1011 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
1011 lines
58 KiB
Plaintext
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Welcome to the third installment of the Frog Farm. You may notice that
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this installment is less full of the hardcore legal issues-and-procedure
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meat and potatoes type of thing that the first two were so crammed with.
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Don't think of it as a regular thing -- what gets sent out is utterly
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unpredictable. Of course, you can affect what gets sent out, by making
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your own contributions to the list!
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For your reading pleasure:
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1) Final Judgment, 1881
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2) Excerpt from Jonathan Swift's _Gulliver's Travels_
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3) Quick Quotes
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4) Swear Not w/George Gordon
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5) The Short and Unhappy History of the Whiskey Rebellion
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6) Excerpt from _They Thought They Were Free_
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7) Famous Courtroom Defenses: Sir Thomas More
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**
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F I N A L J U D G M E N T
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The following is a verbatim transcript of a sentence imposed
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upon a defendant convicted of murder in the Federal District
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Court of the Territory of New Mexico many years ago by a United
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States Judge, sitting at Taos in an adobe stable used as a
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temporary courtroom:
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"Jose Manuel Miguel Xavier Gonzales, in a few short weeks it
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will be spring. The snows of winter will flee away, the ice will
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vanish, and the air will become soft and balmy. In short, Jose
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Manuel Miguel Xavier Gonzales, the annual miracle of the years
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will awaken and come to pass, but you won't be there.
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"The rivulet will run its soaring course to the sea, the
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timid desert flowers will put forth their tender shoots, the
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glorious valleys of this imperial domain will blossom as the
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rose. Still, you won't be here to see.
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"From every tree top some wild woods songster will carol his
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mating song, butterflies will sport in the sunshine, the busy bee
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will hum happy as it pursues its accustomed vocation, the gentle
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breeze will tease the tassels of the wild grasses, and all
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nature, Jose Manuel Miguel Xavier Gonzales, will be glad, but
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you. You won't be here to enjoy it because I command the Sheriff
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or some other officer of the country to lead you out to some
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remote spot, swing you by the neck from a knotting bough of some
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sturdy oak, and let you hang until you are dead.
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"And then, Jose Manuel Miguel Xavier Gonzales, I further
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command that such officer or officers retire quickly from your
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dangling corpse, that vultures may descend from the heavens upon
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your filthy body until nothing shall remain but bare, bleached
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bones of a cold-blooded, copper-colored, blood-thirsty, throat-
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cutting, chili-eating, sheep-herding, murdering son-of-a-bitch."
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United States of America v. Gonzales (1881), United States
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District Court, New Mexico Territory Sessions.
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Origin: TEXAS FATHERS * A PARALEGALS POINT Fido 1:106/1555.7
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**
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From Jonathan Swift's _Gulliver's Travels_, 1735:
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[Gulliver is attempting to explain lawyers to his new master.]
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There is a society of men among us, bred up from their youth in the art of
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proving, by words multiplied for the purpose, that white is black, and black
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is white, according as they are paid. To this society all the rest of the
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people are slaves. For example, if my neighbor hath a mind to my cow, he hires
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a lawyer to prove that he ought to have my cow from me. I must then hire
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another to defend my right, it being against all rules of law that any man
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should be allowed to speak for himself. Now in this case, I, who am the right
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owner, lie under two great disadvantages. First, my lawyer, being practised
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almost from his cradle in defending falsehood, is quite out of his element
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when he would be an advocate for justice, which as an office unnatural, he
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always attempts with ill will. The second disadvantage is that my lawyer must
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proceed with great caution, or else he will he reprimanded by the judges, and
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adhorred by his brethren, as one that would lessen the practise of the law.
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And therefore, I have but two methods to preserve my cow. The first is to gain
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over my adversary's lawyer with a double fee, who will then betray his client
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by insinuating that he hath justice on his side. The second way is for my
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lawyer to make my cause appear as unjust as he can, by allowing the cow to
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belong to my adversary; and this, if it be skillfully done, will certainly
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bespeak the favour of the bench.
