; and in his base flattery of
|
||
his Sowship, and in his crawling servility to his dog and slave,
|
||
disgraced himself even more. But, a creature like his Sowship set
|
||
upon a throne is like the Plague, and everybody receives infection
|
||
from him.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXIII - ENGLAND UNDER CHARLES THE FIRST
|
||
|
||
BABY CHARLES became KING CHARLES THE FIRST, in the twenty-fifth
|
||
year of his age. Unlike his father, he was usually amiable in his
|
||
private character, and grave and dignified in his bearing; but,
|
||
like his father, he had monstrously exaggerated notions of the
|
||
rights of a king, and was evasive, and not to be trusted. If his
|
||
word could have been relied upon, his history might have had a
|
||
different end.
|
||
|
||
His first care was to send over that insolent upstart, Buckingham,
|
||
to bring Henrietta Maria from Paris to be his Queen; upon which
|
||
occasion Buckingham - with his usual audacity - made love to the
|
||
young Queen of Austria, and was very indignant indeed with CARDINAL
|
||
RICHELIEU, the French Minister, for thwarting his intentions. The
|
||
English people were very well disposed to like their new Queen, and
|
||
to receive her with great favour when she came among them as a
|
||
stranger. But, she held the Protestant religion in great dislike,
|
||
and brought over a crowd of unpleasant priests, who made her do
|
||
some very ridiculous things, and forced themselves upon the public
|
||
notice in many disagreeable ways. Hence, the people soon came to
|
||
dislike her, and she soon came to dislike them; and she did so much
|
||
all through this reign in setting the King (who was dotingly fond
|
||
of her) against his subjects, that it would have been better for
|
||
him if she had never been born.
|
||
|
||
Now, you are to understand that King Charles the First - of his own
|
||
determination to be a high and mighty King not to be called to
|
||
account by anybody, and urged on by his Queen besides -
|
||
deliberately set himself to put his Parliament down and to put
|
||
himself up. You are also to understand, that even in pursuit of
|
||
this wrong idea (enough in itself to have ruined any king) he never
|
||
took a straight course, but always took a crooked one.
|
||
|
||
He was bent upon war with Spain, though neither the House of
|
||
Commons nor the people were quite clear as to the justice of that
|
||
war, now that they began to think a little more about the story of
|
||
the Spanish match. But the King rushed into it hotly, raised money
|
||
by illegal means to meet its expenses, and encountered a miserable
|
||
failure at Cadiz, in the very first year of his reign. An
|
||
expedition to Cadiz had been made in the hope of plunder, but as it
|
||
was not successful, it was necessary to get a grant of money from
|
||
the Parliament; and when they met, in no very complying humour,
|
||
the, King told them, 'to make haste to let him have it, or it would
|
||
be the worse for themselves.' Not put in a more complying humour
|
||
by this, they impeached the King's favourite, the Duke of
|
||
Buckingham, as the cause (which he undoubtedly was) of many great
|
||
public grievances and wrongs. The King, to save him, dissolved the
|
||
Parliament without getting the money he wanted; and when the Lords
|
||
implored him to consider and grant a little delay, he replied, 'No,
|
||
not one minute.' He then began to raise money for himself by the
|
||
following means among others.
|
||
|
||
He levied certain duties called tonnage and poundage which had not
|
||
been granted by the Parliament, and could lawfully be levied by no
|
||
other power; he called upon the seaport towns to furnish, and to
|
||
pay all the cost for three months of, a fleet of armed ships; and
|
||
he required the people to unite in lending him large sums of money,
|
||
the repayment of which was very doubtful. If the poor people
|
||
refused, they were pressed as soldiers or sailors; if the gentry
|
||
refused, they were sent to prison. Five gentlemen, named SIR
|
||
THOMAS DARNEL, JOHN CORBET, WALTER EARL, JOHN HEVENINGHAM, and
|
||
EVERARD HAMPDEN, for refusing were taken up by a warrant of the
|
||
King's privy council, and were sent to prison without any cause but
|
||
the King's pleasure being stated for their imprisonment. Then the
|
||
question came to be solemnly tried, whether this was not a
|
||
violation of Magna Charta, and an encroachment by the King on the
|
||
highest rights of the English people. His lawyers contended No,
|
||
because to encroach upon the rights of the English people would be
|
||
to do wrong, and the King could do no wrong. The accommodating
|
||
judges decided in favour of this wicked nonsense; and here was a
|
||
fatal division between the King and the people.
|
||
|
||
For all this, it became necessary to call another Parliament. The
|
||
people, sensible of the danger in which their liberties were, chose
|
||
for it those who were best known for their determined opposition to
|
||
the King; but still the King, quite blinded by his determination to
|
||
carry everything before him, addressed them when they met, in a
|
||
contemptuous manner, and just told them in so many words that he
|
||
had only called them together because he wanted money. The
|
||
Parliament, strong enough and resolute enough to know that they
|
||
would lower his tone, cared little for what he said, and laid
|
||
before him one of the great documents of history, which is called
|
||
the PETITION OF RIGHT, requiring that the free men of England
|
||
should no longer be called upon to lend the King money, and should
|
||
no longer be pressed or imprisoned for refusing to do so; further,
|
||
that the free men of England should no longer be seized by the
|
||
King's special mandate or warrant, it being contrary to their
|
||
rights and liberties and the laws of their country. At first the
|
||
King returned an answer to this petition, in which he tried to
|
||
shirk it altogether; but, the House of Commons then showing their
|
||
determination to go on with the impeachment of Buckingham, the King
|
||
in alarm returned an answer, giving his consent to all that was
|
||
required of him. He not only afterwards departed from his word and
|
||
honour on these points, over and over again, but, at this very
|
||
time, he did the mean and dissembling act of publishing his first
|
||
answer and not his second - merely that the people might suppose
|
||
that the Parliament had not got the better of him.
|
||
|
||
That pestilent Buckingham, to gratify his own wounded vanity, had
|
||
by this time involved the country in war with France, as well as
|
||
with Spain. For such miserable causes and such miserable creatures
|
||
are wars sometimes made! But he was destined to do little more
|
||
mischief in this world. One morning, as he was going out of his
|
||
house to his carriage, he turned to speak to a certain Colonel
|
||
FRYER who was with him; and he was violently stabbed with a knife,
|
||
which the murderer left sticking in his heart. This happened in
|
||
his hall. He had had angry words up-stairs, just before, with some
|
||
French gentlemen, who were immediately suspected by his servants,
|
||
and had a close escape from being set upon and killed. In the
|
||
midst of the noise, the real murderer, who had gone to the kitchen
|
||
and might easily have got away, drew his sword and cried out, 'I am
|
||
the man!' His name was JOHN FELTON, a Protestant and a retired
|
||
officer in the army. He said he had had no personal ill-will to
|
||
the Duke, but had killed him as a curse to the country. He had
|
||
aimed his blow well, for Buckingham had only had time to cry out,
|
||
'Villain!' and then he drew out the knife, fell against a table,
|
||
and died.
|
||
|
||
The council made a mighty business of examining John Felton about
|
||
this murder, though it was a plain case enough, one would think.
|
||
He had come seventy miles to do it, he told them, and he did it for
|
||
the reason he had declared; if they put him upon the rack, as that
|
||
noble MARQUIS OF DORSET whom he saw before him, had the goodness to
|
||
threaten, he gave that marquis warning, that he would accuse HIM as
|
||
his accomplice! The King was unpleasantly anxious to have him
|
||
racked, nevertheless; but as the judges now found out that torture
|
||
was contrary to the law of England - it is a pity they did not make
|
||
the discovery a little sooner - John Felton was simply executed for
|
||
the murder he had done. A murder it undoubtedly was, and not in
|
||
the least to be defended: though he had freed England from one of
|
||
the most profligate, contemptible, and base court favourites to
|
||
whom it has ever yielded.
|
||
|
||
A very different man now arose. This was SIR THOMAS WENTWORTH, a
|
||
Yorkshire gentleman, who had sat in Parliament for a long time, and
|
||
who had favoured arbitrary and haughty principles, but who had gone
|
||
over to the people's side on receiving offence from Buckingham.
|
||
The King, much wanting such a man - for, besides being naturally
|
||
favourable to the King's cause, he had great abilities - made him
|
||
first a Baron, and then a Viscount, and gave him high employment,
|
||
and won him most completely.
|
||
|
||
A Parliament, however, was still in existence, and was NOT to be
|
||
won. On the twentieth of January, one thousand six hundred and
|
||
twenty-nine, SIR JOHN ELIOT, a great man who had been active in the
|
||
Petition of Right, brought forward other strong resolutions against
|
||
the King's chief instruments, and called upon the Speaker to put
|
||
them to the vote. To this the Speaker answered, 'he was commanded
|
||
otherwise by the King,' and got up to leave the chair - which,
|
||
according to the rules of the House of Commons would have obliged
|
||
it to adjourn without doing anything more - when two members, named
|
||
Mr. HOLLIS and Mr. VALENTINE, held him down. A scene of great
|
||
confusion arose among the members; and while many swords were drawn
|
||
and flashing about, the King, who was kept informed of all that was
|
||
going on, told the captain of his guard to go down to the House and
|
||
force the doors. The resolutions were by that time, however,
|
||
voted, and the House adjourned. Sir John Eliot and those two
|
||
members who had held the Speaker down, were quickly summoned before
|
||
the council. As they claimed it to be their privilege not to
|
||
answer out of Parliament for anything they had said in it, they
|
||
were committed to the Tower. The King then went down and dissolved
|
||
the Parliament, in a speech wherein he made mention of these
|
||
gentlemen as 'Vipers' - which did not do him much good that ever I
|
||
have heard of.
|
||
|
||
As they refused to gain their liberty by saying they were sorry for
|
||
what they had done, the King, always remarkably unforgiving, never
|
||
overlooked their offence. When they demanded to be brought up
|
||
before the court of King's Bench, he even resorted to the meanness
|
||
of having them moved about from prison to prison, so that the writs
|
||
issued for that purpose should not legally find them. At last they
|
||
came before the court and were sentenced to heavy fines, and to be
|
||
imprisoned during the King's pleasure. When Sir John Eliot's
|
||
health had quite given way, and he so longed for change of air and
|
||
scene as to petition for his release, the King sent back the answer
|
||
(worthy of his Sowship himself) that the petition was not humble
|
||
enough. When he sent another petition by his young son, in which
|
||
he pathetically offered to go back to prison when his health was
|
||
restored, if he might be released for its recovery, the King still
|
||
disregarded it. When he died in the Tower, and his children
|
||
petitioned to be allowed to take his body down to Cornwall, there
|
||
to lay it among the ashes of his forefathers, the King returned for
|
||
answer, 'Let Sir John Eliot's body be buried in the church of that
|
||
parish where he died.' All this was like a very little King
|
||
indeed, I think.
|
||
|
||
And now, for twelve long years, steadily pursuing his design of
|
||
setting himself up and putting the people down, the King called no
|
||
Parliament; but ruled without one. If twelve thousand volumes were
|
||
written in his praise (as a good many have been) it would still
|
||
remain a fact, impossible to be denied, that for twelve years King
|
||
Charles the First reigned in England unlawfully and despotically,
|
||
seized upon his subjects' goods and money at his pleasure, and
|
||
punished according to his unbridled will all who ventured to oppose
|
||
him. It is a fashion with some people to think that this King's
|
||
career was cut short; but I must say myself that I think he ran a
|
||
pretty long one.
|
||
|
||
WILLIAM LAUD, Archbishop of Canterbury, was the King's right-hand
|
||
man in the religious part of the putting down of the people's
|
||
liberties. Laud, who was a sincere man, of large learning but
|
||
small sense - for the two things sometimes go together in very
|
||
different quantities - though a Protestant, held opinions so near
|
||
those of the Catholics, that the Pope wanted to make a Cardinal of
|
||
him, if he would have accepted that favour. He looked upon vows,
|
||
robes, lighted candles, images, and so forth, as amazingly
|
||
important in religious ceremonies; and he brought in an immensity
|
||
of bowing and candle-snuffing. He also regarded archbishops and
|
||
bishops as a sort of miraculous persons, and was inveterate in the
|
||
last degree against any who thought otherwise. Accordingly, he
|
||
offered up thanks to Heaven, and was in a state of much pious
|
||
pleasure, when a Scotch clergyman, named LEIGHTON, was pilloried,
|
||
whipped, branded in the cheek, and had one of his ears cut off and
|
||
one of his nostrils slit, for calling bishops trumpery and the
|
||
inventions of men. He originated on a Sunday morning the
|
||
prosecution of WILLIAM PRYNNE, a barrister who was of similar
|
||
opinions, and who was fined a thousand pounds; who was pilloried;
|
||
who had his ears cut off on two occasions - one ear at a time - and
|
||
who was imprisoned for life. He highly approved of the punishment
|
||
of DOCTOR BASTWICK, a physician; who was also fined a thousand
|
||
pounds; and who afterwards had HIS ears cut off, and was imprisoned
|
||
for life. These were gentle methods of persuasion, some will tell
|
||
you: I think, they were rather calculated to be alarming to the
|
||
people.
|
||
|
||
In the money part of the putting down of the people's liberties,
|
||
the King was equally gentle, as some will tell you: as I think,
|
||
equally alarming. He levied those duties of tonnage and poundage,
|
||
and increased them as he thought fit. He granted monopolies to
|
||
companies of merchants on their paying him for them,
|
||
notwithstanding the great complaints that had, for years and years,
|
||
been made on the subject of monopolies. He fined the people for
|
||
disobeying proclamations issued by his Sowship in direct violation
|
||
of law. He revived the detested Forest laws, and took private
|
||
property to himself as his forest right. Above all, he determined
|
||
to have what was called Ship Money; that is to say, money for the
|
||
support of the fleet - not only from the seaports, but from all the
|
||
counties of England: having found out that, in some ancient time
|
||
or other, all the counties paid it. The grievance of this ship
|
||
money being somewhat too strong, JOHN CHAMBERS, a citizen of
|
||
London, refused to pay his part of it. For this the Lord Mayor
|
||
ordered John Chambers to prison, and for that John Chambers brought
|
||
a suit against the Lord Mayor. LORD SAY, also, behaved like a real
|
||
nobleman, and declared he would not pay. But, the sturdiest and
|
||
best opponent of the ship money was JOHN HAMPDEN, a gentleman of
|
||
Buckinghamshire, who had sat among the 'vipers' in the House of
|
||
Commons when there was such a thing, and who had been the bosom
|
||
friend of Sir John Eliot. This case was tried before the twelve
|
||
judges in the Court of Exchequer, and again the King's lawyers said
|
||
it was impossible that ship money could be wrong, because the King
|
||
could do no wrong, however hard he tried - and he really did try
|
||
very hard during these twelve years. Seven of the judges said that
|
||
was quite true, and Mr. Hampden was bound to pay: five of the
|
||
judges said that was quite false, and Mr. Hampden was not bound to
|
||
pay. So, the King triumphed (as he thought), by making Hampden the
|
||
most popular man in England; where matters were getting to that
|
||
height now, that many honest Englishmen could not endure their
|
||
country, and sailed away across the seas to found a colony in
|
||
Massachusetts Bay in America. It is said that Hampden himself and
|
||
his relation OLIVER CROMWELL were going with a company of such
|
||
voyagers, and were actually on board ship, when they were stopped
|
||
by a proclamation, prohibiting sea captains to carry out such
|
||
passengers without the royal license. But O! it would have been
|
||
well for the King if he had let them go! This was the state of
|
||
England. If Laud had been a madman just broke loose, he could not
|
||
have done more mischief than he did in Scotland. In his endeavours
|
||
(in which he was seconded by the King, then in person in that part
|
||
of his dominions) to force his own ideas of bishops, and his own
|
||
religious forms and ceremonies upon the Scotch, he roused that
|
||
nation to a perfect frenzy. They formed a solemn league, which
|
||
they called The Covenant, for the preservation of their own
|
||
religious forms; they rose in arms throughout the whole country;
|
||
they summoned all their men to prayers and sermons twice a day by
|
||
beat of drum; they sang psalms, in which they compared their
|
||
enemies to all the evil spirits that ever were heard of; and they
|
||
solemnly vowed to smite them with the sword. At first the King
|
||
tried force, then treaty, then a Scottish Parliament which did not
|
||
answer at all. Then he tried the EARL OF STRAFFORD, formerly Sir
|
||
Thomas Wentworth; who, as LORD WENTWORTH, had been governing
|
||
Ireland. He, too, had carried it with a very high hand there,
|
||
though to the benefit and prosperity of that country.
|
||
|
||
Strafford and Laud were for conquering the Scottish people by force
|
||
of arms. Other lords who were taken into council, recommended that
|
||
a Parliament should at last be called; to which the King
|
||
unwillingly consented. So, on the thirteenth of April, one
|
||
thousand six hundred and forty, that then strange sight, a
|
||
Parliament, was seen at Westminster. It is called the Short
|
||
Parliament, for it lasted a very little while. While the members
|
||
were all looking at one another, doubtful who would dare to speak,
|
||
MR. PYM arose and set forth all that the King had done unlawfully
|
||
during the past twelve years, and what was the position to which
|
||
England was reduced. This great example set, other members took
|
||
courage and spoke the truth freely, though with great patience and
|
||
moderation. The King, a little frightened, sent to say that if
|
||
they would grant him a certain sum on certain terms, no more ship
|
||
money should be raised. They debated the matter for two days; and
|
||
then, as they would not give him all he asked without promise or
|
||
inquiry, he dissolved them.
|
||
|
||
But they knew very well that he must have a Parliament now; and he
|
||
began to make that discovery too, though rather late in the day.
|
||
Wherefore, on the twenty-fourth of September, being then at York
|
||
with an army collected against the Scottish people, but his own men
|
||
sullen and discontented like the rest of the nation, the King told
|
||
the great council of the Lords, whom he had called to meet him
|
||
there, that he would summon another Parliament to assemble on the
|
||
third of November. The soldiers of the Covenant had now forced
|
||
their way into England and had taken possession of the northern
|
||
counties, where the coals are got. As it would never do to be
|
||
without coals, and as the King's troops could make no head against
|
||
the Covenanters so full of gloomy zeal, a truce was made, and a
|
||
treaty with Scotland was taken into consideration. Meanwhile the
|
||
northern counties paid the Covenanters to leave the coals alone,
|
||
and keep quiet.
|
||
|
||
We have now disposed of the Short Parliament. We have next to see
|
||
what memorable things were done by the Long one.
|
||
|
||
SECOND PART
|
||
|
||
THE Long Parliament assembled on the third of November, one
|
||
thousand six hundred and forty-one. That day week the Earl of
|
||
Strafford arrived from York, very sensible that the spirited and
|
||
determined men who formed that Parliament were no friends towards
|
||
him, who had not only deserted the cause of the people, but who had
|
||
on all occasions opposed himself to their liberties. The King told
|
||
him, for his comfort, that the Parliament 'should not hurt one hair
|
||
of his head.' But, on the very next day Mr. Pym, in the House of
|
||
Commons, and with great solemnity, impeached the Earl of Strafford
|
||
as a traitor. He was immediately taken into custody and fell from
|
||
his proud height.
|
||
|
||
It was the twenty-second of March before he was brought to trial in
|
||
Westminster Hall; where, although he was very ill and suffered
|
||
great pain, he defended himself with such ability and majesty, that
|
||
it was doubtful whether he would not get the best of it. But on
|
||
the thirteenth day of the trial, Pym produced in the House of
|
||
Commons a copy of some notes of a council, found by young SIR HARRY
|
||
VANE in a red velvet cabinet belonging to his father (Secretary
|
||
Vane, who sat at the council-table with the Earl), in which
|
||
Strafford had distinctly told the King that he was free from all
|
||
rules and obligations of government, and might do with his people
|
||
whatever he liked; and in which he had added - 'You have an army in
|
||
Ireland that you may employ to reduce this kingdom to obedience.'
|
||
It was not clear whether by the words 'this kingdom,' he had really
|
||
meant England or Scotland; but the Parliament contended that he
|
||
meant England, and this was treason. At the same sitting of the
|
||
House of Commons it was resolved to bring in a bill of attainder
|
||
declaring the treason to have been committed: in preference to
|
||
proceeding with the trial by impeachment, which would have required
|
||
the treason to be proved.
|
||
|
||
So, a bill was brought in at once, was carried through the House of
|
||
Commons by a large majority, and was sent up to the House of Lords.
|
||
While it was still uncertain whether the House of Lords would pass
|
||
it and the King consent to it, Pym disclosed to the House of
|
||
Commons that the King and Queen had both been plotting with the
|
||
officers of the army to bring up the soldiers and control the
|
||
Parliament, and also to introduce two hundred soldiers into the
|
||
Tower of London to effect the Earl's escape. The plotting with the
|
||
army was revealed by one GEORGE GORING, the son of a lord of that
|
||
name: a bad fellow who was one of the original plotters, and
|
||
turned traitor. The King had actually given his warrant for the
|
||
admission of the two hundred men into the Tower, and they would
|
||
have got in too, but for the refusal of the governor - a sturdy
|
||
Scotchman of the name of BALFOUR - to admit them. These matters
|
||
being made public, great numbers of people began to riot outside
|
||
the Houses of Parliament, and to cry out for the execution of the
|
||
Earl of Strafford, as one of the King's chief instruments against
|
||
them. The bill passed the House of Lords while the people were in
|
||
this state of agitation, and was laid before the King for his
|
||
assent, together with another bill declaring that the Parliament
|
||
then assembled should not be dissolved or adjourned without their
|
||
own consent. The King - not unwilling to save a faithful servant,
|
||
though he had no great attachment for him - was in some doubt what
|
||
to do; but he gave his consent to both bills, although he in his
|
||
heart believed that the bill against the Earl of Strafford was
|
||
unlawful and unjust. The Earl had written to him, telling him that
|
||
he was willing to die for his sake. But he had not expected that
|
||
his royal master would take him at his word quite so readily; for,
|
||
when he heard his doom, he laid his hand upon his heart, and said,
|
||
'Put not your trust in Princes!'
|
||
|
||
The King, who never could be straightforward and plain, through one
|
||
single day or through one single sheet of paper, wrote a letter to
|
||
the Lords, and sent it by the young Prince of Wales, entreating
|
||
them to prevail with the Commons that 'that unfortunate man should
|
||
fulfil the natural course of his life in a close imprisonment.' In
|
||
a postscript to the very same letter, he added, 'If he must die, it
|
||
were charity to reprieve him till Saturday.' If there had been any
|
||
doubt of his fate, this weakness and meanness would have settled
|
||
it. The very next day, which was the twelfth of May, he was
|
||
brought out to be beheaded on Tower Hill.