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Now, your Honour is to know that these judges are persons appointed to decide
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all controversies of property, as well as for the trial of criminals, and
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picked out from the most dexterous lawyers, who are grown old or lazy, and
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having been biased all their lives against truth and equity, are under such a
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fatal necessity of favouring fraud, perjury, and oppression, that I have known
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several of them refuse a large bribe from the side where justice lay, rather
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than injure the faculty, by doing anything unbecoming their nature or their
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office.
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It is a maxim among these lawyers, that whatever hath been done before may
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legally be done again; and therefore, they take special care to record all the
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decisions formerly made against common justice and the general reason of
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mankind. These, under the name of "precedents", they produce as authorities,
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to justify the most iniquitous opinions; and the judges never fail of
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directing accordingly.
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In pleading, they studiously avoid entering into the merits of the cause, but
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are loud, violent and tedious in dwelling upon all circumstances which are not
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to the purpose. For instance, in the case already mentioned, they never desire
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to know what claim or title my adversary hath to my cow; but whether the said
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cow were red or black, her horns long or short, whether the field I graze her
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in be round or square, whether she waas milked at home or abroad, what
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diseases she is subject to, and the like; after which they consult precedents,
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adjourn the cause from time to time, and ten, twenty or thirty years, come to
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an issue.
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It is likewise to be observed, that this society hath a peculiar cant and
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jargon of their own, that no other mortal can understand, and wherein all
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their laws are written, which they take special care to multiply; whereby they
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have wholly confounded the very essence of truth and falsehood, of right and
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wrong; so that it will take thirty years to decide whether the field left me
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by my ancestors for six generations belongs to me, or to a stranger three
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hundred miles off.
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In the trial of persons accused for crimes against the state, the method is
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much more short and commendable: the judge first sends to sound the
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disposition of those in power, after which he can easily hang or save the
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criminal, strictly preserving all due forms of law.
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Here my master interposed, saying it was a pity that creatures endowed with
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such prodigious abilities of mind as these lawyers, by the description I gave
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of them, must certainly be, were not rather encouraged to be instructors of
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others in wisdom and knowledge; in answer to which I assured his Honour that
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in all points out of their own trade, they were the most ignorant and stupid
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generations among us, the most despicable in common conversation, avowed
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enemies to all knowledge and learning, and equally disposed to pervert the
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general reason of mankind in every other subject of discourse, as in that of
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their own profession.
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**
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"...an...officer who acts in violation of the Constitution ceases to represent
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the government." BROOKFIELD CO. V. STUART, (1964) 234 F. Supp 94, 99
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(U.S.D.C., Wash.D.C.)
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"...an officer may be held liable in damages to any person injured in
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consequence of a breach of any of the duties connected with his office...The
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liability for nonfeasance, misfeasance, and for malfeasance in office is in
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his 'individual,' not his official capacity..." 70 AmJur2nd Sec. 50, VII Civil
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Liability.
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"Decency, security, and liberty alike demand that government officials be
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subjected to the same rules of conduct that are commands to the citizen. In
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a Government of laws, existence of the government will be imperiled if it
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fails to observe the law scrupulously. Crime is contagious. If government
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becomes a lawbreaker, it breeds contempt for the law...it invites every man
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to become a law unto himself...and against that pernicious doctrine, this
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court should resolutely set its face." OLMSTEAD V. U.S., 277 US 348, 485; 48 S
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Ct. 564, 575; 72 LEd 944.
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**
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Swear Not
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with George Gordon
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A witness who has religious objections to either swearing or affirming to
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tell the truth has a right to find some other way to express an obligation
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to testify accurately, a federal appeals court ruled on December 19, 1985.
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By a 2 - 1 vote, the 9th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals ordered a federal
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judge in Idaho to reinstate a Boise man's civil rights suit, which was
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dismissed when he refused to either swear or affirm he would testify
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truthfully at a pretrial deposition.