|
||
|
||
Archbishop Laud, who had been so fond of having people's ears
|
||
cropped off and their noses slit, was now confined in the Tower
|
||
too; and when the Earl went by his window to his death, he was
|
||
there, at his request, to give him his blessing. They had been
|
||
great friends in the King's cause, and the Earl had written to him
|
||
in the days of their power that he thought it would be an admirable
|
||
thing to have Mr. Hampden publicly whipped for refusing to pay the
|
||
ship money. However, those high and mighty doings were over now,
|
||
and the Earl went his way to death with dignity and heroism. The
|
||
governor wished him to get into a coach at the Tower gate, for fear
|
||
the people should tear him to pieces; but he said it was all one to
|
||
him whether he died by the axe or by the people's hands. So, he
|
||
walked, with a firm tread and a stately look, and sometimes pulled
|
||
off his hat to them as he passed along. They were profoundly
|
||
quiet. He made a speech on the scaffold from some notes he had
|
||
prepared (the paper was found lying there after his head was struck
|
||
off), and one blow of the axe killed him, in the forty-ninth year
|
||
of his age.
|
||
|
||
This bold and daring act, the Parliament accompanied by other
|
||
famous measures, all originating (as even this did) in the King's
|
||
having so grossly and so long abused his power. The name of
|
||
DELINQUENTS was applied to all sheriffs and other officers who had
|
||
been concerned in raising the ship money, or any other money, from
|
||
the people, in an unlawful manner; the Hampden judgment was
|
||
reversed; the judges who had decided against Hampden were called
|
||
upon to give large securities that they would take such
|
||
consequences as Parliament might impose upon them; and one was
|
||
arrested as he sat in High Court, and carried off to prison. Laud
|
||
was impeached; the unfortunate victims whose ears had been cropped
|
||
and whose noses had been slit, were brought out of prison in
|
||
triumph; and a bill was passed declaring that a Parliament should
|
||
be called every third year, and that if the King and the King's
|
||
officers did not call it, the people should assemble of themselves
|
||
and summon it, as of their own right and power. Great
|
||
illuminations and rejoicings took place over all these things, and
|
||
the country was wildly excited. That the Parliament took advantage
|
||
of this excitement and stirred them up by every means, there is no
|
||
doubt; but you are always to remember those twelve long years,
|
||
during which the King had tried so hard whether he really could do
|
||
any wrong or not.
|
||
|
||
All this time there was a great religious outcry against the right
|
||
of the Bishops to sit in Parliament; to which the Scottish people
|
||
particularly objected. The English were divided on this subject,
|
||
and, partly on this account and partly because they had had foolish
|
||
expectations that the Parliament would be able to take off nearly
|
||
all the taxes, numbers of them sometimes wavered and inclined
|
||
towards the King.
|
||
|
||
I believe myself, that if, at this or almost any other period of
|
||
his life, the King could have been trusted by any man not out of
|
||
his senses, he might have saved himself and kept his throne. But,
|
||
on the English army being disbanded, he plotted with the officers
|
||
again, as he had done before, and established the fact beyond all
|
||
doubt by putting his signature of approval to a petition against
|
||
the Parliamentary leaders, which was drawn up by certain officers.
|
||
When the Scottish army was disbanded, he went to Edinburgh in four
|
||
days - which was going very fast at that time - to plot again, and
|
||
so darkly too, that it is difficult to decide what his whole object
|
||
was. Some suppose that he wanted to gain over the Scottish
|
||
Parliament, as he did in fact gain over, by presents and favours,
|
||
many Scottish lords and men of power. Some think that he went to
|
||
get proofs against the Parliamentary leaders in England of their
|
||
having treasonably invited the Scottish people to come and help
|
||
them. With whatever object he went to Scotland, he did little good
|
||
by going. At the instigation of the EARL OF MONTROSE, a desperate
|
||
man who was then in prison for plotting, he tried to kidnap three
|
||
Scottish lords who escaped. A committee of the Parliament at home,
|
||
who had followed to watch him, writing an account of this INCIDENT,
|
||
as it was called, to the Parliament, the Parliament made a fresh
|
||
stir about it; were, or feigned to be, much alarmed for themselves;
|
||
and wrote to the EARL OF ESSEX, the commander-in-chief, for a guard
|
||
to protect them.
|
||
|
||
It is not absolutely proved that the King plotted in Ireland
|
||
besides, but it is very probable that he did, and that the Queen
|
||
did, and that he had some wild hope of gaining the Irish people
|
||
over to his side by favouring a rise among them. Whether or no,
|
||
they did rise in a most brutal and savage rebellion; in which,
|
||
encouraged by their priests, they committed such atrocities upon
|
||
numbers of the English, of both sexes and of all ages, as nobody
|
||
could believe, but for their being related on oath by eye-
|
||
witnesses. Whether one hundred thousand or two hundred thousand
|
||
Protestants were murdered in this outbreak, is uncertain; but, that
|
||
it was as ruthless and barbarous an outbreak as ever was known
|
||
among any savage people, is certain.
|
||
|
||
The King came home from Scotland, determined to make a great
|
||
struggle for his lost power. He believed that, through his
|
||
presents and favours, Scotland would take no part against him; and
|
||
the Lord Mayor of London received him with such a magnificent
|
||
dinner that he thought he must have become popular again in
|
||
England. It would take a good many Lord Mayors, however, to make a
|
||
people, and the King soon found himself mistaken.
|
||
|
||
Not so soon, though, but that there was a great opposition in the
|
||
Parliament to a celebrated paper put forth by Pym and Hampden and
|
||
the rest, called 'THE REMONSTRANCE,' which set forth all the
|
||
illegal acts that the King had ever done, but politely laid the
|
||
blame of them on his bad advisers. Even when it was passed and
|
||
presented to him, the King still thought himself strong enough to
|
||
discharge Balfour from his command in the Tower, and to put in his
|
||
place a man of bad character; to whom the Commons instantly
|
||
objected, and whom he was obliged to abandon. At this time, the
|
||
old outcry about the Bishops became louder than ever, and the old
|
||
Archbishop of York was so near being murdered as he went down to
|
||
the House of Lords - being laid hold of by the mob and violently
|
||
knocked about, in return for very foolishly scolding a shrill boy
|
||
who was yelping out 'No Bishops!' - that he sent for all the
|
||
Bishops who were in town, and proposed to them to sign a
|
||
declaration that, as they could no longer without danger to their
|
||
lives attend their duty in Parliament, they protested against the
|
||
lawfulness of everything done in their absence. This they asked
|
||
the King to send to the House of Lords, which he did. Then the
|
||
House of Commons impeached the whole party of Bishops and sent them
|
||
off to the Tower:
|
||
|
||
Taking no warning from this; but encouraged by there being a
|
||
moderate party in the Parliament who objected to these strong
|
||
measures, the King, on the third of January, one thousand six
|
||
hundred and forty-two, took the rashest step that ever was taken by
|
||
mortal man.
|
||
|
||
Of his own accord and without advice, he sent the Attorney-General
|
||
to the House of Lords, to accuse of treason certain members of
|
||
Parliament who as popular leaders were the most obnoxious to him;
|
||
LORD KIMBOLTON, SIR ARTHUR HASELRIG, DENZIL HOLLIS, JOHN PYM (they
|
||
used to call him King Pym, he possessed such power and looked so
|
||
big), JOHN HAMPDEN, and WILLIAM STRODE. The houses of those
|
||
members he caused to be entered, and their papers to be sealed up.
|
||
At the same time, he sent a messenger to the House of Commons
|
||
demanding to have the five gentlemen who were members of that House
|
||
immediately produced. To this the House replied that they should
|
||
appear as soon as there was any legal charge against them, and
|
||
immediately adjourned.
|
||
|
||
Next day, the House of Commons send into the City to let the Lord
|
||
Mayor know that their privileges are invaded by the King, and that
|
||
there is no safety for anybody or anything. Then, when the five
|
||
members are gone out of the way, down comes the King himself, with
|
||
all his guard and from two to three hundred gentlemen and soldiers,
|
||
of whom the greater part were armed. These he leaves in the hall;
|
||
and then, with his nephew at his side, goes into the House, takes
|
||
off his hat, and walks up to the Speaker's chair. The Speaker
|
||
leaves it, the King stands in front of it, looks about him steadily
|
||
for a little while, and says he has come for those five members.
|
||
No one speaks, and then he calls John Pym by name. No one speaks,
|
||
and then he calls Denzil Hollis by name. No one speaks, and then
|
||
he asks the Speaker of the House where those five members are? The
|
||
Speaker, answering on his knee, nobly replies that he is the
|
||
servant of that House, and that he has neither eyes to see, nor
|
||
tongue to speak, anything but what the House commands him. Upon
|
||
this, the King, beaten from that time evermore, replies that he
|
||
will seek them himself, for they have committed treason; and goes
|
||
out, with his hat in his hand, amid some audible murmurs from the
|
||
members.
|
||
|
||
No words can describe the hurry that arose out of doors when all
|
||
this was known. The five members had gone for safety to a house in
|
||
Coleman-street, in the City, where they were guarded all night; and
|
||
indeed the whole city watched in arms like an army. At ten o'clock
|
||
in the morning, the King, already frightened at what he had done,
|
||
came to the Guildhall, with only half a dozen lords, and made a
|
||
speech to the people, hoping they would not shelter those whom he
|
||
accused of treason. Next day, he issued a proclamation for the
|
||
apprehension of the five members; but the Parliament minded it so
|
||
little that they made great arrangements for having them brought
|
||
down to Westminster in great state, five days afterwards. The King
|
||
was so alarmed now at his own imprudence, if not for his own
|
||
safety, that he left his palace at Whitehall, and went away with
|
||
his Queen and children to Hampton Court.
|
||
|
||
It was the eleventh of May, when the five members were carried in
|
||
state and triumph to Westminster. They were taken by water. The
|
||
river could not be seen for the boats on it; and the five members
|
||
were hemmed in by barges full of men and great guns, ready to
|
||
protect them, at any cost. Along the Strand a large body of the
|
||
train-bands of London, under their commander, SKIPPON, marched to
|
||
be ready to assist the little fleet. Beyond them, came a crowd who
|
||
choked the streets, roaring incessantly about the Bishops and the
|
||
Papists, and crying out contemptuously as they passed Whitehall,
|
||
'What has become of the King?' With this great noise outside the
|
||
House of Commons, and with great silence within, Mr. Pym rose and
|
||
informed the House of the great kindness with which they had been
|
||
received in the City. Upon that, the House called the sheriffs in
|
||
and thanked them, and requested the train-bands, under their
|
||
commander Skippon, to guard the House of Commons every day. Then,
|
||
came four thousand men on horseback out of Buckinghamshire,
|
||
offering their services as a guard too, and bearing a petition to
|
||
the King, complaining of the injury that had been done to Mr.
|
||
Hampden, who was their county man and much beloved and honoured.
|
||
|
||
When the King set off for Hampton Court, the gentlemen and soldiers
|
||
who had been with him followed him out of town as far as Kingston-
|
||
upon-Thames; next day, Lord Digby came to them from the King at
|
||
Hampton Court, in his coach and six, to inform them that the King
|
||
accepted their protection. This, the Parliament said, was making
|
||
war against the kingdom, and Lord Digby fled abroad. The
|
||
Parliament then immediately applied themselves to getting hold of
|
||
the military power of the country, well knowing that the King was
|
||
already trying hard to use it against them, and that he had
|
||
secretly sent the Earl of Newcastle to Hull, to secure a valuable
|
||
magazine of arms and gunpowder that was there. In those times,
|
||
every county had its own magazines of arms and powder, for its own
|
||
train-bands or militia; so, the Parliament brought in a bill
|
||
claiming the right (which up to this time had belonged to the King)
|
||
of appointing the Lord Lieutenants of counties, who commanded these
|
||
train-bands; also, of having all the forts, castles, and garrisons
|
||
in the kingdom, put into the hands of such governors as they, the
|
||
Parliament, could confide in. It also passed a law depriving the
|
||
Bishops of their votes. The King gave his assent to that bill, but
|
||
would not abandon the right of appointing the Lord Lieutenants,
|
||
though he said he was willing to appoint such as might be suggested
|
||
to him by the Parliament. When the Earl of Pembroke asked him
|
||
whether he would not give way on that question for a time, he said,
|
||
'By God! not for one hour!' and upon this he and the Parliament
|
||
went to war.
|
||
|
||
His young daughter was betrothed to the Prince of Orange. On
|
||
pretence of taking her to the country of her future husband, the
|
||
Queen was already got safely away to Holland, there to pawn the
|
||
Crown jewels for money to raise an army on the King's side. The
|
||
Lord Admiral being sick, the House of Commons now named the Earl of
|
||
Warwick to hold his place for a year. The King named another
|
||
gentleman; the House of Commons took its own way, and the Earl of
|
||
Warwick became Lord Admiral without the King's consent. The
|
||
Parliament sent orders down to Hull to have that magazine removed
|
||
to London; the King went down to Hull to take it himself. The
|
||
citizens would not admit him into the town, and the governor would
|
||
not admit him into the castle. The Parliament resolved that
|
||
whatever the two Houses passed, and the King would not consent to,
|
||
should be called an ORDINANCE, and should be as much a law as if he
|
||
did consent to it. The King protested against this, and gave
|
||
notice that these ordinances were not to be obeyed. The King,
|
||
attended by the majority of the House of Peers, and by many members
|
||
of the House of Commons, established himself at York. The
|
||
Chancellor went to him with the Great Seal, and the Parliament made
|
||
a new Great Seal. The Queen sent over a ship full of arms and
|
||
ammunition, and the King issued letters to borrow money at high
|
||
interest. The Parliament raised twenty regiments of foot and
|
||
seventy-five troops of horse; and the people willingly aided them
|
||
with their money, plate, jewellery, and trinkets - the married
|
||
women even with their wedding-rings. Every member of Parliament
|
||
who could raise a troop or a regiment in his own part of the
|
||
country, dressed it according to his taste and in his own colours,
|
||
and commanded it. Foremost among them all, OLIVER CROMWELL raised
|
||
a troop of horse - thoroughly in earnest and thoroughly well armed
|
||
- who were, perhaps, the best soldiers that ever were seen.
|
||
|
||
In some of their proceedings, this famous Parliament passed the
|
||
bounds of previous law and custom, yielded to and favoured riotous
|
||
assemblages of the people, and acted tyrannically in imprisoning
|
||
some who differed from the popular leaders. But again, you are
|
||
always to remember that the twelve years during which the King had
|
||
had his own wilful way, had gone before; and that nothing could
|
||
make the times what they might, could, would, or should have been,
|
||
if those twelve years had never rolled away.
|
||
|
||
THIRD PART
|
||
|
||
I SHALL not try to relate the particulars of the great civil war
|
||
between King Charles the First and the Long Parliament, which
|
||
lasted nearly four years, and a full account of which would fill
|
||
many large books. It was a sad thing that Englishmen should once
|
||
more be fighting against Englishmen on English ground; but, it is
|
||
some consolation to know that on both sides there was great
|
||
humanity, forbearance, and honour. The soldiers of the Parliament
|
||
were far more remarkable for these good qualities than the soldiers
|
||
of the King (many of whom fought for mere pay without much caring
|
||
for the cause); but those of the nobility and gentry who were on
|
||
the King's side were so brave, and so faithful to him, that their
|
||
conduct cannot but command our highest admiration. Among them were
|
||
great numbers of Catholics, who took the royal side because the
|
||
Queen was so strongly of their persuasion.
|
||
|
||
The King might have distinguished some of these gallant spirits, if
|
||
he had been as generous a spirit himself, by giving them the
|
||
command of his army. Instead of that, however, true to his old
|
||
high notions of royalty, he entrusted it to his two nephews, PRINCE
|
||
RUPERT and PRINCE MAURICE, who were of royal blood and came over
|
||
from abroad to help him. It might have been better for him if they
|
||
had stayed away; since Prince Rupert was an impetuous, hot-headed
|
||
fellow, whose only idea was to dash into battle at all times and
|
||
seasons, and lay about him.
|
||
|
||
The general-in-chief of the Parliamentary army was the Earl of
|
||
Essex, a gentleman of honour and an excellent soldier. A little
|
||
while before the war broke out, there had been some rioting at
|
||
Westminster between certain officious law students and noisy
|
||
soldiers, and the shopkeepers and their apprentices, and the
|
||
general people in the streets. At that time the King's friends
|
||
called the crowd, Roundheads, because the apprentices wore short
|
||
hair; the crowd, in return, called their opponents Cavaliers,
|
||
meaning that they were a blustering set, who pretended to be very
|
||
military. These two words now began to be used to distinguish the
|
||
two sides in the civil war. The Royalists also called the
|
||
Parliamentary men Rebels and Rogues, while the Parliamentary men
|
||
called THEM Malignants, and spoke of themselves as the Godly, the
|
||
Honest, and so forth.
|
||
|
||
The war broke out at Portsmouth, where that double traitor Goring
|
||
had again gone over to the King and was besieged by the
|
||
Parliamentary troops. Upon this, the King proclaimed the Earl of
|
||
Essex and the officers serving under him, traitors, and called upon
|
||
his loyal subjects to meet him in arms at Nottingham on the twenty-
|
||
fifth of August. But his loyal subjects came about him in scanty
|
||
numbers, and it was a windy, gloomy day, and the Royal Standard got
|
||
blown down, and the whole affair was very melancholy. The chief
|
||
engagements after this, took place in the vale of the Red Horse
|
||
near Banbury, at Brentford, at Devizes, at Chalgrave Field (where
|
||
Mr. Hampden was so sorely wounded while fighting at the head of his
|
||
men, that he died within a week), at Newbury (in which battle LORD
|
||
FALKLAND, one of the best noblemen on the King's side, was killed),
|
||
at Leicester, at Naseby, at Winchester, at Marston Moor near York,
|
||
at Newcastle, and in many other parts of England and Scotland.
|
||
These battles were attended with various successes. At one time,
|
||
the King was victorious; at another time, the Parliament. But
|
||
almost all the great and busy towns were against the King; and when
|
||
it was considered necessary to fortify London, all ranks of people,
|
||
from labouring men and women, up to lords and ladies, worked hard
|
||
together with heartiness and good will. The most distinguished
|
||
leaders on the Parliamentary side were HAMPDEN, SIR THOMAS FAIRFAX,
|
||
and, above all, OLIVER CROMWELL, and his son-in-law IRETON.
|
||
|
||
During the whole of this war, the people, to whom it was very
|
||
expensive and irksome, and to whom it was made the more distressing
|
||
by almost every family being divided - some of its members
|
||
attaching themselves to one side and some to the other - were over
|
||
and over again most anxious for peace. So were some of the best
|
||
men in each cause. Accordingly, treaties of peace were discussed
|
||
between commissioners from the Parliament and the King; at York, at
|
||
Oxford (where the King held a little Parliament of his own), and at
|
||
Uxbridge. But they came to nothing. In all these negotiations,
|
||
and in all his difficulties, the King showed himself at his best.
|
||
He was courageous, cool, self-possessed, and clever; but, the old
|
||
taint of his character was always in him, and he was never for one
|
||
single moment to be trusted. Lord Clarendon, the historian, one of
|
||
his highest admirers, supposes that he had unhappily promised the
|
||
Queen never to make peace without her consent, and that this must
|
||
often be taken as his excuse. He never kept his word from night to
|
||
morning. He signed a cessation of hostilities with the blood-
|
||
stained Irish rebels for a sum of money, and invited the Irish
|
||
regiments over, to help him against the Parliament. In the battle
|
||
of Naseby, his cabinet was seized and was found to contain a
|
||
correspondence with the Queen, in which he expressly told her that
|
||
he had deceived the Parliament - a mongrel Parliament, he called it
|
||
now, as an improvement on his old term of vipers - in pretending to
|
||
recognise it and to treat with it; and from which it further
|
||
appeared that he had long been in secret treaty with the Duke of
|
||
Lorraine for a foreign army of ten thousand men. Disappointed in
|
||
this, he sent a most devoted friend of his, the EARL OF GLAMORGAN,
|
||
to Ireland, to conclude a secret treaty with the Catholic powers,
|
||
to send him an Irish army of ten thousand men; in return for which
|
||
he was to bestow great favours on the Catholic religion. And, when
|
||
this treaty was discovered in the carriage of a fighting Irish
|
||
Archbishop who was killed in one of the many skirmishes of those
|
||
days, he basely denied and deserted his attached friend, the Earl,
|
||
on his being charged with high treason; and - even worse than this
|
||
- had left blanks in the secret instructions he gave him with his
|
||
own kingly hand, expressly that he might thus save himself.
|
||
|
||
At last, on the twenty-seventh day of April, one thousand six
|
||
hundred and forty-six, the King found himself in the city of
|
||
Oxford, so surrounded by the Parliamentary army who were closing in
|
||
upon him on all sides that he felt that if he would escape he must
|
||
delay no longer. So, that night, having altered the cut of his
|
||
hair and beard, he was dressed up as a servant and put upon a horse
|
||
with a cloak strapped behind him, and rode out of the town behind
|
||
one of his own faithful followers, with a clergyman of that country
|
||
who knew the road well, for a guide. He rode towards London as far
|
||
as Harrow, and then altered his plans and resolved, it would seem,
|
||
to go to the Scottish camp. The Scottish men had been invited over
|
||
to help the Parliamentary army, and had a large force then in
|
||
England. The King was so desperately intriguing in everything he
|
||
did, that it is doubtful what he exactly meant by this step. He
|
||
took it, anyhow, and delivered himself up to the EARL OF LEVEN, the
|
||
Scottish general-in-chief, who treated him as an honourable
|
||
prisoner. Negotiations between the Parliament on the one hand and
|
||
the Scottish authorities on the other, as to what should be done
|
||
with him, lasted until the following February. Then, when the King
|
||
had refused to the Parliament the concession of that old militia
|
||
point for twenty years, and had refused to Scotland the recognition
|
||
of its Solemn League and Covenant, Scotland got a handsome sum for
|
||
its army and its help, and the King into the bargain. He was
|
||
taken, by certain Parliamentary commissioners appointed to receive
|
||
him, to one of his own houses, called Holmby House, near Althorpe,
|
||
in Northamptonshire.
|
||
|
||
While the Civil War was still in progress, John Pym died, and was
|
||
buried with great honour in Westminster Abbey - not with greater
|
||
honour than he deserved, for the liberties of Englishmen owe a
|
||
mighty debt to Pym and Hampden. The war was but newly over when
|
||
the Earl of Essex died, of an illness brought on by his having
|
||
overheated himself in a stag hunt in Windsor Forest. He, too, was
|
||
buried in Westminster Abbey, with great state. I wish it were not
|
||
necessary to add that Archbishop Laud died upon the scaffold when
|
||
the war was not yet done. His trial lasted in all nearly a year,
|
||
and, it being doubtful even then whether the charges brought
|
||
against him amounted to treason, the odious old contrivance of the
|
||
worst kings was resorted to, and a bill of attainder was brought in
|
||
against him. He was a violently prejudiced and mischievous person;
|
||
had had strong ear-cropping and nose-splitting propensities, as you
|
||
know; and had done a world of harm. But he died peaceably, and
|
||
like a brave old man.