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The civil rights suit was filed against the state of Idaho and Ada County
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by George K. Gordon, who said a state judge sentenced him to jail for 12
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days for contempt when he refused to swear or affirm to tell the truth
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during proceedings in a civil suit.
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Before trial, Gordon was summoned to an out-of-court deposition. He again
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refused to swear or affirm he would tell the truth, and U.S. District Judge
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Harold Ryan ordered his suit dismissed.
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Here are some excerpts from the motion that George Gordon filed before the
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Court:
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"The question of whether the courts of Idaho can compel a liar to take an
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oath to tell the truth and thereby force him to commit perjury is a serious
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one. I contend that the answer is no. The 5th Amendment comes into play
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here.
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"Oh, but you say, there is no Fifth Amendment protection to remain silent
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in a civil case, therefore refusing to testify or answer questions
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concerning this civil examination does not come under the Fifth Amendment
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protection and you are right if you say you cannot refuse to answer
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questions after judgement in a civil action and I concur.
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"But, I did not refuse to answer questions in any examination after
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judgement. I refused to swear an oath and I contend that is another issue.
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Let's examine the matter further. The Fifth Amendment is designed to
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protect a man against self incrimination, testimony against himself. If a
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liar is compelled to take an oath and then answer questions, he is then
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compelled to commit perjury which is both a criminal felony and entrapment.
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"I have told the court that I am a pathological liar. As my authority, I
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claim my First Amendment right to freedom of religion. I claim as an
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inalienable right to believe my conscience and whatever religious authority
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I believe to choose as my guide in this matter. I contend that you cannot
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question my religious belief, only the 'sincerity with which I believe it.'
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"God tells us 'let God be true though every man be a liar.' Matthew 5:33.
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'Again you have heard that it hath been said by them of old time, thou
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shalt not forswear thyself, but shall perform unto the Lord thine oaths:
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5:34 But I say unto you, swear not at all; neither by heaven; for it is
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God's throne; 5:35 Nor by the earth; for it is his footstool: neither by
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Jerusalem; for it is the city of the great King. 5:36 Neither shalt thou
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swear by thy head, because thou canst make one hair white or black. 5:37
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But let your communication be Yea, Yea, Yea; Nay, Nay: for whatsoever is
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more than these cometh of evil.' Here is a direct order from Jesus Christ
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that we are not to swear. I cannot speak for any other man but it is for
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this cause that I cannot swear or take the oath.
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"Let us examine one other piece of scripture while we are on the subject of
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oaths. James 5:12 'But above all things my brethren, swear not, neither by
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heaven, neither by the earth, neither by any other oath; but let your yea
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be yea; and your nay, nay; lest ye fall into condemnation.'
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"Now, I do not claim to be a Christian. I cannot determine whether I have
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that status or not. I cannot believe that I hold such a status. But can I
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then disregard a direct order from God himself? God himself has said every
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man is a liar. Do you cast me in the dungeon for telling you the truth that
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I am a liar?
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"I contend that to compel me to tell the truth is like compelling a dog to
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crow or a cat to bark. I concede that I have the capacity to tell the
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truth. When I write it down or when I decide that I want to tell the truth
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of the matter, I have the capacity. But to place me under oath, threat,
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duress, and then coerce me to tell the truth, places me in jeopardy of
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committing perjury and I claim my inalienable right to be free from such
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force pursuant to the Miranda Doctrine. I claim the right to remain silent
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when the question asked could result in an answer that could be used
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against me in a criminal prosecution.
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"Now to the question that I claim I cannot be compelled to answer. The
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court asked the defendant this question: "Do you swear or affirm that the
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testimony you are about to give will be the truth, the whole truth and
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nothing but the truth?" I answered the question plainly: 'No.' Do you cast
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me into the prison for telling you the truth or for perjury? I am alleged
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to be in criminal contempt but the court has not made any judicial
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determination as to whether it is because I lied, told the truth, refused
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to lie, refused to tell the truth, or for not taking an oath, or for some
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other cause not known to me at this time. I contend that before I can
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return to court to answer this matter I must have the proper Fifth
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Amendment safeguards. I demand all of my rights at all times and I waive
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none of them at any time, for any cause or reason, including my right to
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time and counsel of my choice pursuant to the Sixth Amendment.