|
||
|
||
FOURTH PART
|
||
|
||
WHEN the Parliament had got the King into their hands, they became
|
||
very anxious to get rid of their army, in which Oliver Cromwell had
|
||
begun to acquire great power; not only because of his courage and
|
||
high abilities, but because he professed to be very sincere in the
|
||
Scottish sort of Puritan religion that was then exceedingly popular
|
||
among the soldiers. They were as much opposed to the Bishops as to
|
||
the Pope himself; and the very privates, drummers, and trumpeters,
|
||
had such an inconvenient habit of starting up and preaching long-
|
||
winded discourses, that I would not have belonged to that army on
|
||
any account.
|
||
|
||
So, the Parliament, being far from sure but that the army might
|
||
begin to preach and fight against them now it had nothing else to
|
||
do, proposed to disband the greater part of it, to send another
|
||
part to serve in Ireland against the rebels, and to keep only a
|
||
small force in England. But, the army would not consent to be
|
||
broken up, except upon its own conditions; and, when the Parliament
|
||
showed an intention of compelling it, it acted for itself in an
|
||
unexpected manner. A certain cornet, of the name of JOICE, arrived
|
||
at Holmby House one night, attended by four hundred horsemen, went
|
||
into the King's room with his hat in one hand and a pistol in the
|
||
other, and told the King that he had come to take him away. The
|
||
King was willing enough to go, and only stipulated that he should
|
||
be publicly required to do so next morning. Next morning,
|
||
accordingly, he appeared on the top of the steps of the house, and
|
||
asked Comet Joice before his men and the guard set there by the
|
||
Parliament, what authority he had for taking him away? To this
|
||
Cornet Joice replied, 'The authority of the army.' 'Have you a
|
||
written commission?' said the King. Joice, pointing to his four
|
||
hundred men on horseback, replied, 'That is my commission.'
|
||
'Well,' said the King, smiling, as if he were pleased, 'I never
|
||
before read such a commission; but it is written in fair and
|
||
legible characters. This is a company of as handsome proper
|
||
gentlemen as I have seen a long while.' He was asked where he
|
||
would like to live, and he said at Newmarket. So, to Newmarket he
|
||
and Cornet Joice and the four hundred horsemen rode; the King
|
||
remarking, in the same smiling way, that he could ride as far at a
|
||
spell as Cornet Joice, or any man there.
|
||
|
||
The King quite believed, I think, that the army were his friends.
|
||
He said as much to Fairfax when that general, Oliver Cromwell, and
|
||
Ireton, went to persuade him to return to the custody of the
|
||
Parliament. He preferred to remain as he was, and resolved to
|
||
remain as he was. And when the army moved nearer and nearer London
|
||
to frighten the Parliament into yielding to their demands, they
|
||
took the King with them. It was a deplorable thing that England
|
||
should be at the mercy of a great body of soldiers with arms in
|
||
their hands; but the King certainly favoured them at this important
|
||
time of his life, as compared with the more lawful power that tried
|
||
to control him. It must be added, however, that they treated him,
|
||
as yet, more respectfully and kindly than the Parliament had done.
|
||
They allowed him to be attended by his own servants, to be
|
||
splendidly entertained at various houses, and to see his children -
|
||
at Cavesham House, near Reading - for two days. Whereas, the
|
||
Parliament had been rather hard with him, and had only allowed him
|
||
to ride out and play at bowls.
|
||
|
||
It is much to be believed that if the King could have been trusted,
|
||
even at this time, he might have been saved. Even Oliver Cromwell
|
||
expressly said that he did believe that no man could enjoy his
|
||
possessions in peace, unless the King had his rights. He was not
|
||
unfriendly towards the King; he had been present when he received
|
||
his children, and had been much affected by the pitiable nature of
|
||
the scene; he saw the King often; he frequently walked and talked
|
||
with him in the long galleries and pleasant gardens of the Palace
|
||
at Hampton Court, whither he was now removed; and in all this
|
||
risked something of his influence with the army. But, the King was
|
||
in secret hopes of help from the Scottish people; and the moment he
|
||
was encouraged to join them he began to be cool to his new friends,
|
||
the army, and to tell the officers that they could not possibly do
|
||
without him. At the very time, too, when he was promising to make
|
||
Cromwell and Ireton noblemen, if they would help him up to his old
|
||
height, he was writing to the Queen that he meant to hang them.
|
||
They both afterwards declared that they had been privately informed
|
||
that such a letter would be found, on a certain evening, sewed up
|
||
in a saddle which would be taken to the Blue Boar in Holborn to be
|
||
sent to Dover; and that they went there, disguised as common
|
||
soldiers, and sat drinking in the inn-yard until a man came with
|
||
the saddle, which they ripped up with their knives, and therein
|
||
found the letter. I see little reason to doubt the story. It is
|
||
certain that Oliver Cromwell told one of the King's most faithful
|
||
followers that the King could not be trusted, and that he would not
|
||
be answerable if anything amiss were to happen to him. Still, even
|
||
after that, he kept a promise he had made to the King, by letting
|
||
him know that there was a plot with a certain portion of the army
|
||
to seize him. I believe that, in fact, he sincerely wanted the
|
||
King to escape abroad, and so to be got rid of without more trouble
|
||
or danger. That Oliver himself had work enough with the army is
|
||
pretty plain; for some of the troops were so mutinous against him,
|
||
and against those who acted with him at this time, that he found it
|
||
necessary to have one man shot at the head of his regiment to
|
||
overawe the rest.
|
||
|
||
The King, when he received Oliver's warning, made his escape from
|
||
Hampton Court; after some indecision and uncertainty, he went to
|
||
Carisbrooke Castle in the Isle of Wight. At first, he was pretty
|
||
free there; but, even there, he carried on a pretended treaty with
|
||
the Parliament, while he was really treating with commissioners
|
||
from Scotland to send an army into England to take his part. When
|
||
he broke off this treaty with the Parliament (having settled with
|
||
Scotland) and was treated as a prisoner, his treatment was not
|
||
changed too soon, for he had plotted to escape that very night to a
|
||
ship sent by the Queen, which was lying off the island.
|
||
|
||
He was doomed to be disappointed in his hopes from Scotland. The
|
||
agreement he had made with the Scottish Commissioners was not
|
||
favourable enough to the religion of that country to please the
|
||
Scottish clergy; and they preached against it. The consequence
|
||
was, that the army raised in Scotland and sent over, was too small
|
||
to do much; and that, although it was helped by a rising of the
|
||
Royalists in England and by good soldiers from Ireland, it could
|
||
make no head against the Parliamentary army under such men as
|
||
Cromwell and Fairfax. The King's eldest son, the Prince of Wales,
|
||
came over from Holland with nineteen ships (a part of the English
|
||
fleet having gone over to him) to help his father; but nothing came
|
||
of his voyage, and he was fain to return. The most remarkable
|
||
event of this second civil war was the cruel execution by the
|
||
Parliamentary General, of SIR CHARLES LUCAS and SIR GEORGE LISLE,
|
||
two grand Royalist generals, who had bravely defended Colchester
|
||
under every disadvantage of famine and distress for nearly three
|
||
months. When Sir Charles Lucas was shot, Sir George Lisle kissed
|
||
his body, and said to the soldiers who were to shoot him, 'Come
|
||
nearer, and make sure of me.' 'I warrant you, Sir George,' said
|
||
one of the soldiers, 'we shall hit you.' 'AY?' he returned with a
|
||
smile, 'but I have been nearer to you, my friends, many a time, and
|
||
you have missed me.'
|
||
|
||
The Parliament, after being fearfully bullied by the army - who
|
||
demanded to have seven members whom they disliked given up to them
|
||
- had voted that they would have nothing more to do with the King.
|
||
On the conclusion, however, of this second civil war (which did not
|
||
last more than six months), they appointed commissioners to treat
|
||
with him. The King, then so far released again as to be allowed to
|
||
live in a private house at Newport in the Isle of Wight, managed
|
||
his own part of the negotiation with a sense that was admired by
|
||
all who saw him, and gave up, in the end, all that was asked of him
|
||
- even yielding (which he had steadily refused, so far) to the
|
||
temporary abolition of the bishops, and the transfer of their
|
||
church land to the Crown. Still, with his old fatal vice upon him,
|
||
when his best friends joined the commissioners in beseeching him to
|
||
yield all those points as the only means of saving himself from the
|
||
army, he was plotting to escape from the island; he was holding
|
||
correspondence with his friends and the Catholics in Ireland,
|
||
though declaring that he was not; and he was writing, with his own
|
||
hand, that in what he yielded he meant nothing but to get time to
|
||
escape.
|
||
|
||
Matters were at this pass when the army, resolved to defy the
|
||
Parliament, marched up to London. The Parliament, not afraid of
|
||
them now, and boldly led by Hollis, voted that the King's
|
||
concessions were sufficient ground for settling the peace of the
|
||
kingdom. Upon that, COLONEL RICH and COLONEL PRIDE went down to
|
||
the House of Commons with a regiment of horse soldiers and a
|
||
regiment of foot; and Colonel Pride, standing in the lobby with a
|
||
list of the members who were obnoxious to the army in his hand, had
|
||
them pointed out to him as they came through, and took them all
|
||
into custody. This proceeding was afterwards called by the people,
|
||
for a joke, PRIDE'S PURGE. Cromwell was in the North, at the head
|
||
of his men, at the time, but when he came home, approved of what
|
||
had been done.
|
||
|
||
What with imprisoning some members and causing others to stay away,
|
||
the army had now reduced the House of Commons to some fifty or so.
|
||
These soon voted that it was treason in a king to make war against
|
||
his parliament and his people, and sent an ordinance up to the
|
||
House of Lords for the King's being tried as a traitor. The House
|
||
of Lords, then sixteen in number, to a man rejected it. Thereupon,
|
||
the Commons made an ordinance of their own, that they were the
|
||
supreme government of the country, and would bring the King to
|
||
trial.
|
||
|
||
The King had been taken for security to a place called Hurst
|
||
Castle: a lonely house on a rock in the sea, connected with the
|
||
coast of Hampshire by a rough road two miles long at low water.
|
||
Thence, he was ordered to be removed to Windsor; thence, after
|
||
being but rudely used there, and having none but soldiers to wait
|
||
upon him at table, he was brought up to St. James's Palace in
|
||
London, and told that his trial was appointed for next day.
|
||
|
||
On Saturday, the twentieth of January, one thousand six hundred and
|
||
forty-nine, this memorable trial began. The House of Commons had
|
||
settled that one hundred and thirty-five persons should form the
|
||
Court, and these were taken from the House itself, from among the
|
||
officers of the army, and from among the lawyers and citizens.
|
||
JOHN BRADSHAW, serjeant-at-law, was appointed president. The place
|
||
was Westminster Hall. At the upper end, in a red velvet chair, sat
|
||
the president, with his hat (lined with plates of iron for his
|
||
protection) on his head. The rest of the Court sat on side
|
||
benches, also wearing their hats. The King's seat was covered with
|
||
velvet, like that of the president, and was opposite to it. He was
|
||
brought from St. James's to Whitehall, and from Whitehall he came
|
||
by water to his trial.
|
||
|
||
When he came in, he looked round very steadily on the Court, and on
|
||
the great number of spectators, and then sat down: presently he
|
||
got up and looked round again. On the indictment 'against Charles
|
||
Stuart, for high treason,' being read, he smiled several times, and
|
||
he denied the authority of the Court, saying that there could be no
|
||
parliament without a House of Lords, and that he saw no House of
|
||
Lords there. Also, that the King ought to be there, and that he
|
||
saw no King in the King's right place. Bradshaw replied, that the
|
||
Court was satisfied with its authority, and that its authority was
|
||
God's authority and the kingdom's. He then adjourned the Court to
|
||
the following Monday. On that day, the trial was resumed, and went
|
||
on all the week. When the Saturday came, as the King passed
|
||
forward to his place in the Hall, some soldiers and others cried
|
||
for 'justice!' and execution on him. That day, too, Bradshaw, like
|
||
an angry Sultan, wore a red robe, instead of the black robe he had
|
||
worn before. The King was sentenced to death that day. As he went
|
||
out, one solitary soldier said, 'God bless you, Sir!' For this,
|
||
his officer struck him. The King said he thought the punishment
|
||
exceeded the offence. The silver head of his walking-stick had
|
||
fallen off while he leaned upon it, at one time of the trial. The
|
||
accident seemed to disturb him, as if he thought it ominous of the
|
||
falling of his own head; and he admitted as much, now it was all
|
||
over.
|
||
|
||
Being taken back to Whitehall, he sent to the House of Commons,
|
||
saying that as the time of his execution might be nigh, he wished
|
||
he might be allowed to see his darling children. It was granted.
|
||
On the Monday he was taken back to St. James's; and his two
|
||
children then in England, the PRINCESS ELIZABETH thirteen years
|
||
old, and the DUKE OF GLOUCESTER nine years old, were brought to
|
||
take leave of him, from Sion House, near Brentford. It was a sad
|
||
and touching scene, when he kissed and fondled those poor children,
|
||
and made a little present of two diamond seals to the Princess, and
|
||
gave them tender messages to their mother (who little deserved
|
||
them, for she had a lover of her own whom she married soon
|
||
afterwards), and told them that he died 'for the laws and liberties
|
||
of the land.' I am bound to say that I don't think he did, but I
|
||
dare say he believed so.
|
||
|
||
There were ambassadors from Holland that day, to intercede for the
|
||
unhappy King, whom you and I both wish the Parliament had spared;
|
||
but they got no answer. The Scottish Commissioners interceded too;
|
||
so did the Prince of Wales, by a letter in which he offered as the
|
||
next heir to the throne, to accept any conditions from the
|
||
Parliament; so did the Queen, by letter likewise.
|
||
|
||
Notwithstanding all, the warrant for the execution was this day
|
||
signed. There is a story that as Oliver Cromwell went to the table
|
||
with the pen in his hand to put his signature to it, he drew his
|
||
pen across the face of one of the commissioners, who was standing
|
||
near, and marked it with ink. That commissioner had not signed his
|
||
own name yet, and the story adds that when he came to do it he
|
||
marked Cromwell's face with ink in the same way.
|
||
|
||
The King slept well, untroubled by the knowledge that it was his
|
||
last night on earth, and rose on the thirtieth of January, two
|
||
hours before day, and dressed himself carefully. He put on two
|
||
shirts lest he should tremble with the cold, and had his hair very
|
||
carefully combed. The warrant had been directed to three officers
|
||
of the army, COLONEL HACKER, COLONEL HUNKS, and COLONEL PHAYER. At
|
||
ten o'clock, the first of these came to the door and said it was
|
||
time to go to Whitehall. The King, who had always been a quick
|
||
walker, walked at his usual speed through the Park, and called out
|
||
to the guard, with his accustomed voice of command, 'March on
|
||
apace!' When he came to Whitehall, he was taken to his own
|
||
bedroom, where a breakfast was set forth. As he had taken the
|
||
Sacrament, he would eat nothing more; but, at about the time when
|
||
the church bells struck twelve at noon (for he had to wait, through
|
||
the scaffold not being ready), he took the advice of the good
|
||
BISHOP JUXON who was with him, and ate a little bread and drank a
|
||
glass of claret. Soon after he had taken this refreshment, Colonel
|
||
Hacker came to the chamber with the warrant in his hand, and called
|
||
for Charles Stuart.
|
||
|
||
And then, through the long gallery of Whitehall Palace, which he
|
||
had often seen light and gay and merry and crowded, in very
|
||
different times, the fallen King passed along, until he came to the
|
||
centre window of the Banqueting House, through which he emerged
|
||
upon the scaffold, which was hung with black. He looked at the two
|
||
executioners, who were dressed in black and masked; he looked at
|
||
the troops of soldiers on horseback and on foot, and all looked up
|
||
at him in silence; he looked at the vast array of spectators,
|
||
filling up the view beyond, and turning all their faces upon him;
|
||
he looked at his old Palace of St. James's; and he looked at the
|
||
block. He seemed a little troubled to find that it was so low, and
|
||
asked, 'if there were no place higher?' Then, to those upon the
|
||
scaffold, he said, 'that it was the Parliament who had begun the
|
||
war, and not he; but he hoped they might be guiltless too, as ill
|
||
instruments had gone between them. In one respect,' he said, 'he
|
||
suffered justly; and that was because he had permitted an unjust
|
||
sentence to be executed on another.' In this he referred to the
|
||
Earl of Strafford.
|
||
|
||
He was not at all afraid to die; but he was anxious to die easily.
|
||
When some one touched the axe while he was speaking, he broke off
|
||
and called out, 'Take heed of the axe! take heed of the axe!' He
|
||
also said to Colonel Hacker, 'Take care that they do not put me to
|
||
pain.' He told the executioner, 'I shall say but very short
|
||
prayers, and then thrust out my hands' - as the sign to strike.
|
||
|
||
He put his hair up, under a white satin cap which the bishop had
|
||
carried, and said, 'I have a good cause and a gracious God on my
|
||
side.' The bishop told him that he had but one stage more to
|
||
travel in this weary world, and that, though it was a turbulent and
|
||
troublesome stage, it was a short one, and would carry him a great
|
||
way - all the way from earth to Heaven. The King's last word, as
|
||
he gave his cloak and the George - the decoration from his breast -
|
||
to the bishop, was, 'Remember!' He then kneeled down, laid his
|
||
head on the block, spread out his hands, and was instantly killed.
|
||
One universal groan broke from the crowd; and the soldiers, who had
|
||
sat on their horses and stood in their ranks immovable as statues,
|
||
were of a sudden all in motion, clearing the streets.
|
||
|
||
Thus, in the forty-ninth year of his age, falling at the same time
|
||
of his career as Strafford had fallen in his, perished Charles the
|
||
First. With all my sorrow for him, I cannot agree with him that he
|
||
died 'the martyr of the people;' for the people had been martyrs to
|
||
him, and to his ideas of a King's rights, long before. Indeed, I
|
||
am afraid that he was but a bad judge of martyrs; for he had called
|
||
that infamous Duke of Buckingham 'the Martyr of his Sovereign.'
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXIV - ENGLAND UNDER OLIVER CROMWELL
|
||
|
||
BEFORE sunset on the memorable day on which King Charles the First
|
||
was executed, the House of Commons passed an act declaring it
|
||
treason in any one to proclaim the Prince of Wales - or anybody
|
||
else - King of England. Soon afterwards, it declared that the
|
||
House of Lords was useless and dangerous, and ought to be
|
||
abolished; and directed that the late King's statue should be taken
|
||
down from the Royal Exchange in the City and other public places.
|
||
Having laid hold of some famous Royalists who had escaped from
|
||
prison, and having beheaded the DUKE OF HAMILTON, LORD HOLLAND, and
|
||
LORD CAPEL, in Palace Yard (all of whom died very courageously),
|
||
they then appointed a Council of State to govern the country. It
|
||
consisted of forty-one members, of whom five were peers. Bradshaw
|
||
was made president. The House of Commons also re-admitted members
|
||
who had opposed the King's death, and made up its numbers to about
|
||
a hundred and fifty.
|
||
|
||
But, it still had an army of more than forty thousand men to deal
|
||
with, and a very hard task it was to manage them. Before the
|
||
King's execution, the army had appointed some of its officers to
|
||
remonstrate between them and the Parliament; and now the common
|
||
soldiers began to take that office upon themselves. The regiments
|
||
under orders for Ireland mutinied; one troop of horse in the city
|
||
of London seized their own flag, and refused to obey orders. For
|
||
this, the ringleader was shot: which did not mend the matter, for,
|
||
both his comrades and the people made a public funeral for him, and
|
||
accompanied the body to the grave with sound of trumpets and with a
|
||
gloomy procession of persons carrying bundles of rosemary steeped
|
||
in blood. Oliver was the only man to deal with such difficulties
|
||
as these, and he soon cut them short by bursting at midnight into
|
||
the town of Burford, near Salisbury, where the mutineers were
|
||
sheltered, taking four hundred of them prisoners, and shooting a
|
||
number of them by sentence of court-martial. The soldiers soon
|
||
found, as all men did, that Oliver was not a man to be trifled
|
||
with. And there was an end of the mutiny.
|
||
|
||
The Scottish Parliament did not know Oliver yet; so, on hearing of
|
||
the King's execution, it proclaimed the Prince of Wales King
|
||
Charles the Second, on condition of his respecting the Solemn
|
||
League and Covenant. Charles was abroad at that time, and so was
|
||
Montrose, from whose help he had hopes enough to keep him holding
|
||
on and off with commissioners from Scotland, just as his father
|
||
might have done. These hopes were soon at an end; for, Montrose,
|
||
having raised a few hundred exiles in Germany, and landed with them
|
||
in Scotland, found that the people there, instead of joining him,
|
||
deserted the country at his approach. He was soon taken prisoner
|
||
and carried to Edinburgh. There he was received with every
|
||
possible insult, and carried to prison in a cart, his officers
|
||
going two and two before him. He was sentenced by the Parliament
|
||
to be hanged on a gallows thirty feet high, to have his head set on
|
||
a spike in Edinburgh, and his limbs distributed in other places,
|
||
according to the old barbarous manner. He said he had always acted
|
||
under the Royal orders, and only wished he had limbs enough to be
|
||
distributed through Christendom, that it might be the more widely
|
||
known how loyal he had been. He went to the scaffold in a bright
|
||
and brilliant dress, and made a bold end at thirty-eight years of
|
||
age. The breath was scarcely out of his body when Charles
|
||
abandoned his memory, and denied that he had ever given him orders
|
||
to rise in his behalf. O the family failing was strong in that
|
||
Charles then!
|
||
|
||
Oliver had been appointed by the Parliament to command the army in
|
||
Ireland, where he took a terrible vengeance for the sanguinary
|
||
rebellion, and made tremendous havoc, particularly in the siege of
|
||
Drogheda, where no quarter was given, and where he found at least a
|
||
thousand of the inhabitants shut up together in the great church:
|
||
every one of whom was killed by his soldiers, usually known as
|
||
OLIVER'S IRONSIDES. There were numbers of friars and priests among
|
||
them, and Oliver gruffly wrote home in his despatch that these were
|
||
'knocked on the head' like the rest.