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"In conclusion to this question, I contend that this court has compelled
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this defendant into a classic Fifth Amendment 'Catch-22' situation in which
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the constitutional protection comes into play in this case. It is for this
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cause that this criminal conviction must be reversed."
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And so it was.
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[Reprinted from `Freedom League', January 1986]
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**
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[I've lost the original citation for this tidbit. I remember it being the
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only good thing in the entire book, though.]
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...The subsequent victory of George Washington's Continental Army over the
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British forces, however, did not resolve the dispute over who had the power to
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decide the taxes that would be paid by the American people. It merely changed
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the locus of the debate...THE TAXING POWER GRANTED [TO] THE NEW GOVERNMENT WHEN
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THE CONSTITUTION WAS OFFICIALLY ADOPTED IN 1788 WAS FAR MORE EXTENSIVE THAN
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PARLIAMENT HAD DREAMED OF ASSUMING IN THE DECADES BEFORE THE WAR OF
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INDEPENDENCE. And many Americans were as opposed to the federal claims as they
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had been to those of the Crown.
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...The section of the new law mandating the whiskey excise tax was of great
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significance, because it almost immediately sparked the first outbreak of
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violent opposition to the brand-new government. A second provision of the law,
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however, would have far more long-term importance to the people of the United
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States. For it was under this second provision, granting the Treasury
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Department the power to collect taxes, that [Alexander] Hamilton in 1792 first
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established the Office of the Commissioner of Revenue, the predecessor of what
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is today known as the Internal Revenue Service.
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...The protest against [the] whiskey tax came in several stages. First, there
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were speeches and demonstrations and organizing meetings. Then in September,
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1791, sixteen frontiersmen disguised in women's clothing assaulted an excise
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tax collector named Robert Johnson. They stole his horse, cut his hair, tarred
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and feathered him, and left him in a "mortifying and painful situation." [9]
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After several more years of scattered acts of violence, the federal government
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began to lose patience. In the summer of 1794, U.S. Marshal David Lenox headed
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west from Philadelphia armed with subpoenas ordering the appearance of over
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sixty distillers before the federal district court in Philadelphia. John
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Neville, a retired military commander who was one of the first agents hired by
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the new commissioner of revenue, became his local guide.
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The federal marshal and the tax collector began serving the subpoenas on July
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15. On the next day, the local militia surrounded the house where Neville was
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staying, a battle broke out, and one militiaman was mortally wounded.
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The line had been drawn in the frontier dust. As news of the outrage flowed
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back to Philadelphia, then the capital of the nation, President Washington and
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Secretary Hamilton decided that an overwhelming response was required. On
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August 4, 1794, Supreme Court Justice James Wilson sent Washington an official
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ruling that "from the evidence which has been laid before me, I hereby notify
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you that in the counties of Washington and Allegheny, the laws of the United
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States are opposed, and the execution thereof obstructed by combinations too
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powerful to be suppressed by the ordinary course of judicial proceedings, or by
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the powers vested in the marshall of that district." [10]
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Justice Wilson's ruling was required before Washington could federalize the
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militias of Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Virginia and Maryland. On September 30,
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accompanied by this ragtag army of thirteen thousand [almost as many as the
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number that fought in the Revolution!], Washington, Hamilton and Secretary of
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War Henry Knox headed west to meet with two emissaries of the rebels. At the
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meeting, Washington told the Westerners that he regarded "the support of the
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laws an object of first magnitude" and that nothing short of "unequivocal
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proofs of absolute submission" would suffice.