|
||
|
||
But, Charles having got over to Scotland where the men of the
|
||
Solemn League and Covenant led him a prodigiously dull life and
|
||
made him very weary with long sermons and grim Sundays, the
|
||
Parliament called the redoubtable Oliver home to knock the Scottish
|
||
men on the head for setting up that Prince. Oliver left his son-
|
||
in-law, Ireton, as general in Ireland in his stead (he died there
|
||
afterwards), and he imitated the example of his father-in-law with
|
||
such good will that he brought the country to subjection, and laid
|
||
it at the feet of the Parliament. In the end, they passed an act
|
||
for the settlement of Ireland, generally pardoning all the common
|
||
people, but exempting from this grace such of the wealthier sort as
|
||
had been concerned in the rebellion, or in any killing of
|
||
Protestants, or who refused to lay down their arms. Great numbers
|
||
of Irish were got out of the country to serve under Catholic powers
|
||
abroad, and a quantity of land was declared to have been forfeited
|
||
by past offences, and was given to people who had lent money to the
|
||
Parliament early in the war. These were sweeping measures; but, if
|
||
Oliver Cromwell had had his own way fully, and had stayed in
|
||
Ireland, he would have done more yet.
|
||
|
||
However, as I have said, the Parliament wanted Oliver for Scotland;
|
||
so, home Oliver came, and was made Commander of all the Forces of
|
||
the Commonwealth of England, and in three days away he went with
|
||
sixteen thousand soldiers to fight the Scottish men. Now, the
|
||
Scottish men, being then - as you will generally find them now -
|
||
mighty cautious, reflected that the troops they had were not used
|
||
to war like the Ironsides, and would be beaten in an open fight.
|
||
Therefore they said, 'If we live quiet in our trenches in Edinburgh
|
||
here, and if all the farmers come into the town and desert the
|
||
country, the Ironsides will be driven out by iron hunger and be
|
||
forced to go away.' This was, no doubt, the wisest plan; but as
|
||
the Scottish clergy WOULD interfere with what they knew nothing
|
||
about, and would perpetually preach long sermons exhorting the
|
||
soldiers to come out and fight, the soldiers got it in their heads
|
||
that they absolutely must come out and fight. Accordingly, in an
|
||
evil hour for themselves, they came out of their safe position.
|
||
Oliver fell upon them instantly, and killed three thousand, and
|
||
took ten thousand prisoners.
|
||
|
||
To gratify the Scottish Parliament, and preserve their favour,
|
||
Charles had signed a declaration they laid before him, reproaching
|
||
the memory of his father and mother, and representing himself as a
|
||
most religious Prince, to whom the Solemn League and Covenant was
|
||
as dear as life. He meant no sort of truth in this, and soon
|
||
afterwards galloped away on horseback to join some tiresome
|
||
Highland friends, who were always flourishing dirks and
|
||
broadswords. He was overtaken and induced to return; but this
|
||
attempt, which was called 'The Start,' did him just so much
|
||
service, that they did not preach quite such long sermons at him
|
||
afterwards as they had done before.
|
||
|
||
On the first of January, one thousand six hundred and fifty-one,
|
||
the Scottish people crowned him at Scone. He immediately took the
|
||
chief command of an army of twenty thousand men, and marched to
|
||
Stirling. His hopes were heightened, I dare say, by the
|
||
redoubtable Oliver being ill of an ague; but Oliver scrambled out
|
||
of bed in no time, and went to work with such energy that he got
|
||
behind the Royalist army and cut it off from all communication with
|
||
Scotland. There was nothing for it then, but to go on to England;
|
||
so it went on as far as Worcester, where the mayor and some of the
|
||
gentry proclaimed King Charles the Second straightway. His
|
||
proclamation, however, was of little use to him, for very few
|
||
Royalists appeared; and, on the very same day, two people were
|
||
publicly beheaded on Tower Hill for espousing his cause. Up came
|
||
Oliver to Worcester too, at double quick speed, and he and his
|
||
Ironsides so laid about them in the great battle which was fought
|
||
there, that they completely beat the Scottish men, and destroyed
|
||
the Royalist army; though the Scottish men fought so gallantly that
|
||
it took five hours to do.
|
||
|
||
The escape of Charles after this battle of Worcester did him good
|
||
service long afterwards, for it induced many of the generous
|
||
English people to take a romantic interest in him, and to think
|
||
much better of him than he ever deserved. He fled in the night,
|
||
with not more than sixty followers, to the house of a Catholic lady
|
||
in Staffordshire. There, for his greater safety, the whole sixty
|
||
left him. He cropped his hair, stained his face and hands brown as
|
||
if they were sunburnt, put on the clothes of a labouring
|
||
countryman, and went out in the morning with his axe in his hand,
|
||
accompanied by four wood-cutters who were brothers, and another man
|
||
who was their brother-in-law. These good fellows made a bed for
|
||
him under a tree, as the weather was very bad; and the wife of one
|
||
of them brought him food to eat; and the old mother of the four
|
||
brothers came and fell down on her knees before him in the wood,
|
||
and thanked God that her sons were engaged in saving his life. At
|
||
night, he came out of the forest and went on to another house which
|
||
was near the river Severn, with the intention of passing into
|
||
Wales; but the place swarmed with soldiers, and the bridges were
|
||
guarded, and all the boats were made fast. So, after lying in a
|
||
hayloft covered over with hay, for some time, he came out of his
|
||
place, attended by COLONEL CARELESS, a Catholic gentleman who had
|
||
met him there, and with whom he lay hid, all next day, up in the
|
||
shady branches of a fine old oak. It was lucky for the King that
|
||
it was September-time, and that the leaves had not begun to fall,
|
||
since he and the Colonel, perched up in this tree, could catch
|
||
glimpses of the soldiers riding about below, and could hear the
|
||
crash in the wood as they went about beating the boughs.
|
||
|
||
After this, he walked and walked until his feet were all blistered;
|
||
and, having been concealed all one day in a house which was
|
||
searched by the troopers while he was there, went with LORD WILMOT,
|
||
another of his good friends, to a place called Bentley, where one
|
||
MISS LANE, a Protestant lady, had obtained a pass to be allowed to
|
||
ride through the guards to see a relation of hers near Bristol.
|
||
Disguised as a servant, he rode in the saddle before this young
|
||
lady to the house of SIR JOHN WINTER, while Lord Wilmot rode there
|
||
boldly, like a plain country gentleman, with dogs at his heels. It
|
||
happened that Sir John Winter's butler had been servant in Richmond
|
||
Palace, and knew Charles the moment he set eyes upon him; but, the
|
||
butler was faithful and kept the secret. As no ship could be found
|
||
to carry him abroad, it was planned that he should go - still
|
||
travelling with Miss Lane as her servant - to another house, at
|
||
Trent near Sherborne in Dorsetshire; and then Miss Lane and her
|
||
cousin, MR. LASCELLES, who had gone on horseback beside her all the
|
||
way, went home. I hope Miss Lane was going to marry that cousin,
|
||
for I am sure she must have been a brave, kind girl. If I had been
|
||
that cousin, I should certainly have loved Miss Lane.
|
||
|
||
When Charles, lonely for the loss of Miss Lane, was safe at Trent,
|
||
a ship was hired at Lyme, the master of which engaged to take two
|
||
gentlemen to France. In the evening of the same day, the King -
|
||
now riding as servant before another young lady - set off for a
|
||
public-house at a place called Charmouth, where the captain of the
|
||
vessel was to take him on board. But, the captain's wife, being
|
||
afraid of her husband getting into trouble, locked him up and would
|
||
not let him sail. Then they went away to Bridport; and, coming to
|
||
the inn there, found the stable-yard full of soldiers who were on
|
||
the look-out for Charles, and who talked about him while they
|
||
drank. He had such presence of mind, that he led the horses of his
|
||
party through the yard as any other servant might have done, and
|
||
said, 'Come out of the way, you soldiers; let us have room to pass
|
||
here!' As he went along, he met a half-tipsy ostler, who rubbed
|
||
his eyes and said to him, 'Why, I was formerly servant to Mr.
|
||
Potter at Exeter, and surely I have sometimes seen you there, young
|
||
man?' He certainly had, for Charles had lodged there. His ready
|
||
answer was, 'Ah, I did live with him once; but I have no time to
|
||
talk now. We'll have a pot of beer together when I come back.'
|
||
|
||
From this dangerous place he returned to Trent, and lay there
|
||
concealed several days. Then he escaped to Heale, near Salisbury;
|
||
where, in the house of a widow lady, he was hidden five days, until
|
||
the master of a collier lying off Shoreham in Sussex, undertook to
|
||
convey a 'gentleman' to France. On the night of the fifteenth of
|
||
October, accompanied by two colonels and a merchant, the King rode
|
||
to Brighton, then a little fishing village, to give the captain of
|
||
the ship a supper before going on board; but, so many people knew
|
||
him, that this captain knew him too, and not only he, but the
|
||
landlord and landlady also. Before he went away, the landlord came
|
||
behind his chair, kissed his hand, and said he hoped to live to be
|
||
a lord and to see his wife a lady; at which Charles laughed. They
|
||
had had a good supper by this time, and plenty of smoking and
|
||
drinking, at which the King was a first-rate hand; so, the captain
|
||
assured him that he would stand by him, and he did. It was agreed
|
||
that the captain should pretend to sail to Deal, and that Charles
|
||
should address the sailors and say he was a gentleman in debt who
|
||
was running away from his creditors, and that he hoped they would
|
||
join him in persuading the captain to put him ashore in France. As
|
||
the King acted his part very well indeed, and gave the sailors
|
||
twenty shillings to drink, they begged the captain to do what such
|
||
a worthy gentleman asked. He pretended to yield to their
|
||
entreaties, and the King got safe to Normandy.
|
||
|
||
Ireland being now subdued, and Scotland kept quiet by plenty of
|
||
forts and soldiers put there by Oliver, the Parliament would have
|
||
gone on quietly enough, as far as fighting with any foreign enemy
|
||
went, but for getting into trouble with the Dutch, who in the
|
||
spring of the year one thousand six hundred and fifty-one sent a
|
||
fleet into the Downs under their ADMIRAL VAN TROMP, to call upon
|
||
the bold English ADMIRAL BLAKE (who was there with half as many
|
||
ships as the Dutch) to strike his flag. Blake fired a raging
|
||
broadside instead, and beat off Van Tromp; who, in the autumn, came
|
||
back again with seventy ships, and challenged the bold Blake - who
|
||
still was only half as strong - to fight him. Blake fought him all
|
||
day; but, finding that the Dutch were too many for him, got quietly
|
||
off at night. What does Van Tromp upon this, but goes cruising and
|
||
boasting about the Channel, between the North Foreland and the Isle
|
||
of Wight, with a great Dutch broom tied to his masthead, as a sign
|
||
that he could and would sweep the English of the sea! Within three
|
||
months, Blake lowered his tone though, and his broom too; for, he
|
||
and two other bold commanders, DEAN and MONK, fought him three
|
||
whole days, took twenty-three of his ships, shivered his broom to
|
||
pieces, and settled his business.
|
||
|
||
Things were no sooner quiet again, than the army began to complain
|
||
to the Parliament that they were not governing the nation properly,
|
||
and to hint that they thought they could do it better themselves.
|
||
Oliver, who had now made up his mind to be the head of the state,
|
||
or nothing at all, supported them in this, and called a meeting of
|
||
officers and his own Parliamentary friends, at his lodgings in
|
||
Whitehall, to consider the best way of getting rid of the
|
||
Parliament. It had now lasted just as many years as the King's
|
||
unbridled power had lasted, before it came into existence. The end
|
||
of the deliberation was, that Oliver went down to the House in his
|
||
usual plain black dress, with his usual grey worsted stockings, but
|
||
with an unusual party of soldiers behind him. These last he left
|
||
in the lobby, and then went in and sat down. Presently he got up,
|
||
made the Parliament a speech, told them that the Lord had done with
|
||
them, stamped his foot and said, 'You are no Parliament. Bring
|
||
them in! Bring them in!' At this signal the door flew open, and
|
||
the soldiers appeared. 'This is not honest,' said Sir Harry Vane,
|
||
one of the members. 'Sir Harry Vane!' cried Cromwell; 'O, Sir
|
||
Harry Vane! The Lord deliver me from Sir Harry Vane!' Then he
|
||
pointed out members one by one, and said this man was a drunkard,
|
||
and that man a dissipated fellow, and that man a liar, and so on.
|
||
Then he caused the Speaker to be walked out of his chair, told the
|
||
guard to clear the House, called the mace upon the table - which is
|
||
a sign that the House is sitting - 'a fool's bauble,' and said,
|
||
'here, carry it away!' Being obeyed in all these orders, he
|
||
quietly locked the door, put the key in his pocket, walked back to
|
||
Whitehall again, and told his friends, who were still assembled
|
||
there, what he had done.
|
||
|
||
They formed a new Council of State after this extraordinary
|
||
proceeding, and got a new Parliament together in their own way:
|
||
which Oliver himself opened in a sort of sermon, and which he said
|
||
was the beginning of a perfect heaven upon earth. In this
|
||
Parliament there sat a well-known leather-seller, who had taken the
|
||
singular name of Praise God Barebones, and from whom it was called,
|
||
for a joke, Barebones's Parliament, though its general name was the
|
||
Little Parliament. As it soon appeared that it was not going to
|
||
put Oliver in the first place, it turned out to be not at all like
|
||
the beginning of heaven upon earth, and Oliver said it really was
|
||
not to be borne with. So he cleared off that Parliament in much
|
||
the same way as he had disposed of the other; and then the council
|
||
of officers decided that he must be made the supreme authority of
|
||
the kingdom, under the title of the Lord Protector of the
|
||
Commonwealth.
|
||
|
||
So, on the sixteenth of December, one thousand six hundred and
|
||
fifty-three, a great procession was formed at Oliver's door, and he
|
||
came out in a black velvet suit and a big pair of boots, and got
|
||
into his coach and went down to Westminster, attended by the
|
||
judges, and the lord mayor, and the aldermen, and all the other
|
||
great and wonderful personages of the country. There, in the Court
|
||
of Chancery, he publicly accepted the office of Lord Protector.
|
||
Then he was sworn, and the City sword was handed to him, and the
|
||
seal was handed to him, and all the other things were handed to him
|
||
which are usually handed to Kings and Queens on state occasions.
|
||
When Oliver had handed them all back, he was quite made and
|
||
completely finished off as Lord Protector; and several of the
|
||
Ironsides preached about it at great length, all the evening.
|
||
|
||
SECOND PART
|
||
|
||
OLIVER CROMWELL - whom the people long called OLD NOLL - in
|
||
accepting the office of Protector, had bound himself by a certain
|
||
paper which was handed to him, called 'the Instrument,' to summon a
|
||
Parliament, consisting of between four and five hundred members, in
|
||
the election of which neither the Royalists nor the Catholics were
|
||
to have any share. He had also pledged himself that this
|
||
Parliament should not be dissolved without its own consent until it
|
||
had sat five months.
|
||
|
||
When this Parliament met, Oliver made a speech to them of three
|
||
hours long, very wisely advising them what to do for the credit and
|
||
happiness of the country. To keep down the more violent members,
|
||
he required them to sign a recognition of what they were forbidden
|
||
by 'the Instrument' to do; which was, chiefly, to take the power
|
||
from one single person at the head of the state or to command the
|
||
army. Then he dismissed them to go to work. With his usual vigour
|
||
and resolution he went to work himself with some frantic preachers
|
||
- who were rather overdoing their sermons in calling him a villain
|
||
and a tyrant - by shutting up their chapels, and sending a few of
|
||
them off to prison.
|
||
|
||
There was not at that time, in England or anywhere else, a man so
|
||
able to govern the country as Oliver Cromwell. Although he ruled
|
||
with a strong hand, and levied a very heavy tax on the Royalists
|
||
(but not until they had plotted against his life), he ruled wisely,
|
||
and as the times required. He caused England to be so respected
|
||
abroad, that I wish some lords and gentlemen who have governed it
|
||
under kings and queens in later days would have taken a leaf out of
|
||
Oliver Cromwell's book. He sent bold Admiral Blake to the
|
||
Mediterranean Sea, to make the Duke of Tuscany pay sixty thousand
|
||
pounds for injuries he had done to British subjects, and spoliation
|
||
he had committed on English merchants. He further despatched him
|
||
and his fleet to Algiers, Tunis, and Tripoli, to have every English
|
||
ship and every English man delivered up to him that had been taken
|
||
by pirates in those parts. All this was gloriously done; and it
|
||
began to be thoroughly well known, all over the world, that England
|
||
was governed by a man in earnest, who would not allow the English
|
||
name to be insulted or slighted anywhere.
|
||
|
||
These were not all his foreign triumphs. He sent a fleet to sea
|
||
against the Dutch; and the two powers, each with one hundred ships
|
||
upon its side, met in the English Channel off the North Foreland,
|
||
where the fight lasted all day long. Dean was killed in this
|
||
fight; but Monk, who commanded in the same ship with him, threw his
|
||
cloak over his body, that the sailors might not know of his death,
|
||
and be disheartened. Nor were they. The English broadsides so
|
||
exceedingly astonished the Dutch that they sheered off at last,
|
||
though the redoubtable Van Tromp fired upon them with his own guns
|
||
for deserting their flag. Soon afterwards, the two fleets engaged
|
||
again, off the coast of Holland. There, the valiant Van Tromp was
|
||
shot through the heart, and the Dutch gave in, and peace was made.
|
||
|
||
Further than this, Oliver resolved not to bear the domineering and
|
||
bigoted conduct of Spain, which country not only claimed a right to
|
||
all the gold and silver that could be found in South America, and
|
||
treated the ships of all other countries who visited those regions,
|
||
as pirates, but put English subjects into the horrible Spanish
|
||
prisons of the Inquisition. So, Oliver told the Spanish ambassador
|
||
that English ships must be free to go wherever they would, and that
|
||
English merchants must not be thrown into those same dungeons, no,
|
||
not for the pleasure of all the priests in Spain. To this, the
|
||
Spanish ambassador replied that the gold and silver country, and
|
||
the Holy Inquisition, were his King's two eyes, neither of which he
|
||
could submit to have put out. Very well, said Oliver, then he was
|
||
afraid he (Oliver) must damage those two eyes directly.
|
||
|
||
So, another fleet was despatched under two commanders, PENN and
|
||
VENABLES, for Hispaniola; where, however, the Spaniards got the
|
||
better of the fight. Consequently, the fleet came home again,
|
||
after taking Jamaica on the way. Oliver, indignant with the two
|
||
commanders who had not done what bold Admiral Blake would have
|
||
done, clapped them both into prison, declared war against Spain,
|
||
and made a treaty with France, in virtue of which it was to shelter
|
||
the King and his brother the Duke of York no longer. Then, he sent
|
||
a fleet abroad under bold Admiral Blake, which brought the King of
|
||
Portugal to his senses - just to keep its hand in - and then
|
||
engaged a Spanish fleet, sunk four great ships, and took two more,
|
||
laden with silver to the value of two millions of pounds: which
|
||
dazzling prize was brought from Portsmouth to London in waggons,
|
||
with the populace of all the towns and villages through which the
|
||
waggons passed, shouting with all their might. After this victory,
|
||
bold Admiral Blake sailed away to the port of Santa Cruz to cut off
|
||
the Spanish treasure-ships coming from Mexico. There, he found
|
||
them, ten in number, with seven others to take care of them, and a
|
||
big castle, and seven batteries, all roaring and blazing away at
|
||
him with great guns. Blake cared no more for great guns than for
|
||
pop-guns - no more for their hot iron balls than for snow-balls.
|
||
He dashed into the harbour, captured and burnt every one of the
|
||
ships, and came sailing out again triumphantly, with the victorious
|
||
English flag flying at his masthead. This was the last triumph of
|
||
this great commander, who had sailed and fought until he was quite
|
||
worn out. He died, as his successful ship was coming into Plymouth
|
||
Harbour amidst the joyful acclamations of the people, and was
|
||
buried in state in Westminster Abbey. Not to lie there, long.
|
||
|
||
Over and above all this, Oliver found that the VAUDOIS, or
|
||
Protestant people of the valleys of Lucerne, were insolently
|
||
treated by the Catholic powers, and were even put to death for
|
||
their religion, in an audacious and bloody manner. Instantly, he
|
||
informed those powers that this was a thing which Protestant
|
||
England would not allow; and he speedily carried his point, through
|
||
the might of his great name, and established their right to worship
|
||
God in peace after their own harmless manner.
|
||
|
||
Lastly, his English army won such admiration in fighting with the
|
||
French against the Spaniards, that, after they had assaulted the
|
||
town of Dunkirk together, the French King in person gave it up to
|
||
the English, that it might be a token to them of their might and
|
||
valour.
|
||
|
||
There were plots enough against Oliver among the frantic
|
||
religionists (who called themselves Fifth Monarchy Men), and among
|
||
the disappointed Republicans. He had a difficult game to play, for
|
||
the Royalists were always ready to side with either party against
|
||
him. The 'King over the water,' too, as Charles was called, had no
|
||
scruples about plotting with any one against his life; although
|
||
there is reason to suppose that he would willingly have married one
|
||
of his daughters, if Oliver would have had such a son-in-law.
|
||
There was a certain COLONEL SAXBY of the army, once a great
|
||
supporter of Oliver's but now turned against him, who was a
|
||
grievous trouble to him through all this part of his career; and
|
||
who came and went between the discontented in England and Spain,
|
||
and Charles who put himself in alliance with Spain on being thrown
|
||
off by France. This man died in prison at last; but not until
|
||
there had been very serious plots between the Royalists and
|
||
Republicans, and an actual rising of them in England, when they
|
||
burst into the city of Salisbury, on a Sunday night, seized the
|
||
judges who were going to hold the assizes there next day, and would
|
||
have hanged them but for the merciful objections of the more
|
||
temperate of their number. Oliver was so vigorous and shrewd that
|
||
he soon put this revolt down, as he did most other conspiracies;
|
||
and it was well for one of its chief managers - that same Lord
|
||
Wilmot who had assisted in Charles's flight, and was now EARL OF
|
||
ROCHESTER - that he made his escape. Oliver seemed to have eyes
|
||
and ears everywhere, and secured such sources of information as his
|
||
enemies little dreamed of. There was a chosen body of six persons,
|
||
called the Sealed Knot, who were in the closest and most secret
|
||
confidence of Charles. One of the foremost of these very men, a
|
||
SIR RICHARD WILLIS, reported to Oliver everything that passed among
|
||
them, and had two hundred a year for it.
|
||
|
||
MILES SYNDARCOMB, also of the old army, was another conspirator
|
||
against the Protector. He and a man named CECIL, bribed one of his
|
||
Life Guards to let them have good notice when he was going out -
|
||
intending to shoot him from a window. But, owing either to his
|
||
caution or his good fortune, they could never get an aim at him.
|
||
Disappointed in this design, they got into the chapel in Whitehall,
|
||
with a basketful of combustibles, which were to explode by means of
|
||
a slow match in six hours; then, in the noise and confusion of the
|
||
fire, they hoped to kill Oliver. But, the Life Guardsman himself
|
||
disclosed this plot; and they were seized, and Miles died (or
|
||
killed himself in prison) a little while before he was ordered for
|
||
execution. A few such plotters Oliver caused to be beheaded, a few
|
||
more to be hanged, and many more, including those who rose in arms
|
||
against him, to be sent as slaves to the West Indies. If he were
|
||
rigid, he was impartial too, in asserting the laws of England.
|
||
When a Portuguese nobleman, the brother of the Portuguese
|
||
ambassador, killed a London citizen in mistake for another man with
|
||
whom he had had a quarrel, Oliver caused him to be tried before a
|
||
jury of Englishmen and foreigners, and had him executed in spite of
|
||
the entreaties of all the ambassadors in London.
|
||
|
||
One of Oliver's own friends, the DUKE OF OLDENBURGH, in sending him
|
||
a present of six fine coach-horses, was very near doing more to
|
||
please the Royalists than all the plotters put together. One day,
|
||
Oliver went with his coach, drawn by these six horses, into Hyde
|
||
Park, to dine with his secretary and some of his other gentlemen
|
||
under the trees there. After dinner, being merry, he took it into
|
||
his head to put his friends inside and to drive them home: a
|
||
postillion riding one of the foremost horses, as the custom was.
|
||
On account of Oliver's being too free with the whip, the six fine
|
||
horses went off at a gallop, the postillion got thrown, and Oliver
|
||
fell upon the coach-pole and narrowly escaped being shot by his own
|
||
pistol, which got entangled with his clothes in the harness, and
|
||
went off. He was dragged some distance by the foot, until his foot
|
||
came out of the shoe, and then he came safely to the ground under
|
||
the broad body of the coach, and was very little the worse. The
|
||
gentlemen inside were only bruised, and the discontented people of
|
||
all parties were much disappointed.
|
||
|
||
The rest of the history of the Protectorate of Oliver Cromwell is a
|
||
history of his Parliaments. His first one not pleasing him at all,
|
||
he waited until the five months were out, and then dissolved it.
|
||
The next was better suited to his views; and from that he desired
|
||
to get - if he could with safety to himself - the title of King.
|
||
He had had this in his mind some time: whether because he thought
|
||
that the English people, being more used to the title, were more
|
||
likely to obey it; or whether because he really wished to be a king
|
||
himself, and to leave the succession to that title in his family,
|
||
is far from clear. He was already as high, in England and in all
|
||
the world, as he would ever be, and I doubt if he cared for the
|
||
mere name. However, a paper, called the 'Humble Petition and
|
||
Advice,' was presented to him by the House of Commons, praying him
|
||
to take a high title and to appoint his successor. That he would
|
||
have taken the title of King there is no doubt, but for the strong
|
||
opposition of the army. This induced him to forbear, and to assent
|
||
only to the other points of the petition. Upon which occasion
|
||
there was another grand show in Westminster Hall, when the Speaker
|
||
of the House of Commons formally invested him with a purple robe
|
||
lined with ermine, and presented him with a splendidly bound Bible,
|
||
and put a golden sceptre in his hand. The next time the Parliament
|
||
met, he called a House of Lords of sixty members, as the petition
|
||
gave him power to do; but as that Parliament did not please him
|
||
either, and would not proceed to the business of the country, he
|
||
jumped into a coach one morning, took six Guards with him, and sent
|
||
them to the right-about. I wish this had been a warning to
|
||
Parliaments to avoid long speeches, and do more work.
|
||
|
||
It was the month of August, one thousand six hundred and fifty-
|
||
eight, when Oliver Cromwell's favourite daughter, ELIZABETH
|
||
CLAYPOLE (who had lately lost her youngest son), lay very ill, and
|
||
his mind was greatly troubled, because he loved her dearly.
|
||
Another of his daughters was married to LORD FALCONBERG, another to
|
||
the grandson of the Earl of Warwick, and he had made his son
|
||
RICHARD one of the Members of the Upper House. He was very kind
|
||
and loving to them all, being a good father and a good husband; but
|
||
he loved this daughter the best of the family, and went down to
|
||
Hampton Court to see her, and could hardly be induced to stir from
|
||
her sick room until she died. Although his religion had been of a
|
||
gloomy kind, his disposition had been always cheerful. He had been
|
||
fond of music in his home, and had kept open table once a week for
|
||
all officers of the army not below the rank of captain, and had
|
||
always preserved in his house a quiet, sensible dignity. He
|
||
encouraged men of genius and learning, and loved to have them about
|
||
him. MILTON was one of his great friends. He was good humoured
|
||
too, with the nobility, whose dresses and manners were very
|
||
different from his; and to show them what good information he had,
|
||
he would sometimes jokingly tell them when they were his guests,
|
||
where they had last drunk the health of the 'King over the water,'
|
||
and would recommend them to be more private (if they could) another
|
||
time. But he had lived in busy times, had borne the weight of
|
||
heavy State affairs, and had often gone in fear of his life. He
|
||
was ill of the gout and ague; and when the death of his beloved
|
||
child came upon him in addition, he sank, never to raise his head
|
||
again. He told his physicians on the twenty-fourth of August that
|
||
the Lord had assured him that he was not to die in that illness,
|
||
and that he would certainly get better. This was only his sick
|
||
fancy, for on the third of September, which was the anniversary of
|
||
the great battle of Worcester, and the day of the year which he
|
||
called his fortunate day, he died, in the sixtieth year of his age.
|
||
He had been delirious, and had lain insensible some hours, but he
|
||
had been overheard to murmur a very good prayer the day before.
|
||
The whole country lamented his death. If you want to know the real
|
||
worth of Oliver Cromwell, and his real services to his country, you
|
||
can hardly do better than compare England under him, with England
|
||
under CHARLES THE SECOND.
|
||
|
||
He had appointed his son Richard to succeed him, and after there
|
||
had been, at Somerset House in the Strand, a lying in state more
|
||
splendid than sensible - as all such vanities after death are, I
|
||
think - Richard became Lord Protector. He was an amiable country
|
||
gentleman, but had none of his father's great genius, and was quite
|
||
unfit for such a post in such a storm of parties. Richard's
|
||
Protectorate, which only lasted a year and a half, is a history of
|
||
quarrels between the officers of the army and the Parliament, and
|
||
between the officers among themselves; and of a growing discontent
|
||
among the people, who had far too many long sermons and far too few
|
||
amusements, and wanted a change. At last, General Monk got the
|
||
army well into his own hands, and then in pursuance of a secret
|
||
plan he seems to have entertained from the time of Oliver's death,
|
||
declared for the King's cause. He did not do this openly; but, in
|
||
his place in the House of Commons, as one of the members for
|
||
Devonshire, strongly advocated the proposals of one SIR JOHN
|
||
GREENVILLE, who came to the House with a letter from Charles, dated
|
||
from Breda, and with whom he had previously been in secret
|
||
communication. There had been plots and counterplots, and a recall
|
||
of the last members of the Long Parliament, and an end of the Long
|
||
Parliament, and risings of the Royalists that were made too soon;
|
||
and most men being tired out, and there being no one to head the
|
||
country now great Oliver was dead, it was readily agreed to welcome
|
||
Charles Stuart. Some of the wiser and better members said - what
|
||
was most true - that in the letter from Breda, he gave no real
|
||
promise to govern well, and that it would be best to make him
|
||
pledge himself beforehand as to what he should be bound to do for
|
||
the benefit of the kingdom. Monk said, however, it would be all
|
||
right when he came, and he could not come too soon.
|
||
|
||
So, everybody found out all in a moment that the country MUST be
|
||
prosperous and happy, having another Stuart to condescend to reign
|
||
over it; and there was a prodigious firing off of guns, lighting of
|
||
bonfires, ringing of bells, and throwing up of caps. The people
|
||
drank the King's health by thousands in the open streets, and
|
||
everybody rejoiced. Down came the Arms of the Commonwealth, up
|
||
went the Royal Arms instead, and out came the public money. Fifty
|
||
thousand pounds for the King, ten thousand pounds for his brother
|
||
the Duke of York, five thousand pounds for his brother the Duke of
|
||
Gloucester. Prayers for these gracious Stuarts were put up in all
|
||
the churches; commissioners were sent to Holland (which suddenly
|
||
found out that Charles was a great man, and that it loved him) to
|
||
invite the King home; Monk and the Kentish grandees went to Dover,
|
||
to kneel down before him as he landed. He kissed and embraced
|
||
Monk, made him ride in the coach with himself and his brothers,
|
||
came on to London amid wonderful shoutings, and passed through the
|
||
army at Blackheath on the twenty-ninth of May (his birthday), in
|
||
the year one thousand six hundred and sixty. Greeted by splendid
|
||
dinners under tents, by flags and tapestry streaming from all the
|
||
houses, by delighted crowds in all the streets, by troops of
|
||
noblemen and gentlemen in rich dresses, by City companies, train-
|
||
bands, drummers, trumpeters, the great Lord Mayor, and the majestic
|
||
Aldermen, the King went on to Whitehall. On entering it, he
|
||
commemorated his Restoration with the joke that it really would
|
||
seem to have been his own fault that he had not come long ago,
|
||
since everybody told him that he had always wished for him with all
|
||
his heart.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXV - ENGLAND UNDER CHARLES THE SECOND, CALLED THE MERRY
|
||
MONARCH
|
||
|
||
THERE never were such profligate times in England as under Charles
|
||
the Second. Whenever you see his portrait, with his swarthy, ill-
|
||
looking face and great nose, you may fancy him in his Court at
|
||
Whitehall, surrounded by some of the very worst vagabonds in the
|
||
kingdom (though they were lords and ladies), drinking, gambling,
|
||
indulging in vicious conversation, and committing every kind of
|
||
profligate excess. It has been a fashion to call Charles the
|
||
Second 'The Merry Monarch.' Let me try to give you a general idea
|
||
of some of the merry things that were done, in the merry days when
|
||
this merry gentleman sat upon his merry throne, in merry England.
|
||
|
||
The first merry proceeding was - of course - to declare that he was
|
||
one of the greatest, the wisest, and the noblest kings that ever
|
||
shone, like the blessed sun itself, on this benighted earth. The
|
||
next merry and pleasant piece of business was, for the Parliament,
|
||
in the humblest manner, to give him one million two hundred
|
||
thousand pounds a year, and to settle upon him for life that old
|
||
disputed tonnage and poundage which had been so bravely fought for.
|
||
Then, General Monk being made EARL OF ALBEMARLE, and a few other
|
||
Royalists similarly rewarded, the law went to work to see what was
|
||
to be done to those persons (they were called Regicides) who had
|
||
been concerned in making a martyr of the late King. Ten of these
|
||
were merrily executed; that is to say, six of the judges, one of
|
||
the council, Colonel Hacker and another officer who had commanded
|
||
the Guards, and HUGH PETERS, a preacher who had preached against
|
||
the martyr with all his heart. These executions were so extremely
|
||
merry, that every horrible circumstance which Cromwell had
|
||
abandoned was revived with appalling cruelty. The hearts of the
|
||
sufferers were torn out of their living bodies; their bowels were
|
||
burned before their faces; the executioner cut jokes to the next
|
||
victim, as he rubbed his filthy hands together, that were reeking
|
||
with the blood of the last; and the heads of the dead were drawn on
|
||
sledges with the living to the place of suffering. Still, even so
|
||
merry a monarch could not force one of these dying men to say that
|
||
he was sorry for what he had done. Nay, the most memorable thing
|
||
said among them was, that if the thing were to do again they would
|
||
do it.
|
||
|
||
Sir Harry Vane, who had furnished the evidence against Strafford,
|
||
and was one of the most staunch of the Republicans, was also tried,
|
||
found guilty, and ordered for execution. When he came upon the
|
||
scaffold on Tower Hill, after conducting his own defence with great
|
||
power, his notes of what he had meant to say to the people were
|
||
torn away from him, and the drums and trumpets were ordered to
|
||
sound lustily and drown his voice; for, the people had been so much
|
||
impressed by what the Regicides had calmly said with their last
|
||
breath, that it was the custom now, to have the drums and trumpets
|
||
always under the scaffold, ready to strike up. Vane said no more
|
||
than this: 'It is a bad cause which cannot bear the words of a
|
||
dying man:' and bravely died.
|
||
|
||
These merry scenes were succeeded by another, perhaps even merrier.
|
||
On the anniversary of the late King's death, the bodies of Oliver
|
||
Cromwell, Ireton, and Bradshaw, were torn out of their graves in
|
||
Westminster Abbey, dragged to Tyburn, hanged there on a gallows all
|
||
day long, and then beheaded. Imagine the head of Oliver Cromwell
|
||
set upon a pole to be stared at by a brutal crowd, not one of whom
|
||
would have dared to look the living Oliver in the face for half a
|
||
moment! Think, after you have read this reign, what England was
|
||
under Oliver Cromwell who was torn out of his grave, and what it
|
||
was under this merry monarch who sold it, like a merry Judas, over
|
||
and over again.
|
||
|
||
Of course, the remains of Oliver's wife and daughter were not to be
|
||
spared either, though they had been most excellent women. The base
|
||
clergy of that time gave up their bodies, which had been buried in
|
||
the Abbey, and - to the eternal disgrace of England - they were
|
||
thrown into a pit, together with the mouldering bones of Pym and of
|
||
the brave and bold old Admiral Blake.
|
||
|
||
The clergy acted this disgraceful part because they hoped to get
|
||
the nonconformists, or dissenters, thoroughly put down in this
|
||
reign, and to have but one prayer-book and one service for all
|
||
kinds of people, no matter what their private opinions were. This
|
||
was pretty well, I think, for a Protestant Church, which had
|
||
displaced the Romish Church because people had a right to their own
|
||
opinions in religious matters. However, they carried it with a
|
||
high hand, and a prayer-book was agreed upon, in which the
|
||
extremest opinions of Archbishop Laud were not forgotten. An Act
|
||
was passed, too, preventing any dissenter from holding any office
|
||
under any corporation. So, the regular clergy in their triumph
|
||
were soon as merry as the King. The army being by this time
|
||
disbanded, and the King crowned, everything was to go on easily for
|
||
evermore.
|
||
|
||
I must say a word here about the King's family. He had not been
|
||
long upon the throne when his brother the Duke of Gloucester, and
|
||
his sister the PRINCESS OF ORANGE, died within a few months of each
|
||
other, of small-pox. His remaining sister, the PRINCESS HENRIETTA,
|
||
married the DUKE OF ORLEANS, the brother of LOUIS THE FOURTEENTH,
|
||
King of France. His brother JAMES, DUKE OF YORK, was made High
|
||
Admiral, and by-and-by became a Catholic. He was a gloomy, sullen,
|
||
bilious sort of man, with a remarkable partiality for the ugliest
|
||
women in the country. He married, under very discreditable
|
||
circumstances, ANNE HYDE, the daughter of LORD CLARENDON, then the
|
||
King's principal Minister - not at all a delicate minister either,
|
||
but doing much of the dirty work of a very dirty palace. It became
|
||
important now that the King himself should be married; and divers
|
||
foreign Monarchs, not very particular about the character of their
|
||
son-in-law, proposed their daughters to him. The KING OF PORTUGAL
|
||
offered his daughter, CATHERINE OF BRAGANZA, and fifty thousand
|
||
pounds: in addition to which, the French King, who was favourable
|
||
to that match, offered a loan of another fifty thousand. The King
|
||
of Spain, on the other hand, offered any one out of a dozen of
|
||
Princesses, and other hopes of gain. But the ready money carried
|
||
the day, and Catherine came over in state to her merry marriage.
|
||
|
||
The whole Court was a great flaunting crowd of debauched men and
|
||
shameless women; and Catherine's merry husband insulted and
|
||
outraged her in every possible way, until she consented to receive
|
||
those worthless creatures as her very good friends, and to degrade
|
||
herself by their companionship. A MRS. PALMER, whom the King made
|
||
LADY CASTLEMAINE, and afterwards DUCHESS OF CLEVELAND, was one of
|
||
the most powerful of the bad women about the Court, and had great
|
||
influence with the King nearly all through his reign. Another
|
||
merry lady named MOLL DAVIES, a dancer at the theatre, was
|
||
afterwards her rival. So was NELL GWYN, first an orange girl and
|
||
then an actress, who really had good in her, and of whom one of the
|
||
worst things I know is, that actually she does seem to have been
|
||
fond of the King. The first DUKE OF ST. ALBANS was this orange
|
||
girl's child. In like manner the son of a merry waiting-lady, whom
|
||
the King created DUCHESS OF PORTSMOUTH, became the DUKE OF
|
||
RICHMOND. Upon the whole it is not so bad a thing to be a
|
||
commoner.
|
||
|
||
The Merry Monarch was so exceedingly merry among these merry
|
||
ladies, and some equally merry (and equally infamous) lords and
|
||
gentlemen, that he soon got through his hundred thousand pounds,
|
||
and then, by way of raising a little pocket-money, made a merry
|
||
bargain. He sold Dunkirk to the French King for five millions of
|
||
livres. When I think of the dignity to which Oliver Cromwell
|
||
raised England in the eyes of foreign powers, and when I think of
|
||
the manner in which he gained for England this very Dunkirk, I am
|
||
much inclined to consider that if the Merry Monarch had been made
|
||
to follow his father for this action, he would have received his
|
||
just deserts.
|
||
|
||
Though he was like his father in none of that father's greater
|
||
qualities, he was like him in being worthy of no trust. When he
|
||
sent that letter to the Parliament, from Breda, he did expressly
|
||
promise that all sincere religious opinions should be respected.
|
||
Yet he was no sooner firm in his power than he consented to one of
|
||
the worst Acts of Parliament ever passed. Under this law, every
|
||
minister who should not give his solemn assent to the Prayer-Book
|
||
by a certain day, was declared to be a minister no longer, and to
|
||
be deprived of his church. The consequence of this was that some
|
||
two thousand honest men were taken from their congregations, and
|
||
reduced to dire poverty and distress. It was followed by another
|
||
outrageous law, called the Conventicle Act, by which any person
|
||
above the age of sixteen who was present at any religious service
|
||
not according to the Prayer-Book, was to be imprisoned three months
|
||
for the first offence, six for the second, and to be transported
|
||
for the third. This Act alone filled the prisons, which were then
|
||
most dreadful dungeons, to overflowing.
|
||
|
||
The Covenanters in Scotland had already fared no better. A base
|
||
Parliament, usually known as the Drunken Parliament, in consequence
|
||
of its principal members being seldom sober, had been got together
|
||
to make laws against the Covenanters, and to force all men to be of
|
||
one mind in religious matters. The MARQUIS OF ARGYLE, relying on
|
||
the King's honour, had given himself up to him; but, he was
|
||
wealthy, and his enemies wanted his wealth. He was tried for
|
||
treason, on the evidence of some private letters in which he had
|
||
expressed opinions - as well he might - more favourable to the
|
||
government of the late Lord Protector than of the present merry and
|
||
religious King. He was executed, as were two men of mark among the
|
||
Covenanters; and SHARP, a traitor who had once been the friend of
|
||
the Presbyterians and betrayed them, was made Archbishop of St.
|
||
Andrew's, to teach the Scotch how to like bishops.
|
||
|
||
Things being in this merry state at home, the Merry Monarch
|
||
undertook a war with the Dutch; principally because they interfered
|
||
with an African company, established with the two objects of buying
|
||
gold-dust and slaves, of which the Duke of York was a leading
|
||
member. After some preliminary hostilities, the said Duke sailed
|
||
to the coast of Holland with a fleet of ninety-eight vessels of
|
||
war, and four fire-ships. This engaged with the Dutch fleet, of no
|
||
fewer than one hundred and thirteen ships. In the great battle
|
||
between the two forces, the Dutch lost eighteen ships, four
|
||
admirals, and seven thousand men. But, the English on shore were
|
||
in no mood of exultation when they heard the news.
|
||
|
||
For, this was the year and the time of the Great Plague in London.
|
||
During the winter of one thousand six hundred and sixty-four it had
|
||
been whispered about, that some few people had died here and there
|
||
of the disease called the Plague, in some of the unwholesome
|
||
suburbs around London. News was not published at that time as it
|
||
is now, and some people believed these rumours, and some
|
||
disbelieved them, and they were soon forgotten. But, in the month
|
||
of May, one thousand six hundred and sixty-five, it began to be
|
||
said all over the town that the disease had burst out with great
|
||
violence in St. Giles's, and that the people were dying in great
|
||
numbers. This soon turned out to be awfully true. The roads out
|
||
of London were choked up by people endeavouring to escape from the
|
||
infected city, and large sums were paid for any kind of conveyance.
|
||
The disease soon spread so fast, that it was necessary to shut up
|
||
the houses in which sick people were, and to cut them off from
|
||
communication with the living. Every one of these houses was
|
||
marked on the outside of the door with a red cross, and the words,
|
||
Lord, have mercy upon us! The streets were all deserted, grass
|
||
grew in the public ways, and there was a dreadful silence in the
|
||
air. When night came on, dismal rumblings used to be heard, and
|
||
these were the wheels of the death-carts, attended by men with
|
||
veiled faces and holding cloths to their mouths, who rang doleful
|
||
bells and cried in a loud and solemn voice, 'Bring out your dead!'
|
||
The corpses put into these carts were buried by torchlight in great
|
||
pits; no service being performed over them; all men being afraid to
|
||
stay for a moment on the brink of the ghastly graves. In the
|
||
general fear, children ran away from their parents, and parents
|
||
from their children. Some who were taken ill, died alone, and
|
||
without any help. Some were stabbed or strangled by hired nurses
|
||
who robbed them of all their money, and stole the very beds on
|
||
which they lay. Some went mad, dropped from the windows, ran
|
||
through the streets, and in their pain and frenzy flung themselves
|
||
into the river.
|
||
|
||
These were not all the horrors of the time. The wicked and
|
||
dissolute, in wild desperation, sat in the taverns singing roaring
|
||
songs, and were stricken as they drank, and went out and died. The
|
||
fearful and superstitious persuaded themselves that they saw
|
||
supernatural sights - burning swords in the sky, gigantic arms and
|
||
darts. Others pretended that at nights vast crowds of ghosts
|
||
walked round and round the dismal pits. One madman, naked, and
|
||
carrying a brazier full of burning coals upon his head, stalked
|
||
through the streets, crying out that he was a Prophet, commissioned
|
||
to denounce the vengeance of the Lord on wicked London. Another
|
||
always went to and fro, exclaiming, 'Yet forty days, and London
|
||
shall be destroyed!' A third awoke the echoes in the dismal
|
||
streets, by night and by day, and made the blood of the sick run
|
||
cold, by calling out incessantly, in a deep hoarse voice, 'O, the
|
||
great and dreadful God!'
|
||
|
||
Through the months of July and August and September, the Great
|
||
Plague raged more and more. Great fires were lighted in the
|
||
streets, in the hope of stopping the infection; but there was a
|
||
plague of rain too, and it beat the fires out. At last, the winds
|
||
which usually arise at that time of the year which is called the
|
||
equinox, when day and night are of equal length all over the world,
|
||
began to blow, and to purify the wretched town. The deaths began
|
||
to decrease, the red crosses slowly to disappear, the fugitives to
|
||
return, the shops to open, pale frightened faces to be seen in the
|
||
streets. The Plague had been in every part of England, but in
|
||
close and unwholesome London it had killed one hundred thousand
|
||
people.