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"The most substantial roundup of suspects...occurred on November 13. Mounted
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troops struck in the dead of night, in some cases literally dragging men from
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bed and without permitting the prisoners to dress themselves for the journey
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ahead. About 150 half-naked frontiersmen, some of them with bare feet, were
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then 'driven before a troop of horse at the trot through muddy roads seven
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miles from Pittsburgh.'" [11]
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Eventually, about twenty of the tax protesters, mostly obscure frontier
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farmers, were dragged to Philadelphia and tried for treason. In the end, the
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juries acquitted all but two of the prisoners. With the absolute right of the
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federal government to collect taxes firmly established, Washington chose to be
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magnanimous, and pardoned the two convicted felons. Thus ended what to this day
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remains the most widespread and violent resistance to federal taxes in the
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history of the United States.
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[9] Thomas P. Slaughter, _The Whiskey Rebellion: Frontier Epilogue to the
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American Revolution (New York: Oxford University Press, 1986), p. 113
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[10] John C. Chommie, _The Internal Revenue Service_ (New York: Praeger
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Publishers, 1970), p. 3
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[11] Slaughter, _Whiskey Rebellion_, p. 218
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Also see Charles Adams' _Fight, Flight, Fraud: The Story of Taxation_
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(Curacao: Euro-Dutch Publishers, 1982).
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**
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Excerpted and condensed without permission from Milton Mayer's _They
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Thought They Were Free; the Germans, 1933-45_ (U. of Chicago Press, 1955).
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The following comments are attributed to a German philologist (pp. 166-172):
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``What no one seemed to notice," ... ``was the ever widening
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gap ... between the government and the people. ... And it became
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always wider. ...
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``What happened here was the gradual habituation of the
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people ... to be being governed by surprise; to receiving
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decisions deliberated in secret; to believing that the situation
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was so complicated that the government had to act on information
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which the people could not understand, or so dangerous that ...
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it could not be released because of national security. ...
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``This separation of government from people ... took place
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so gradually and so insensibly, each step disguised (perhaps not
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even intentionally) as a temporary emergency measure or
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associated with true patriotic allegiance or with real social
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purposes. And all the crises and reforms ... so occupied the
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people that they did not see the slow motion underneath ...
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``... the whole process of its coming into being, was above
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all *diverting*. It provided an excuse not to think for people
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who did not want to think anyway. I do not speak of your `little
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men' ...; I speak of my colleagues and myself, learned men, ... .
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Most of us did not want to think about fundamental things and
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never had. ... Nazism gave us some dreadful, fundamental things
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to think about ... and kept us so busy with continuous changes
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and `crises' and so fascinated ... by the machinations of the
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`national enemies,' without and within, that we had no time to
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think about these dreadful things that were growing, little by
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little, all around us. ...
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``To live in this process is absolutely not to be able to
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notice it ... unless one has a much greater degree of political
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awareness ... than most of us had ever had occasion to develop.
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Each step was so small, so inconsequential, so well explained or,
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on occasion, `regretted,' that ... unless one understood what
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the whole thing was in principle, what all these `little
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measures' that no `patriotic German' could resent must some day
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lead to, one no more saw it developing from day to day than a
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farmer in his field sees the corn growing. ...
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``How is this to be avoided ... Many, many times since it
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all happened I have pondered that pair of great maxims ...
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`Resist the beginnings' and `Consider the end.' But one must
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foresee the end in order to resist ... the beginnings. ... and
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how is this to be done ...? ...
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``Your `little men', ..., were not against National
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Socialism in principle. Men like me, who were, are the greater
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offenders ...
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``... One doesn't see exactly where or how to move. ... Each
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act, each occasion, is worse than the last, but only a little
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worse. You wait for the next and the next. You wait for one great
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shocking occasion, thinking that others, when such a shock comes,
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will join with you in resisting somehow. You don't want to act,
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or even talk, alone; you don't want to `go out of your way to
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make trouble.' ... And it is not just fear ... that restrains
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you; it is also genuine uncertainty.