|
||
|
||
All this time, the Merry Monarch was as merry as ever, and as
|
||
worthless as ever. All this time, the debauched lords and
|
||
gentlemen and the shameless ladies danced and gamed and drank, and
|
||
loved and hated one another, according to their merry ways.
|
||
|
||
So little humanity did the government learn from the late
|
||
affliction, that one of the first things the Parliament did when it
|
||
met at Oxford (being as yet afraid to come to London), was to make
|
||
a law, called the Five Mile Act, expressly directed against those
|
||
poor ministers who, in the time of the Plague, had manfully come
|
||
back to comfort the unhappy people. This infamous law, by
|
||
forbidding them to teach in any school, or to come within five
|
||
miles of any city, town, or village, doomed them to starvation and
|
||
death.
|
||
|
||
The fleet had been at sea, and healthy. The King of France was now
|
||
in alliance with the Dutch, though his navy was chiefly employed in
|
||
looking on while the English and Dutch fought. The Dutch gained
|
||
one victory; and the English gained another and a greater; and
|
||
Prince Rupert, one of the English admirals, was out in the Channel
|
||
one windy night, looking for the French Admiral, with the intention
|
||
of giving him something more to do than he had had yet, when the
|
||
gale increased to a storm, and blew him into Saint Helen's. That
|
||
night was the third of September, one thousand six hundred and
|
||
sixty-six, and that wind fanned the Great Fire of London.
|
||
|
||
It broke out at a baker's shop near London Bridge, on the spot on
|
||
which the Monument now stands as a remembrance of those raging
|
||
flames. It spread and spread, and burned and burned, for three
|
||
days. The nights were lighter than the days; in the daytime there
|
||
was an immense cloud of smoke, and in the night-time there was a
|
||
great tower of fire mounting up into the sky, which lighted the
|
||
whole country landscape for ten miles round. Showers of hot ashes
|
||
rose into the air and fell on distant places; flying sparks carried
|
||
the conflagration to great distances, and kindled it in twenty new
|
||
spots at a time; church steeples fell down with tremendous crashes;
|
||
houses crumbled into cinders by the hundred and the thousand. The
|
||
summer had been intensely hot and dry, the streets were very
|
||
narrow, and the houses mostly built of wood and plaster. Nothing
|
||
could stop the tremendous fire, but the want of more houses to
|
||
burn; nor did it stop until the whole way from the Tower to Temple
|
||
Bar was a desert, composed of the ashes of thirteen thousand houses
|
||
and eighty-nine churches.
|
||
|
||
This was a terrible visitation at the time, and occasioned great
|
||
loss and suffering to the two hundred thousand burnt-out people,
|
||
who were obliged to lie in the fields under the open night sky, or
|
||
in hastily-made huts of mud and straw, while the lanes and roads
|
||
were rendered impassable by carts which had broken down as they
|
||
tried to save their goods. But the Fire was a great blessing to
|
||
the City afterwards, for it arose from its ruins very much improved
|
||
- built more regularly, more widely, more cleanly and carefully,
|
||
and therefore much more healthily. It might be far more healthy
|
||
than it is, but there are some people in it still - even now, at
|
||
this time, nearly two hundred years later - so selfish, so pig-
|
||
headed, and so ignorant, that I doubt if even another Great Fire
|
||
would warm them up to do their duty.
|
||
|
||
The Catholics were accused of having wilfully set London in flames;
|
||
one poor Frenchman, who had been mad for years, even accused
|
||
himself of having with his own hand fired the first house. There
|
||
is no reasonable doubt, however, that the fire was accidental. An
|
||
inscription on the Monument long attributed it to the Catholics;
|
||
but it is removed now, and was always a malicious and stupid
|
||
untruth.
|
||
|
||
SECOND PART
|
||
|
||
THAT the Merry Monarch might be very merry indeed, in the merry
|
||
times when his people were suffering under pestilence and fire, he
|
||
drank and gambled and flung away among his favourites the money
|
||
which the Parliament had voted for the war. The consequence of
|
||
this was that the stout-hearted English sailors were merrily
|
||
starving of want, and dying in the streets; while the Dutch, under
|
||
their admirals DE WITT and DE RUYTER, came into the River Thames,
|
||
and up the River Medway as far as Upnor, burned the guard-ships,
|
||
silenced the weak batteries, and did what they would to the English
|
||
coast for six whole weeks. Most of the English ships that could
|
||
have prevented them had neither powder nor shot on board; in this
|
||
merry reign, public officers made themselves as merry as the King
|
||
did with the public money; and when it was entrusted to them to
|
||
spend in national defences or preparations, they put it into their
|
||
own pockets with the merriest grace in the world.
|
||
|
||
Lord Clarendon had, by this time, run as long a course as is
|
||
usually allotted to the unscrupulous ministers of bad kings. He
|
||
was impeached by his political opponents, but unsuccessfully. The
|
||
King then commanded him to withdraw from England and retire to
|
||
France, which he did, after defending himself in writing. He was
|
||
no great loss at home, and died abroad some seven years afterwards.
|
||
|
||
There then came into power a ministry called the Cabal Ministry,
|
||
because it was composed of LORD CLIFFORD, the EARL OF ARLINGTON,
|
||
the DUKE OF BUCKINGHAM (a great rascal, and the King's most
|
||
powerful favourite), LORD ASHLEY, and the DUKE OF LAUDERDALE, C. A.
|
||
B. A. L. As the French were making conquests in Flanders, the
|
||
first Cabal proceeding was to make a treaty with the Dutch, for
|
||
uniting with Spain to oppose the French. It was no sooner made
|
||
than the Merry Monarch, who always wanted to get money without
|
||
being accountable to a Parliament for his expenditure, apologised
|
||
to the King of France for having had anything to do with it, and
|
||
concluded a secret treaty with him, making himself his infamous
|
||
pensioner to the amount of two millions of livres down, and three
|
||
millions more a year; and engaging to desert that very Spain, to
|
||
make war against those very Dutch, and to declare himself a
|
||
Catholic when a convenient time should arrive. This religious king
|
||
had lately been crying to his Catholic brother on the subject of
|
||
his strong desire to be a Catholic; and now he merrily concluded
|
||
this treasonable conspiracy against the country he governed, by
|
||
undertaking to become one as soon as he safely could. For all of
|
||
which, though he had had ten merry heads instead of one, he richly
|
||
deserved to lose them by the headsman's axe.
|
||
|
||
As his one merry head might have been far from safe, if these
|
||
things had been known, they were kept very quiet, and war was
|
||
declared by France and England against the Dutch. But, a very
|
||
uncommon man, afterwards most important to English history and to
|
||
the religion and liberty of this land, arose among them, and for
|
||
many long years defeated the whole projects of France. This was
|
||
WILLIAM OF NASSAU, PRINCE OF ORANGE, son of the last Prince of
|
||
Orange of the same name, who married the daughter of Charles the
|
||
First of England. He was a young man at this time, only just of
|
||
age; but he was brave, cool, intrepid, and wise. His father had
|
||
been so detested that, upon his death, the Dutch had abolished the
|
||
authority to which this son would have otherwise succeeded
|
||
(Stadtholder it was called), and placed the chief power in the
|
||
hands of JOHN DE WITT, who educated this young prince. Now, the
|
||
Prince became very popular, and John de Witt's brother CORNELIUS
|
||
was sentenced to banishment on a false accusation of conspiring to
|
||
kill him. John went to the prison where he was, to take him away
|
||
to exile, in his coach; and a great mob who collected on the
|
||
occasion, then and there cruelly murdered both the brothers. This
|
||
left the government in the hands of the Prince, who was really the
|
||
choice of the nation; and from this time he exercised it with the
|
||
greatest vigour, against the whole power of France, under its
|
||
famous generals CONDE and TURENNE, and in support of the Protestant
|
||
religion. It was full seven years before this war ended in a
|
||
treaty of peace made at Nimeguen, and its details would occupy a
|
||
very considerable space. It is enough to say that William of
|
||
Orange established a famous character with the whole world; and
|
||
that the Merry Monarch, adding to and improving on his former
|
||
baseness, bound himself to do everything the King of France liked,
|
||
and nothing the King of France did not like, for a pension of one
|
||
hundred thousand pounds a year, which was afterwards doubled.
|
||
Besides this, the King of France, by means of his corrupt
|
||
ambassador - who wrote accounts of his proceedings in England,
|
||
which are not always to be believed, I think - bought our English
|
||
members of Parliament, as he wanted them. So, in point of fact,
|
||
during a considerable portion of this merry reign, the King of
|
||
France was the real King of this country.
|
||
|
||
But there was a better time to come, and it was to come (though his
|
||
royal uncle little thought so) through that very William, Prince of
|
||
Orange. He came over to England, saw Mary, the elder daughter of
|
||
the Duke of York, and married her. We shall see by-and-by what
|
||
came of that marriage, and why it is never to be forgotten.
|
||
|
||
This daughter was a Protestant, but her mother died a Catholic.
|
||
She and her sister ANNE, also a Protestant, were the only survivors
|
||
of eight children. Anne afterwards married GEORGE, PRINCE OF
|
||
DENMARK, brother to the King of that country.
|
||
|
||
Lest you should do the Merry Monarch the injustice of supposing
|
||
that he was even good humoured (except when he had everything his
|
||
own way), or that he was high spirited and honourable, I will
|
||
mention here what was done to a member of the House of Commons, SIR
|
||
JOHN COVENTRY. He made a remark in a debate about taxing the
|
||
theatres, which gave the King offence. The King agreed with his
|
||
illegitimate son, who had been born abroad, and whom he had made
|
||
DUKE OF MONMOUTH, to take the following merry vengeance. To waylay
|
||
him at night, fifteen armed men to one, and to slit his nose with a
|
||
penknife. Like master, like man. The King's favourite, the Duke
|
||
of Buckingham, was strongly suspected of setting on an assassin to
|
||
murder the DUKE OF ORMOND as he was returning home from a dinner;
|
||
and that Duke's spirited son, LORD OSSORY, was so persuaded of his
|
||
guilt, that he said to him at Court, even as he stood beside the
|
||
King, 'My lord, I know very well that you are at the bottom of this
|
||
late attempt upon my father. But I give you warning, if he ever
|
||
come to a violent end, his blood shall be upon you, and wherever I
|
||
meet you I will pistol you! I will do so, though I find you
|
||
standing behind the King's chair; and I tell you this in his
|
||
Majesty's presence, that you may be quite sure of my doing what I
|
||
threaten.' Those were merry times indeed.
|
||
|
||
There was a fellow named BLOOD, who was seized for making, with two
|
||
companions, an audacious attempt to steal the crown, the globe, and
|
||
sceptre, from the place where the jewels were kept in the Tower.
|
||
This robber, who was a swaggering ruffian, being taken, declared
|
||
that he was the man who had endeavoured to kill the Duke of Ormond,
|
||
and that he had meant to kill the King too, but was overawed by the
|
||
majesty of his appearance, when he might otherwise have done it, as
|
||
he was bathing at Battersea. The King being but an ill-looking
|
||
fellow, I don't believe a word of this. Whether he was flattered,
|
||
or whether he knew that Buckingham had really set Blood on to
|
||
murder the Duke, is uncertain. But it is quite certain that he
|
||
pardoned this thief, gave him an estate of five hundred a year in
|
||
Ireland (which had had the honour of giving him birth), and
|
||
presented him at Court to the debauched lords and the shameless
|
||
ladies, who made a great deal of him - as I have no doubt they
|
||
would have made of the Devil himself, if the King had introduced
|
||
him.
|
||
|
||
Infamously pensioned as he was, the King still wanted money, and
|
||
consequently was obliged to call Parliaments. In these, the great
|
||
object of the Protestants was to thwart the Catholic Duke of York,
|
||
who married a second time; his new wife being a young lady only
|
||
fifteen years old, the Catholic sister of the DUKE OF MODENA. In
|
||
this they were seconded by the Protestant Dissenters, though to
|
||
their own disadvantage: since, to exclude Catholics from power,
|
||
they were even willing to exclude themselves. The King's object
|
||
was to pretend to be a Protestant, while he was really a Catholic;
|
||
to swear to the bishops that he was devoutly attached to the
|
||
English Church, while he knew he had bargained it away to the King
|
||
of France; and by cheating and deceiving them, and all who were
|
||
attached to royalty, to become despotic and be powerful enough to
|
||
confess what a rascal he was. Meantime, the King of France,
|
||
knowing his merry pensioner well, intrigued with the King's
|
||
opponents in Parliament, as well as with the King and his friends.
|
||
|
||
The fears that the country had of the Catholic religion being
|
||
restored, if the Duke of York should come to the throne, and the
|
||
low cunning of the King in pretending to share their alarms, led to
|
||
some very terrible results. A certain DR. TONGE, a dull clergyman
|
||
in the City, fell into the hands of a certain TITUS OATES, a most
|
||
infamous character, who pretended to have acquired among the
|
||
Jesuits abroad a knowledge of a great plot for the murder of the
|
||
King, and the re-establishment if the Catholic religion. Titus
|
||
Oates, being produced by this unlucky Dr. Tonge and solemnly
|
||
examined before the council, contradicted himself in a thousand
|
||
ways, told the most ridiculous and improbable stories, and
|
||
implicated COLEMAN, the Secretary of the Duchess of York. Now,
|
||
although what he charged against Coleman was not true, and although
|
||
you and I know very well that the real dangerous Catholic plot was
|
||
that one with the King of France of which the Merry Monarch was
|
||
himself the head, there happened to be found among Coleman's
|
||
papers, some letters, in which he did praise the days of Bloody
|
||
Queen Mary, and abuse the Protestant religion. This was great good
|
||
fortune for Titus, as it seemed to confirm him; but better still
|
||
was in store. SIR EDMUNDBURY GODFREY, the magistrate who had first
|
||
examined him, being unexpectedly found dead near Primrose Hill, was
|
||
confidently believed to have been killed by the Catholics. I think
|
||
there is no doubt that he had been melancholy mad, and that he
|
||
killed himself; but he had a great Protestant funeral, and Titus
|
||
was called the Saver of the Nation, and received a pension of
|
||
twelve hundred pounds a year.
|
||
|
||
As soon as Oates's wickedness had met with this success, up started
|
||
another villain, named WILLIAM BEDLOE, who, attracted by a reward
|
||
of five hundred pounds offered for the apprehension of the
|
||
murderers of Godfrey, came forward and charged two Jesuits and some
|
||
other persons with having committed it at the Queen's desire.
|
||
Oates, going into partnership with this new informer, had the
|
||
audacity to accuse the poor Queen herself of high treason. Then
|
||
appeared a third informer, as bad as either of the two, and accused
|
||
a Catholic banker named STAYLEY of having said that the King was
|
||
the greatest rogue in the world (which would not have been far from
|
||
the truth), and that he would kill him with his own hand. This
|
||
banker, being at once tried and executed, Coleman and two others
|
||
were tried and executed. Then, a miserable wretch named PRANCE, a
|
||
Catholic silversmith, being accused by Bedloe, was tortured into
|
||
confessing that he had taken part in Godfrey's murder, and into
|
||
accusing three other men of having committed it. Then, five
|
||
Jesuits were accused by Oates, Bedloe, and Prance together, and
|
||
were all found guilty, and executed on the same kind of
|
||
contradictory and absurd evidence. The Queen's physician and three
|
||
monks were next put on their trial; but Oates and Bedloe had for
|
||
the time gone far enough and these four were acquitted. The public
|
||
mind, however, was so full of a Catholic plot, and so strong
|
||
against the Duke of York, that James consented to obey a written
|
||
order from his brother, and to go with his family to Brussels,
|
||
provided that his rights should never be sacrificed in his absence
|
||
to the Duke of Monmouth. The House of Commons, not satisfied with
|
||
this as the King hoped, passed a bill to exclude the Duke from ever
|
||
succeeding to the throne. In return, the King dissolved the
|
||
Parliament. He had deserted his old favourite, the Duke of
|
||
Buckingham, who was now in the opposition.
|
||
|
||
To give any sufficient idea of the miseries of Scotland in this
|
||
merry reign, would occupy a hundred pages. Because the people
|
||
would not have bishops, and were resolved to stand by their solemn
|
||
League and Covenant, such cruelties were inflicted upon them as
|
||
make the blood run cold. Ferocious dragoons galloped through the
|
||
country to punish the peasants for deserting the churches; sons
|
||
were hanged up at their fathers' doors for refusing to disclose
|
||
where their fathers were concealed; wives were tortured to death
|
||
for not betraying their husbands; people were taken out of their
|
||
fields and gardens, and shot on the public roads without trial;
|
||
lighted matches were tied to the fingers of prisoners, and a most
|
||
horrible torment called the Boot was invented, and constantly
|
||
applied, which ground and mashed the victims' legs with iron
|
||
wedges. Witnesses were tortured as well as prisoners. All the
|
||
prisons were full; all the gibbets were heavy with bodies; murder
|
||
and plunder devastated the whole country. In spite of all, the
|
||
Covenanters were by no means to be dragged into the churches, and
|
||
persisted in worshipping God as they thought right. A body of
|
||
ferocious Highlanders, turned upon them from the mountains of their
|
||
own country, had no greater effect than the English dragoons under
|
||
GRAHAME OF CLAVERHOUSE, the most cruel and rapacious of all their
|
||
enemies, whose name will ever be cursed through the length and
|
||
breadth of Scotland. Archbishop Sharp had ever aided and abetted
|
||
all these outrages. But he fell at last; for, when the injuries of
|
||
the Scottish people were at their height, he was seen, in his
|
||
coach-and-six coming across a moor, by a body of men, headed by one
|
||
JOHN BALFOUR, who were waiting for another of their oppressors.
|
||
Upon this they cried out that Heaven had delivered him into their
|
||
hands, and killed him with many wounds. If ever a man deserved
|
||
such a death, I think Archbishop Sharp did.
|
||
|
||
It made a great noise directly, and the Merry Monarch - strongly
|
||
suspected of having goaded the Scottish people on, that he might
|
||
have an excuse for a greater army than the Parliament were willing
|
||
to give him - sent down his son, the Duke of Monmouth, as
|
||
commander-in-chief, with instructions to attack the Scottish
|
||
rebels, or Whigs as they were called, whenever he came up with
|
||
them. Marching with ten thousand men from Edinburgh, he found
|
||
them, in number four or five thousand, drawn up at Bothwell Bridge,
|
||
by the Clyde. They were soon dispersed; and Monmouth showed a more
|
||
humane character towards them, than he had shown towards that
|
||
Member of Parliament whose nose he had caused to be slit with a
|
||
penknife. But the Duke of Lauderdale was their bitter foe, and
|
||
sent Claverhouse to finish them.
|
||
|
||
As the Duke of York became more and more unpopular, the Duke of
|
||
Monmouth became more and more popular. It would have been decent
|
||
in the latter not to have voted in favour of the renewed bill for
|
||
the exclusion of James from the throne; but he did so, much to the
|
||
King's amusement, who used to sit in the House of Lords by the
|
||
fire, hearing the debates, which he said were as good as a play.
|
||
The House of Commons passed the bill by a large majority, and it
|
||
was carried up to the House of Lords by LORD RUSSELL, one of the
|
||
best of the leaders on the Protestant side. It was rejected there,
|
||
chiefly because the bishops helped the King to get rid of it; and
|
||
the fear of Catholic plots revived again. There had been another
|
||
got up, by a fellow out of Newgate, named DANGERFIELD, which is
|
||
more famous than it deserves to be, under the name of the MEAL-TUB
|
||
PLOT. This jail-bird having been got out of Newgate by a MRS.
|
||
CELLIER, a Catholic nurse, had turned Catholic himself, and
|
||
pretended that he knew of a plot among the Presbyterians against
|
||
the King's life. This was very pleasant to the Duke of York, who
|
||
hated the Presbyterians, who returned the compliment. He gave
|
||
Dangerfield twenty guineas, and sent him to the King his brother.
|
||
But Dangerfield, breaking down altogether in his charge, and being
|
||
sent back to Newgate, almost astonished the Duke out of his five
|
||
senses by suddenly swearing that the Catholic nurse had put that
|
||
false design into his head, and that what he really knew about,
|
||
was, a Catholic plot against the King; the evidence of which would
|
||
be found in some papers, concealed in a meal-tub in Mrs. Cellier's
|
||
house. There they were, of course - for he had put them there
|
||
himself - and so the tub gave the name to the plot. But, the nurse
|
||
was acquitted on her trial, and it came to nothing.
|
||
|
||
Lord Ashley, of the Cabal, was now Lord Shaftesbury, and was strong
|
||
against the succession of the Duke of York. The House of Commons,
|
||
aggravated to the utmost extent, as we may well suppose, by
|
||
suspicions of the King's conspiracy with the King of France, made a
|
||
desperate point of the exclusion, still, and were bitter against
|
||
the Catholics generally. So unjustly bitter were they, I grieve to
|
||
say, that they impeached the venerable Lord Stafford, a Catholic
|
||
nobleman seventy years old, of a design to kill the King. The
|
||
witnesses were that atrocious Oates and two other birds of the same
|
||
feather. He was found guilty, on evidence quite as foolish as it
|
||
was false, and was beheaded on Tower Hill. The people were opposed
|
||
to him when he first appeared upon the scaffold; but, when he had
|
||
addressed them and shown them how innocent he was and how wickedly
|
||
he was sent there, their better nature was aroused, and they said,
|
||
'We believe you, my Lord. God bless you, my Lord!'
|
||
|
||
The House of Commons refused to let the King have any money until
|
||
he should consent to the Exclusion Bill; but, as he could get it
|
||
and did get it from his master the King of France, he could afford
|
||
to hold them very cheap. He called a Parliament at Oxford, to
|
||
which he went down with a great show of being armed and protected
|
||
as if he were in danger of his life, and to which the opposition
|
||
members also went armed and protected, alleging that they were in
|
||
fear of the Papists, who were numerous among the King's guards.
|
||
However, they went on with the Exclusion Bill, and were so earnest
|
||
upon it that they would have carried it again, if the King had not
|
||
popped his crown and state robes into a sedan-chair, bundled
|
||
himself into it along with them, hurried down to the chamber where
|
||
the House of Lords met, and dissolved the Parliament. After which
|
||
he scampered home, and the members of Parliament scampered home
|
||
too, as fast as their legs could carry them.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of York, then residing in Scotland, had, under the law
|
||
which excluded Catholics from public trust, no right whatever to
|
||
public employment. Nevertheless, he was openly employed as the
|
||
King's representative in Scotland, and there gratified his sullen
|
||
and cruel nature to his heart's content by directing the dreadful
|
||
cruelties against the Covenanters. There were two ministers named
|
||
CARGILL and CAMERON who had escaped from the battle of Bothwell
|
||
Bridge, and who returned to Scotland, and raised the miserable but
|
||
still brave and unsubdued Covenanters afresh, under the name of
|
||
Cameronians. As Cameron publicly posted a declaration that the
|
||
King was a forsworn tyrant, no mercy was shown to his unhappy
|
||
followers after he was slain in battle. The Duke of York, who was
|
||
particularly fond of the Boot and derived great pleasure from
|
||
having it applied, offered their lives to some of these people, if
|
||
they would cry on the scaffold 'God save the King!' But their
|
||
relations, friends, and countrymen, had been so barbarously
|
||
tortured and murdered in this merry reign, that they preferred to
|
||
die, and did die. The Duke then obtained his merry brother's
|
||
permission to hold a Parliament in Scotland, which first, with most
|
||
shameless deceit, confirmed the laws for securing the Protestant
|
||
religion against Popery, and then declared that nothing must or
|
||
should prevent the succession of the Popish Duke. After this
|
||
double-faced beginning, it established an oath which no human being
|
||
could understand, but which everybody was to take, as a proof that
|
||
his religion was the lawful religion. The Earl of Argyle, taking
|
||
it with the explanation that he did not consider it to prevent him
|
||
from favouring any alteration either in the Church or State which
|
||
was not inconsistent with the Protestant religion or with his
|
||
loyalty, was tried for high treason before a Scottish jury of which
|
||
the MARQUIS OF MONTROSE was foreman, and was found guilty. He
|
||
escaped the scaffold, for that time, by getting away, in the
|
||
disguise of a page, in the train of his daughter, LADY SOPHIA
|
||
LINDSAY. It was absolutely proposed, by certain members of the
|
||
Scottish Council, that this lady should be whipped through the
|
||
streets of Edinburgh. But this was too much even for the Duke, who
|
||
had the manliness then (he had very little at most times) to remark
|
||
that Englishmen were not accustomed to treat ladies in that manner.
|
||
In those merry times nothing could equal the brutal servility of
|
||
the Scottish fawners, but the conduct of similar degraded beings in
|
||
England.
|
||
|
||
After the settlement of these little affairs, the Duke returned to
|
||
England, and soon resumed his place at the Council, and his office
|
||
of High Admiral - all this by his brother's favour, and in open
|
||
defiance of the law. It would have been no loss to the country, if
|
||
he had been drowned when his ship, in going to Scotland to fetch
|
||
his family, struck on a sand-bank, and was lost with two hundred
|
||
souls on board. But he escaped in a boat with some friends; and
|
||
the sailors were so brave and unselfish, that, when they saw him
|
||
rowing away, they gave three cheers, while they themselves were
|
||
going down for ever.
|
||
|
||
The Merry Monarch, having got rid of his Parliament, went to work
|
||
to make himself despotic, with all speed. Having had the villainy
|
||
to order the execution of OLIVER PLUNKET, BISHOP OF ARMAGH, falsely
|
||
accused of a plot to establish Popery in that country by means of a
|
||
French army - the very thing this royal traitor was himself trying
|
||
to do at home - and having tried to ruin Lord Shaftesbury, and
|
||
failed - he turned his hand to controlling the corporations all
|
||
over the country; because, if he could only do that, he could get
|
||
what juries he chose, to bring in perjured verdicts, and could get
|
||
what members he chose returned to Parliament. These merry times
|
||
produced, and made Chief Justice of the Court of King's Bench, a
|
||
drunken ruffian of the name of JEFFREYS; a red-faced, swollen,
|
||
bloated, horrible creature, with a bullying, roaring voice, and a
|
||
more savage nature perhaps than was ever lodged in any human
|
||
breast. This monster was the Merry Monarch's especial favourite,
|
||
and he testified his admiration of him by giving him a ring from
|
||
his own finger, which the people used to call Judge Jeffreys's
|
||
Bloodstone. Him the King employed to go about and bully the
|
||
corporations, beginning with London; or, as Jeffreys himself
|
||
elegantly called it, 'to give them a lick with the rough side of
|
||
his tongue.' And he did it so thoroughly, that they soon became
|
||
the basest and most sycophantic bodies in the kingdom - except the
|
||
University of Oxford, which, in that respect, was quite pre-eminent
|
||
and unapproachable.
|
||
|
||
Lord Shaftesbury (who died soon after the King's failure against
|
||
him), LORD WILLIAM RUSSELL, the Duke of Monmouth, LORD HOWARD, LORD
|
||
JERSEY, ALGERNON SIDNEY, JOHN HAMPDEN (grandson of the great
|
||
Hampden), and some others, used to hold a council together after
|
||
the dissolution of the Parliament, arranging what it might be
|
||
necessary to do, if the King carried his Popish plot to the utmost
|
||
height. Lord Shaftesbury having been much the most violent of this
|
||
party, brought two violent men into their secrets - RUMSEY, who had
|
||
been a soldier in the Republican army; and WEST, a lawyer. These
|
||
two knew an old officer of CROMWELL'S, called RUMBOLD, who had
|
||
married a maltster's widow, and so had come into possession of a
|
||
solitary dwelling called the Rye House, near Hoddesdon, in
|
||
Hertfordshire. Rumbold said to them what a capital place this
|
||
house of his would be from which to shoot at the King, who often
|
||
passed there going to and fro from Newmarket. They liked the idea,
|
||
and entertained it. But, one of their body gave information; and
|
||
they, together with SHEPHERD a wine merchant, Lord Russell,
|
||
Algernon Sidney, LORD ESSEX, LORD HOWARD, and Hampden, were all
|
||
arrested.
|
||
|
||
Lord Russell might have easily escaped, but scorned to do so, being
|
||
innocent of any wrong; Lord Essex might have easily escaped, but
|
||
scorned to do so, lest his flight should prejudice Lord Russell.
|
||
But it weighed upon his mind that he had brought into their
|
||
council, Lord Howard - who now turned a miserable traitor - against
|
||
a great dislike Lord Russell had always had of him. He could not
|
||
bear the reflection, and destroyed himself before Lord Russell was
|
||
brought to trial at the Old Bailey.
|
||
|
||
He knew very well that he had nothing to hope, having always been
|
||
manful in the Protestant cause against the two false brothers, the
|
||
one on the throne, and the other standing next to it. He had a
|
||
wife, one of the noblest and best of women, who acted as his
|
||
secretary on his trial, who comforted him in his prison, who supped
|
||
with him on the night before he died, and whose love and virtue and
|
||
devotion have made her name imperishable. Of course, he was found
|
||
guilty, and was sentenced to be beheaded in Lincoln's Inn-fields,
|
||
not many yards from his own house. When he had parted from his
|
||
children on the evening before his death, his wife still stayed
|
||
with him until ten o'clock at night; and when their final
|
||
separation in this world was over, and he had kissed her many
|
||
times, he still sat for a long while in his prison, talking of her
|
||
goodness. Hearing the rain fall fast at that time, he calmly said,
|
||
'Such a rain to-morrow will spoil a great show, which is a dull
|
||
thing on a rainy day.' At midnight he went to bed, and slept till
|
||
four; even when his servant called him, he fell asleep again while
|
||
his clothes were being made ready. He rode to the scaffold in his
|
||
own carriage, attended by two famous clergymen, TILLOTSON and
|
||
BURNET, and sang a psalm to himself very softly, as he went along.
|
||
He was as quiet and as steady as if he had been going out for an
|
||
ordinary ride. After saying that he was surprised to see so great
|
||
a crowd, he laid down his head upon the block, as if upon the
|
||
pillow of his bed, and had it struck off at the second blow. His
|
||
noble wife was busy for him even then; for that true-hearted lady
|
||
printed and widely circulated his last words, of which he had given
|
||
her a copy. They made the blood of all the honest men in England
|
||
boil.
|
||
|
||
The University of Oxford distinguished itself on the very same day
|
||
by pretending to believe that the accusation against Lord Russell
|
||
was true, and by calling the King, in a written paper, the Breath
|
||
of their Nostrils and the Anointed of the Lord. This paper the
|
||
Parliament afterwards caused to be burned by the common hangman;
|
||
which I am sorry for, as I wish it had been framed and glazed and
|
||
hung up in some public place, as a monument of baseness for the
|
||
scorn of mankind.
|
||
|
||
Next, came the trial of Algernon Sidney, at which Jeffreys
|
||
presided, like a great crimson toad, sweltering and swelling with
|
||
rage. 'I pray God, Mr. Sidney,' said this Chief Justice of a merry
|
||
reign, after passing sentence, 'to work in you a temper fit to go
|
||
to the other world, for I see you are not fit for this.' 'My
|
||
lord,' said the prisoner, composedly holding out his arm, 'feel my
|
||
pulse, and see if I be disordered. I thank Heaven I never was in
|
||
better temper than I am now.' Algernon Sidney was executed on
|
||
Tower Hill, on the seventh of December, one thousand six hundred
|
||
and eighty-three. He died a hero, and died, in his own words, 'For
|
||
that good old cause in which he had been engaged from his youth,
|
||
and for which God had so often and so wonderfully declared
|
||
himself.'
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Monmouth had been making his uncle, the Duke of York,
|
||
very jealous, by going about the country in a royal sort of way,
|
||
playing at the people's games, becoming godfather to their
|
||
children, and even touching for the King's evil, or stroking the
|
||
faces of the sick to cure them - though, for the matter of that, I
|
||
should say he did them about as much good as any crowned king could
|
||
have done. His father had got him to write a letter, confessing
|
||
his having had a part in the conspiracy, for which Lord Russell had
|
||
been beheaded; but he was ever a weak man, and as soon as he had
|
||
written it, he was ashamed of it and got it back again. For this,
|
||
he was banished to the Netherlands; but he soon returned and had an
|
||
interview with his father, unknown to his uncle. It would seem
|
||
that he was coming into the Merry Monarch's favour again, and that
|
||
the Duke of York was sliding out of it, when Death appeared to the
|
||
merry galleries at Whitehall, and astonished the debauched lords
|
||
and gentlemen, and the shameless ladies, very considerably.
|
||
|
||
On Monday, the second of February, one thousand six hundred and
|
||
eighty-five, the merry pensioner and servant of the King of France
|
||
fell down in a fit of apoplexy. By the Wednesday his case was
|
||
hopeless, and on the Thursday he was told so. As he made a
|
||
difficulty about taking the sacrament from the Protestant Bishop of
|
||
Bath, the Duke of York got all who were present away from the bed,
|
||
and asked his brother, in a whisper, if he should send for a
|
||
Catholic priest? The King replied, 'For God's sake, brother, do!'
|
||
The Duke smuggled in, up the back stairs, disguised in a wig and
|
||
gown, a priest named HUDDLESTON, who had saved the King's life
|
||
after the battle of Worcester: telling him that this worthy man in
|
||
the wig had once saved his body, and was now come to save his soul.
|
||
|
||
The Merry Monarch lived through that night, and died before noon on
|
||
the next day, which was Friday, the sixth. Two of the last things
|
||
he said were of a human sort, and your remembrance will give him
|
||
the full benefit of them. When the Queen sent to say she was too
|
||
unwell to attend him and to ask his pardon, he said, 'Alas! poor
|
||
woman, SHE beg MY pardon! I beg hers with all my heart. Take back
|
||
that answer to her.' And he also said, in reference to Nell Gwyn,
|
||
'Do not let poor Nelly starve.'
|
||
|
||
He died in the fifty-fifth year of his age, and the twenty-fifth of
|
||
his reign.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXVI - ENGLAND UNDER JAMES THE SECOND
|
||
|
||
KING JAMES THE SECOND was a man so very disagreeable, that even the
|
||
best of historians has favoured his brother Charles, as becoming,
|
||
by comparison, quite a pleasant character. The one object of his
|
||
short reign was to re-establish the Catholic religion in England;
|
||
and this he doggedly pursued with such a stupid obstinacy, that his
|
||
career very soon came to a close.
|
||
|
||
The first thing he did, was, to assure his council that he would
|
||
make it his endeavour to preserve the Government, both in Church
|
||
and State, as it was by law established; and that he would always
|
||
take care to defend and support the Church. Great public
|
||
acclamations were raised over this fair speech, and a great deal
|
||
was said, from the pulpits and elsewhere, about the word of a King
|
||
which was never broken, by credulous people who little supposed
|
||
that he had formed a secret council for Catholic affairs, of which
|
||
a mischievous Jesuit, called FATHER PETRE, was one of the chief
|
||
members. With tears of joy in his eyes, he received, as the
|
||
beginning of HIS pension from the King of France, five hundred
|
||
thousand livres; yet, with a mixture of meanness and arrogance that
|
||
belonged to his contemptible character, he was always jealous of
|
||
making some show of being independent of the King of France, while
|
||
he pocketed his money. As - notwithstanding his publishing two
|
||
papers in favour of Popery (and not likely to do it much service, I
|
||
should think) written by the King, his brother, and found in his
|
||
strong-box; and his open display of himself attending mass - the
|
||
Parliament was very obsequious, and granted him a large sum of
|
||
money, he began his reign with a belief that he could do what he
|
||
pleased, and with a determination to do it.
|
||
|
||
Before we proceed to its principal events, let us dispose of Titus
|
||
Oates. He was tried for perjury, a fortnight after the coronation,
|
||
and besides being very heavily fined, was sentenced to stand twice
|
||
in the pillory, to be whipped from Aldgate to Newgate one day, and
|
||
from Newgate to Tyburn two days afterwards, and to stand in the
|
||
pillory five times a year as long as he lived. This fearful
|
||
sentence was actually inflicted on the rascal. Being unable to
|
||
stand after his first flogging, he was dragged on a sledge from
|
||
Newgate to Tyburn, and flogged as he was drawn along. He was so
|
||
strong a villain that he did not die under the torture, but lived
|
||
to be afterwards pardoned and rewarded, though not to be ever
|
||
believed in any more. Dangerfield, the only other one of that crew
|
||
left alive, was not so fortunate. He was almost killed by a
|
||
whipping from Newgate to Tyburn, and, as if that were not
|
||
punishment enough, a ferocious barrister of Gray's Inn gave him a
|
||
poke in the eye with his cane, which caused his death; for which
|
||
the ferocious barrister was deservedly tried and executed.
|
||
|
||
As soon as James was on the throne, Argyle and Monmouth went from
|
||
Brussels to Rotterdam, and attended a meeting of Scottish exiles
|
||
held there, to concert measures for a rising in England. It was
|
||
agreed that Argyle should effect a landing in Scotland, and
|
||
Monmouth in England; and that two Englishmen should be sent with
|
||
Argyle to be in his confidence, and two Scotchmen with the Duke of
|
||
Monmouth.
|
||
|
||
Argyle was the first to act upon this contract. But, two of his
|
||
men being taken prisoners at the Orkney Islands, the Government
|
||
became aware of his intention, and was able to act against him with
|
||
such vigour as to prevent his raising more than two or three
|
||
thousand Highlanders, although he sent a fiery cross, by trusty
|
||
messengers, from clan to clan and from glen to glen, as the custom
|
||
then was when those wild people were to be excited by their chiefs.
|
||
As he was moving towards Glasgow with his small force, he was
|
||
betrayed by some of his followers, taken, and carried, with his
|
||
hands tied behind his back, to his old prison in Edinburgh Castle.
|
||
James ordered him to be executed, on his old shamefully unjust
|
||
sentence, within three days; and he appears to have been anxious
|
||
that his legs should have been pounded with his old favourite the
|
||
boot. However, the boot was not applied; he was simply beheaded,
|
||
and his head was set upon the top of Edinburgh Jail. One of those
|
||
Englishmen who had been assigned to him was that old soldier
|
||
Rumbold, the master of the Rye House. He was sorely wounded, and
|
||
within a week after Argyle had suffered with great courage, was
|
||
brought up for trial, lest he should die and disappoint the King.
|
||
He, too, was executed, after defending himself with great spirit,
|
||
and saying that he did not believe that God had made the greater
|
||
part of mankind to carry saddles on their backs and bridles in
|
||
their mouths, and to be ridden by a few, booted and spurred for the
|
||
purpose - in which I thoroughly agree with Rumbold.
|
||
|
||
The Duke of Monmouth, partly through being detained and partly
|
||
through idling his time away, was five or six weeks behind his
|
||
friend when he landed at Lyme, in Dorset: having at his right hand
|
||
an unlucky nobleman called LORD GREY OF WERK, who of himself would
|
||
have ruined a far more promising expedition. He immediately set up
|
||
his standard in the market-place, and proclaimed the King a tyrant,
|
||
and a Popish usurper, and I know not what else; charging him, not
|
||
only with what he had done, which was bad enough, but with what
|
||
neither he nor anybody else had done, such as setting fire to
|
||
London, and poisoning the late King. Raising some four thousand
|
||
men by these means, he marched on to Taunton, where there were many
|
||
Protestant dissenters who were strongly opposed to the Catholics.
|
||
Here, both the rich and poor turned out to receive him, ladies
|
||
waved a welcome to him from all the windows as he passed along the
|
||
streets, flowers were strewn in his way, and every compliment and
|
||
honour that could be devised was showered upon him. Among the
|
||
rest, twenty young ladies came forward, in their best clothes, and
|
||
in their brightest beauty, and gave him a Bible ornamented with
|
||
their own fair hands, together with other presents.
|
||
|
||
Encouraged by this homage, he proclaimed himself King, and went on
|
||
to Bridgewater. But, here the Government troops, under the EARL OF
|
||
FEVERSHAM, were close at hand; and he was so dispirited at finding
|
||
that he made but few powerful friends after all, that it was a
|
||
question whether he should disband his army and endeavour to
|
||
escape. It was resolved, at the instance of that unlucky Lord
|
||
Grey, to make a night attack on the King's army, as it lay encamped
|
||
on the edge of a morass called Sedgemoor. The horsemen were
|
||
commanded by the same unlucky lord, who was not a brave man. He
|
||
gave up the battle almost at the first obstacle - which was a deep
|
||
drain; and although the poor countrymen, who had turned out for
|
||
Monmouth, fought bravely with scythes, poles, pitchforks, and such
|
||
poor weapons as they had, they were soon dispersed by the trained
|
||
soldiers, and fled in all directions. When the Duke of Monmouth
|
||
himself fled, was not known in the confusion; but the unlucky Lord
|
||
Grey was taken early next day, and then another of the party was
|
||
taken, who confessed that he had parted from the Duke only four
|
||
hours before. Strict search being made, he was found disguised as
|
||
a peasant, hidden in a ditch under fern and nettles, with a few
|
||
peas in his pocket which he had gathered in the fields to eat. The
|
||
only other articles he had upon him were a few papers and little
|
||
books: one of the latter being a strange jumble, in his own
|
||
writing, of charms, songs, recipes, and prayers. He was completely
|
||
broken. He wrote a miserable letter to the King, beseeching and
|
||
entreating to be allowed to see him. When he was taken to London,
|
||
and conveyed bound into the King's presence, he crawled to him on
|
||
his knees, and made a most degrading exhibition. As James never
|
||
forgave or relented towards anybody, he was not likely to soften
|
||
towards the issuer of the Lyme proclamation, so he told the
|
||
suppliant to prepare for death.
|
||
|
||
On the fifteenth of July, one thousand six hundred and eighty-five,
|
||
this unfortunate favourite of the people was brought out to die on
|
||
Tower Hill. The crowd was immense, and the tops of all the houses
|
||
were covered with gazers. He had seen his wife, the daughter of
|
||
the Duke of Buccleuch, in the Tower, and had talked much of a lady
|
||
whom he loved far better - the LADY HARRIET WENTWORTH - who was one
|
||
of the last persons he remembered in this life. Before laying down
|
||
his head upon the block he felt the edge of the axe, and told the
|
||
executioner that he feared it was not sharp enough, and that the
|
||
axe was not heavy enough. On the executioner replying that it was
|
||
of the proper kind, the Duke said, 'I pray you have a care, and do
|
||
not use me so awkwardly as you used my Lord Russell.' The
|
||
executioner, made nervous by this, and trembling, struck once and
|
||
merely gashed him in the neck. Upon this, the Duke of Monmouth
|
||
raised his head and looked the man reproachfully in the face. Then
|
||
he struck twice, and then thrice, and then threw down the axe, and
|
||
cried out in a voice of horror that he could not finish that work.
|
||
The sheriffs, however, threatening him with what should be done to
|
||
himself if he did not, he took it up again and struck a fourth time
|
||
and a fifth time. Then the wretched head at last fell off, and
|
||
James, Duke of Monmouth, was dead, in the thirty-sixth year of his
|
||
age. He was a showy, graceful man, with many popular qualities,
|
||
and had found much favour in the open hearts of the English.
|
||
|
||
The atrocities, committed by the Government, which followed this
|
||
Monmouth rebellion, form the blackest and most lamentable page in
|
||
English history. The poor peasants, having been dispersed with
|
||
great loss, and their leaders having been taken, one would think
|
||
that the implacable King might have been satisfied. But no; he let
|
||
loose upon them, among other intolerable monsters, a COLONEL KIRK,
|
||
who had served against the Moors, and whose soldiers - called by
|
||
the people Kirk's lambs, because they bore a lamb upon their flag,
|
||
as the emblem of Christianity - were worthy of their leader. The
|
||
atrocities committed by these demons in human shape are far too
|
||
horrible to be related here. It is enough to say, that besides
|
||
most ruthlessly murdering and robbing them, and ruining them by
|
||
making them buy their pardons at the price of all they possessed,
|
||
it was one of Kirk's favourite amusements, as he and his officers
|
||
sat drinking after dinner, and toasting the King, to have batches
|
||
of prisoners hanged outside the windows for the company's
|
||
diversion; and that when their feet quivered in the convulsions of
|
||
death, he used to swear that they should have music to their
|
||
dancing, and would order the drums to beat and the trumpets to
|
||
play. The detestable King informed him, as an acknowledgment of
|
||
these services, that he was 'very well satisfied with his
|
||
proceedings.' But the King's great delight was in the proceedings
|
||
of Jeffreys, now a peer, who went down into the west, with four
|
||
other judges, to try persons accused of having had any share in the
|
||
rebellion. The King pleasantly called this 'Jeffreys's campaign.'
|
||
The people down in that part of the country remember it to this day
|
||
as The Bloody Assize.
|
||
|
||
It began at Winchester, where a poor deaf old lady, MRS. ALICIA
|
||
LISLE, the widow of one of the judges of Charles the First (who had
|
||
been murdered abroad by some Royalist assassins), was charged with
|
||
having given shelter in her house to two fugitives from Sedgemoor.