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``Uncertainty is a very important factor, and, instead of
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decreasing as time goes on, it grows. Outside, in the streets,
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..., `everyone' is happy. One hears no protest, and certainly
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|
sees none. ... you speak privately to your colleagues, some of
|
|
whom certainly feel as you do; but what do they say? They say,
|
|
`It's not so bad' or `You're seeing things' or `You're an
|
|
alarmist.'
|
|
|
|
``And you *are* an alarmist. You are saying that *this* must
|
|
lead to *this*, and you can't prove it. ... On the one hand, your
|
|
enemies ... intimidate you. On the other, your colleagues pooh-
|
|
pooh you as pessimistic or even neurotic. You are left with your
|
|
close friends, ... people who have always thought as you have.
|
|
|
|
``... in small gatherings of your oldest friends, you feel
|
|
that you are talking to yourselves, that you are isolated from
|
|
the reality of things. This weakens your confidence still further
|
|
and serves as a further deterrent to - to what? It is clearer
|
|
all the time that, if you are going to do anything, you must
|
|
*make* an occasion to do it, and then you are obviously a
|
|
troublemaker. So you wait...
|
|
|
|
``But the one great shocking occasion, when tens or hundreds
|
|
or thousands will join with you, never comes. *That's* the
|
|
difficulty. If the last and worst act of the whole regime had
|
|
come immediately after the first and smallest... But of course
|
|
this isn't the way it happens. In between come all the hundreds
|
|
of little steps, some of them imperceptible, each of them
|
|
preparing you not to be shocked by the next. Step C is not so
|
|
much worse than Step B, and, if you did not make a stand at Step
|
|
B, why should you at Step C? And so on to Step D.
|
|
|
|
``And one day, too late, your principles ... all rush in
|
|
upon you. The burden of self-deception has grown too heavy, and
|
|
some minor incident, in my case my little boy ... saying `Jew
|
|
swine,' collapses it all at once, and you see that everything,
|
|
everything, has changed and changed completely under your nose.
|
|
The world you were born in - your nation, your people - is not
|
|
the world you were born in at all. The forms are all there, all
|
|
untouched, all reassuring, the houses, the shops, the jobs, the
|
|
mealtimes, the visits, the concerts, the cinema, the holidays.
|
|
But the spirit, which you never noticed because you made the
|
|
lifelong mistake of identifying it with the forms, is changed.
|
|
Now you live in a world of hate and fear, and the people who hate
|
|
and fear do not even know it themselves; when everyone is
|
|
transformed, no one is transformed. ...
|
|
|
|
``... Life ... has flowed to a new level, carrying you with
|
|
it, without any effort on your part. On this new level you live
|
|
... more comfortably every day, with new morals, new principles.
|
|
You have accepted things you would not have accepted five years
|
|
ago, a year ago, things that your father ... could not have
|
|
imagined.
|
|
|
|
``Suddenly it all comes down, all at once. You see what you
|
|
are, what you have done, or, more accurately, what you haven't
|
|
done (for that was all that was required of most of us: that we
|
|
do nothing). ... You remember everything now, and your heart
|
|
breaks. Too late. You are compromised beyond repair."
|
|
|
|
|
|
**
|
|
|
|
[Note that there's a lot of background supplied to explain the context.
|
|
Here's a fellow who refused to take an oath based on religious freedom
|
|
long before George Gordon..]
|
|
|
|
From _Statesman & Saint: Cardinal Wolsey, Sir Thomas More & the Politics
|
|
of Henry VIII_, by Jasper Ridley:
|
|
|
|
In January 1533, Henry secretly married Anne Boleyn, who was already
|
|
pregnant by him. In April, an Act of Parliament made it high treason to
|
|
appeal from any court in England to the papal court in Rome. In May,
|
|
Cranmer held a special court at Dunstable and gave judgment that Henry's
|
|
marriage to Catherine was unlawful. It was then announced that King Henry,
|
|
being a bachelor, had married Anne Boleyn a few months earlier, and she was
|
|
now the queen...On Whit Sunday, June 1, Anne was crowned queen..In
|
|
December, the Council issued a proclamation abrogating the Papal supremacy
|
|
over the Church of England, and ordering that the Pope must in future be
|
|
referred to as "the Bishop of Rome". At the same time, the conspiracy of
|
|
Elizabeth Barton, the Nun of Kent, was exposed. It brought More into
|
|
danger.