|
||
Three times the jury refused to find her guilty, until Jeffreys
|
||
bullied and frightened them into that false verdict. When he had
|
||
extorted it from them, he said, 'Gentlemen, if I had been one of
|
||
you, and she had been my own mother, I would have found her
|
||
guilty;' - as I dare say he would. He sentenced her to be burned
|
||
alive, that very afternoon. The clergy of the cathedral and some
|
||
others interfered in her favour, and she was beheaded within a
|
||
week. As a high mark of his approbation, the King made Jeffreys
|
||
Lord Chancellor; and he then went on to Dorchester, to Exeter, to
|
||
Taunton, and to Wells. It is astonishing, when we read of the
|
||
enormous injustice and barbarity of this beast, to know that no one
|
||
struck him dead on the judgment-seat. It was enough for any man or
|
||
woman to be accused by an enemy, before Jeffreys, to be found
|
||
guilty of high treason. One man who pleaded not guilty, he ordered
|
||
to be taken out of court upon the instant, and hanged; and this so
|
||
terrified the prisoners in general that they mostly pleaded guilty
|
||
at once. At Dorchester alone, in the course of a few days,
|
||
Jeffreys hanged eighty people; besides whipping, transporting,
|
||
imprisoning, and selling as slaves, great numbers. He executed, in
|
||
all, two hundred and fifty, or three hundred.
|
||
|
||
These executions took place, among the neighbours and friends of
|
||
the sentenced, in thirty-six towns and villages. Their bodies were
|
||
mangled, steeped in caldrons of boiling pitch and tar, and hung up
|
||
by the roadsides, in the streets, over the very churches. The
|
||
sight and smell of heads and limbs, the hissing and bubbling of the
|
||
infernal caldrons, and the tears and terrors of the people, were
|
||
dreadful beyond all description. One rustic, who was forced to
|
||
steep the remains in the black pot, was ever afterwards called 'Tom
|
||
Boilman.' The hangman has ever since been called Jack Ketch,
|
||
because a man of that name went hanging and hanging, all day long,
|
||
in the train of Jeffreys. You will hear much of the horrors of the
|
||
great French Revolution. Many and terrible they were, there is no
|
||
doubt; but I know of nothing worse, done by the maddened people of
|
||
France in that awful time, than was done by the highest judge in
|
||
England, with the express approval of the King of England, in The
|
||
Bloody Assize.
|
||
|
||
Nor was even this all. Jeffreys was as fond of money for himself
|
||
as of misery for others, and he sold pardons wholesale to fill his
|
||
pockets. The King ordered, at one time, a thousand prisoners to be
|
||
given to certain of his favourites, in order that they might
|
||
bargain with them for their pardons. The young ladies of Taunton
|
||
who had presented the Bible, were bestowed upon the maids of honour
|
||
at court; and those precious ladies made very hard bargains with
|
||
them indeed. When The Bloody Assize was at its most dismal height,
|
||
the King was diverting himself with horse-races in the very place
|
||
where Mrs. Lisle had been executed. When Jeffreys had done his
|
||
worst, and came home again, he was particularly complimented in the
|
||
Royal Gazette; and when the King heard that through drunkenness and
|
||
raging he was very ill, his odious Majesty remarked that such
|
||
another man could not easily be found in England. Besides all
|
||
this, a former sheriff of London, named CORNISH, was hanged within
|
||
sight of his own house, after an abominably conducted trial, for
|
||
having had a share in the Rye House Plot, on evidence given by
|
||
Rumsey, which that villain was obliged to confess was directly
|
||
opposed to the evidence he had given on the trial of Lord Russell.
|
||
And on the very same day, a worthy widow, named ELIZABETH GAUNT,
|
||
was burned alive at Tyburn, for having sheltered a wretch who
|
||
himself gave evidence against her. She settled the fuel about
|
||
herself with her own hands, so that the flames should reach her
|
||
quickly: and nobly said, with her last breath, that she had obeyed
|
||
the sacred command of God, to give refuge to the outcast, and not
|
||
to betray the wanderer.
|
||
|
||
After all this hanging, beheading, burning, boiling, mutilating,
|
||
exposing, robbing, transporting, and selling into slavery, of his
|
||
unhappy subjects, the King not unnaturally thought that he could do
|
||
whatever he would. So, he went to work to change the religion of
|
||
the country with all possible speed; and what he did was this.
|
||
|
||
He first of all tried to get rid of what was called the Test Act -
|
||
which prevented the Catholics from holding public employments - by
|
||
his own power of dispensing with the penalties. He tried it in one
|
||
case, and, eleven of the twelve judges deciding in his favour, he
|
||
exercised it in three others, being those of three dignitaries of
|
||
University College, Oxford, who had become Papists, and whom he
|
||
kept in their places and sanctioned. He revived the hated
|
||
Ecclesiastical Commission, to get rid of COMPTON, Bishop of London,
|
||
who manfully opposed him. He solicited the Pope to favour England
|
||
with an ambassador, which the Pope (who was a sensible man then)
|
||
rather unwillingly did. He flourished Father Petre before the eyes
|
||
of the people on all possible occasions. He favoured the
|
||
establishment of convents in several parts of London. He was
|
||
delighted to have the streets, and even the court itself, filled
|
||
with Monks and Friars in the habits of their orders. He constantly
|
||
endeavoured to make Catholics of the Protestants about him. He
|
||
held private interviews, which he called 'closetings,' with those
|
||
Members of Parliament who held offices, to persuade them to consent
|
||
to the design he had in view. When they did not consent, they were
|
||
removed, or resigned of themselves, and their places were given to
|
||
Catholics. He displaced Protestant officers from the army, by
|
||
every means in his power, and got Catholics into their places too.
|
||
He tried the same thing with the corporations, and also (though not
|
||
so successfully) with the Lord Lieutenants of counties. To terrify
|
||
the people into the endurance of all these measures, he kept an
|
||
army of fifteen thousand men encamped on Hounslow Heath, where mass
|
||
was openly performed in the General's tent, and where priests went
|
||
among the soldiers endeavouring to persuade them to become
|
||
Catholics. For circulating a paper among those men advising them
|
||
to be true to their religion, a Protestant clergyman, named
|
||
JOHNSON, the chaplain of the late Lord Russell, was actually
|
||
sentenced to stand three times in the pillory, and was actually
|
||
whipped from Newgate to Tyburn. He dismissed his own brother-in-
|
||
law from his Council because he was a Protestant, and made a Privy
|
||
Councillor of the before-mentioned Father Petre. He handed Ireland
|
||
over to RICHARD TALBOT, EARL OF TYRCONNELL, a worthless, dissolute
|
||
knave, who played the same game there for his master, and who
|
||
played the deeper game for himself of one day putting it under the
|
||
protection of the French King. In going to these extremities,
|
||
every man of sense and judgment among the Catholics, from the Pope
|
||
to a porter, knew that the King was a mere bigoted fool, who would
|
||
undo himself and the cause he sought to advance; but he was deaf to
|
||
all reason, and, happily for England ever afterwards, went tumbling
|
||
off his throne in his own blind way.
|
||
|
||
A spirit began to arise in the country, which the besotted
|
||
blunderer little expected. He first found it out in the University
|
||
of Cambridge. Having made a Catholic a dean at Oxford without any
|
||
opposition, he tried to make a monk a master of arts at Cambridge:
|
||
which attempt the University resisted, and defeated him. He then
|
||
went back to his favourite Oxford. On the death of the President
|
||
of Magdalen College, he commanded that there should be elected to
|
||
succeed him, one MR. ANTHONY FARMER, whose only recommendation was,
|
||
that he was of the King's religion. The University plucked up
|
||
courage at last, and refused. The King substituted another man,
|
||
and it still refused, resolving to stand by its own election of a
|
||
MR. HOUGH. The dull tyrant, upon this, punished Mr. Hough, and
|
||
five-and-twenty more, by causing them to be expelled and declared
|
||
incapable of holding any church preferment; then he proceeded to
|
||
what he supposed to be his highest step, but to what was, in fact,
|
||
his last plunge head-foremost in his tumble off his throne.
|
||
|
||
He had issued a declaration that there should be no religious tests
|
||
or penal laws, in order to let in the Catholics more easily; but
|
||
the Protestant dissenters, unmindful of themselves, had gallantly
|
||
joined the regular church in opposing it tooth and nail. The King
|
||
and Father Petre now resolved to have this read, on a certain
|
||
Sunday, in all the churches, and to order it to be circulated for
|
||
that purpose by the bishops. The latter took counsel with the
|
||
Archbishop of Canterbury, who was in disgrace; and they resolved
|
||
that the declaration should not be read, and that they would
|
||
petition the King against it. The Archbishop himself wrote out the
|
||
petition, and six bishops went into the King's bedchamber the same
|
||
night to present it, to his infinite astonishment. Next day was
|
||
the Sunday fixed for the reading, and it was only read by two
|
||
hundred clergymen out of ten thousand. The King resolved against
|
||
all advice to prosecute the bishops in the Court of King's Bench,
|
||
and within three weeks they were summoned before the Privy Council,
|
||
and committed to the Tower. As the six bishops were taken to that
|
||
dismal place, by water, the people who were assembled in immense
|
||
numbers fell upon their knees, and wept for them, and prayed for
|
||
them. When they got to the Tower, the officers and soldiers on
|
||
guard besought them for their blessing. While they were confined
|
||
there, the soldiers every day drank to their release with loud
|
||
shouts. When they were brought up to the Court of King's Bench for
|
||
their trial, which the Attorney-General said was for the high
|
||
offence of censuring the Government, and giving their opinion about
|
||
affairs of state, they were attended by similar multitudes, and
|
||
surrounded by a throng of noblemen and gentlemen. When the jury
|
||
went out at seven o'clock at night to consider of their verdict,
|
||
everybody (except the King) knew that they would rather starve than
|
||
yield to the King's brewer, who was one of them, and wanted a
|
||
verdict for his customer. When they came into court next morning,
|
||
after resisting the brewer all night, and gave a verdict of not
|
||
guilty, such a shout rose up in Westminster Hall as it had never
|
||
heard before; and it was passed on among the people away to Temple
|
||
Bar, and away again to the Tower. It did not pass only to the
|
||
east, but passed to the west too, until it reached the camp at
|
||
Hounslow, where the fifteen thousand soldiers took it up and echoed
|
||
it. And still, when the dull King, who was then with Lord
|
||
Feversham, heard the mighty roar, asked in alarm what it was, and
|
||
was told that it was 'nothing but the acquittal of the bishops,' he
|
||
said, in his dogged way, 'Call you that nothing? It is so much the
|
||
worse for them.'
|
||
|
||
Between the petition and the trial, the Queen had given birth to a
|
||
son, which Father Petre rather thought was owing to Saint Winifred.
|
||
But I doubt if Saint Winifred had much to do with it as the King's
|
||
friend, inasmuch as the entirely new prospect of a Catholic
|
||
successor (for both the King's daughters were Protestants)
|
||
determined the EARLS OF SHREWSBURY, DANBY, and DEVONSHIRE, LORD
|
||
LUMLEY, the BISHOP OF LONDON, ADMIRAL RUSSELL, and COLONEL SIDNEY,
|
||
to invite the Prince of Orange over to England. The Royal Mole,
|
||
seeing his danger at last, made, in his fright, many great
|
||
concessions, besides raising an army of forty thousand men; but the
|
||
Prince of Orange was not a man for James the Second to cope with.
|
||
His preparations were extraordinarily vigorous, and his mind was
|
||
resolved.
|
||
|
||
For a fortnight after the Prince was ready to sail for England, a
|
||
great wind from the west prevented the departure of his fleet.
|
||
Even when the wind lulled, and it did sail, it was dispersed by a
|
||
storm, and was obliged to put back to refit. At last, on the first
|
||
of November, one thousand six hundred and eighty-eight, the
|
||
Protestant east wind, as it was long called, began to blow; and on
|
||
the third, the people of Dover and the people of Calais saw a fleet
|
||
twenty miles long sailing gallantly by, between the two places. On
|
||
Monday, the fifth, it anchored at Torbay in Devonshire, and the
|
||
Prince, with a splendid retinue of officers and men, marched into
|
||
Exeter. But the people in that western part of the country had
|
||
suffered so much in The Bloody Assize, that they had lost heart.
|
||
Few people joined him; and he began to think of returning, and
|
||
publishing the invitation he had received from those lords, as his
|
||
justification for having come at all. At this crisis, some of the
|
||
gentry joined him; the Royal army began to falter; an engagement
|
||
was signed, by which all who set their hand to it declared that
|
||
they would support one another in defence of the laws and liberties
|
||
of the three Kingdoms, of the Protestant religion, and of the
|
||
Prince of Orange. From that time, the cause received no check; the
|
||
greatest towns in England began, one after another, to declare for
|
||
the Prince; and he knew that it was all safe with him when the
|
||
University of Oxford offered to melt down its plate, if he wanted
|
||
any money.
|
||
|
||
By this time the King was running about in a pitiable way, touching
|
||
people for the King's evil in one place, reviewing his troops in
|
||
another, and bleeding from the nose in a third. The young Prince
|
||
was sent to Portsmouth, Father Petre went off like a shot to
|
||
France, and there was a general and swift dispersal of all the
|
||
priests and friars. One after another, the King's most important
|
||
officers and friends deserted him and went over to the Prince. In
|
||
the night, his daughter Anne fled from Whitehall Palace; and the
|
||
Bishop of London, who had once been a soldier, rode before her with
|
||
a drawn sword in his hand, and pistols at his saddle. 'God help
|
||
me,' cried the miserable King: 'my very children have forsaken
|
||
me!' In his wildness, after debating with such lords as were in
|
||
London, whether he should or should not call a Parliament, and
|
||
after naming three of them to negotiate with the Prince, he
|
||
resolved to fly to France. He had the little Prince of Wales
|
||
brought back from Portsmouth; and the child and the Queen crossed
|
||
the river to Lambeth in an open boat, on a miserable wet night, and
|
||
got safely away. This was on the night of the ninth of December.
|
||
|
||
At one o'clock on the morning of the eleventh, the King, who had,
|
||
in the meantime, received a letter from the Prince of Orange,
|
||
stating his objects, got out of bed, told LORD NORTHUMBERLAND who
|
||
lay in his room not to open the door until the usual hour in the
|
||
morning, and went down the back stairs (the same, I suppose, by
|
||
which the priest in the wig and gown had come up to his brother)
|
||
and crossed the river in a small boat: sinking the great seal of
|
||
England by the way. Horses having been provided, he rode,
|
||
accompanied by SIR EDWARD HALES, to Feversham, where he embarked in
|
||
a Custom House Hoy. The master of this Hoy, wanting more ballast,
|
||
ran into the Isle of Sheppy to get it, where the fishermen and
|
||
smugglers crowded about the boat, and informed the King of their
|
||
suspicions that he was a 'hatchet-faced Jesuit.' As they took his
|
||
money and would not let him go, he told them who he was, and that
|
||
the Prince of Orange wanted to take his life; and he began to
|
||
scream for a boat - and then to cry, because he had lost a piece of
|
||
wood on his ride which he called a fragment of Our Saviour's cross.
|
||
He put himself into the hands of the Lord Lieutenant of the county,
|
||
and his detention was made known to the Prince of Orange at Windsor
|
||
- who, only wanting to get rid of him, and not caring where he
|
||
went, so that he went away, was very much disconcerted that they
|
||
did not let him go. However, there was nothing for it but to have
|
||
him brought back, with some state in the way of Life Guards, to
|
||
Whitehall. And as soon as he got there, in his infatuation, he
|
||
heard mass, and set a Jesuit to say grace at his public dinner.
|
||
|
||
The people had been thrown into the strangest state of confusion by
|
||
his flight, and had taken it into their heads that the Irish part
|
||
of the army were going to murder the Protestants. Therefore, they
|
||
set the bells a ringing, and lighted watch-fires, and burned
|
||
Catholic Chapels, and looked about in all directions for Father
|
||
Petre and the Jesuits, while the Pope's ambassador was running away
|
||
in the dress of a footman. They found no Jesuits; but a man, who
|
||
had once been a frightened witness before Jeffreys in court, saw a
|
||
swollen, drunken face looking through a window down at Wapping,
|
||
which he well remembered. The face was in a sailor's dress, but he
|
||
knew it to be the face of that accursed judge, and he seized him.
|
||
The people, to their lasting honour, did not tear him to pieces.
|
||
After knocking him about a little, they took him, in the basest
|
||
agonies of terror, to the Lord Mayor, who sent him, at his own
|
||
shrieking petition, to the Tower for safety. There, he died.
|
||
|
||
Their bewilderment continuing, the people now lighted bonfires and
|
||
made rejoicings, as if they had any reason to be glad to have the
|
||
King back again. But, his stay was very short, for the English
|
||
guards were removed from Whitehall, Dutch guards were marched up to
|
||
it, and he was told by one of his late ministers that the Prince
|
||
would enter London, next day, and he had better go to Ham. He
|
||
said, Ham was a cold, damp place, and he would rather go to
|
||
Rochester. He thought himself very cunning in this, as he meant to
|
||
escape from Rochester to France. The Prince of Orange and his
|
||
friends knew that, perfectly well, and desired nothing more. So,
|
||
he went to Gravesend, in his royal barge, attended by certain
|
||
lords, and watched by Dutch troops, and pitied by the generous
|
||
people, who were far more forgiving than he had ever been, when
|
||
they saw him in his humiliation. On the night of the twenty-third
|
||
of December, not even then understanding that everybody wanted to
|
||
get rid of him, he went out, absurdly, through his Rochester
|
||
garden, down to the Medway, and got away to France, where he
|
||
rejoined the Queen.
|
||
|
||
There had been a council in his absence, of the lords, and the
|
||
authorities of London. When the Prince came, on the day after the
|
||
King's departure, he summoned the Lords to meet him, and soon
|
||
afterwards, all those who had served in any of the Parliaments of
|
||
King Charles the Second. It was finally resolved by these
|
||
authorities that the throne was vacant by the conduct of King James
|
||
the Second; that it was inconsistent with the safety and welfare of
|
||
this Protestant kingdom, to be governed by a Popish prince; that
|
||
the Prince and Princess of Orange should be King and Queen during
|
||
their lives and the life of the survivor of them; and that their
|
||
children should succeed them, if they had any. That if they had
|
||
none, the Princess Anne and her children should succeed; that if
|
||
she had none, the heirs of the Prince of Orange should succeed.
|
||
|
||
On the thirteenth of January, one thousand six hundred and eighty-
|
||
nine, the Prince and Princess, sitting on a throne in Whitehall,
|
||
bound themselves to these conditions. The Protestant religion was
|
||
established in England, and England's great and glorious Revolution
|
||
was complete.
|
||
|
||
CHAPTER XXXVII
|
||
|
||
I HAVE now arrived at the close of my little history. The events
|
||
which succeeded the famous Revolution of one thousand six hundred
|
||
and eighty-eight, would neither be easily related nor easily
|
||
understood in such a book as this.
|
||
|
||
William and Mary reigned together, five years. After the death of
|
||
his good wife, William occupied the throne, alone, for seven years
|
||
longer. During his reign, on the sixteenth of September, one
|
||
thousand seven hundred and one, the poor weak creature who had once
|
||
been James the Second of England, died in France. In the meantime
|
||
he had done his utmost (which was not much) to cause William to be
|
||
assassinated, and to regain his lost dominions. James's son was
|
||
declared, by the French King, the rightful King of England; and was
|
||
called in France THE CHEVALIER SAINT GEORGE, and in England THE
|
||
PRETENDER. Some infatuated people in England, and particularly in
|
||
Scotland, took up the Pretender's cause from time to time - as if
|
||
the country had not had Stuarts enough! - and many lives were
|
||
sacrificed, and much misery was occasioned. King William died on
|
||
Sunday, the seventh of March, one thousand seven hundred and two,
|
||
of the consequences of an accident occasioned by his horse
|
||
stumbling with him. He was always a brave, patriotic Prince, and a
|
||
man of remarkable abilities. His manner was cold, and he made but
|
||
few friends; but he had truly loved his queen. When he was dead, a
|
||
lock of her hair, in a ring, was found tied with a black ribbon
|
||
round his left arm.
|
||
|
||
He was succeeded by the PRINCESS ANNE, a popular Queen, who reigned
|
||
twelve years. In her reign, in the month of May, one thousand
|
||
seven hundred and seven, the Union between England and Scotland was
|
||
effected, and the two countries were incorporated under the name of
|
||
GREAT BRITAIN. Then, from the year one thousand seven hundred and
|
||
fourteen to the year one thousand, eight hundred and thirty,
|
||
reigned the four GEORGES.
|
||
|
||
It was in the reign of George the Second, one thousand seven
|
||
hundred and forty-five, that the Pretender did his last mischief,
|
||
and made his last appearance. Being an old man by that time, he
|
||
and the Jacobites - as his friends were called - put forward his
|
||
son, CHARLES EDWARD, known as the young Chevalier. The Highlanders
|
||
of Scotland, an extremely troublesome and wrong-headed race on the
|
||
subject of the Stuarts, espoused his cause, and he joined them, and
|
||
there was a Scottish rebellion to make him king, in which many
|
||
gallant and devoted gentlemen lost their lives. It was a hard
|
||
matter for Charles Edward to escape abroad again, with a high price
|
||
on his head; but the Scottish people were extraordinarily faithful
|
||
to him, and, after undergoing many romantic adventures, not unlike
|
||
those of Charles the Second, he escaped to France. A number of
|
||
charming stories and delightful songs arose out of the Jacobite
|
||
feelings, and belong to the Jacobite times. Otherwise I think the
|
||
Stuarts were a public nuisance altogether.
|
||
|
||
It was in the reign of George the Third that England lost North
|
||
America, by persisting in taxing her without her own consent. That
|
||
immense country, made independent under WASHINGTON, and left to
|
||
itself, became the United States; one of the greatest nations of
|
||
the earth. In these times in which I write, it is honourably
|
||
remarkable for protecting its subjects, wherever they may travel,
|
||
with a dignity and a determination which is a model for England.
|
||
Between you and me, England has rather lost ground in this respect
|
||
since the days of Oliver Cromwell.
|
||
|
||
The Union of Great Britain with Ireland - which had been getting on
|
||
very ill by itself - took place in the reign of George the Third,
|
||
on the second of July, one thousand seven hundred and ninety-eight.
|
||
|
||
WILLIAM THE FOURTH succeeded George the Fourth, in the year one
|
||
thousand eight hundred and thirty, and reigned seven years. QUEEN
|
||
VICTORIA, his niece, the only child of the Duke of Kent, the fourth
|
||
son of George the Third, came to the throne on the twentieth of
|
||
June, one thousand eight hundred and thirty-seven. She was married
|
||
to PRINCE ALBERT of Saxe Gotha on the tenth of February, one
|
||
thousand eight hundred and forty. She is very good, and much
|
||
beloved. So I end, like the crier, with
|
||
|
||
GOD SAVE THE QUEEN!
|
||
|
||
End of the Project Gutenberg eText A Child's History of England
|
||
|