|
|
|
|
Elizabeth Barton had first attracted attention about 1526 by her trances
|
|
at Courtopestreet near her native village of Aldington in Kent. As
|
|
villagers crowded around her, they heard a hollow voice speaking as if from
|
|
out of her belly. The voice ordered Elizabeth to enter the nunnery of St.
|
|
Sepulchre's in Centerbury. There she met her confessor, Dr. Edward Bocking,
|
|
who was a monk of Christchurch, Canterbury. Under his guidance, she began
|
|
to experience revelations of a controversial character. She went to see
|
|
Wolsey -- probably in 1528 -- and told him that she had seen a vision of
|
|
him with three swords: One representing his power as Legate, the second his
|
|
power as Lord Chancellor, and the third his power to grant the king a
|
|
divorce.
|
|
|
|
The Lady of Courtopestreet ordered the nun to go to the king, to tell him
|
|
to burn English translations of the Bible and to remain loyal to the Pope,
|
|
and to warn him that if he married Anne Boleyn, he would die within a month
|
|
and that within six months the people would be struck down by a great
|
|
plague. She gained access to Henry, and passed on the warning to him. He
|
|
listened with surprising patience, and showed no irritation, but henceforth
|
|
she was kept under observation.
|
|
|
|
Both Warham and Fisher were impressed by her sanctity and by her
|
|
revelations. Fisher believed what she said about the warnings, and realized
|
|
the political use which could be made of them in opposition to the divorce.
|
|
More was much more cautious. He first heard from Elizabeth Barton and her
|
|
visions from Warham, and, relying on the archbishop's report, had formed a
|
|
favorable opinion of her. When she became active as a prophet of the
|
|
disasters which would follow if Henry married Anne Boleyn, More met several
|
|
of her closest collaborators. At Christmas 1532, Father Resby, a Friar
|
|
Observant of Canterbury, told him about her prophecies. Father Rich, a
|
|
Friar Observant of Richmond, who was an active propagandist for Catherine
|
|
of Aragorn, told him more about her prophecies at Shrovetide in February
|
|
1533, and invited him to meet her.
|
|
|
|
A meeting between More and the nun was arranged in the little chapel in
|
|
the monastery of Sion some time in the summer of 1533; but More, if we are
|
|
to believe the account of the meeting which he gave to Cromwell, was very
|
|
careful of what he said to her. They discussed the case of a young woman of
|
|
Tottenham, of whom More had heard, who was persuaded by the nun that her
|
|
visions were illusions planted by the Devil; but More assured Cromwell that
|
|
"we talked no word of the King's Grace or any great personage else".
|
|
|
|
Soon afterwards, he wrote to the nun, impressing on her the need for
|
|
caution. He reminded her of how the Duke of Buckingham had been executed
|
|
largely because he spoke incautiously to a monk:
|
|
|
|
It sufficeth me, good Madam, to put you in remembrance of such thing
|
|
as I nothing doubt your wisdom and the spirit of God shall keep you from
|
|
talking with any persons, specially with lay persons, of any such manner
|
|
things as pertain to princes' affairs, or the state of the realm, but only
|
|
to common and talk with any person, high and low, of such manner things as
|
|
may to the soul be profitable for you to show and for them to know.
|
|
|
|
More had been cautious, but not cautious enough. The nun, Bocking, Resby,
|
|
Rich and her other associates were convicted of high treason and executed
|
|
after they had recanted at Paul's Cross. Fisher and More were accused of
|
|
misprision of treason -- of failing to inform the authorities when they
|
|
knew that high treason had been committed. Both their names were included
|
|
in a bill of attainder which was introduced in Parliament pronouncing them
|
|
guilty and sentencing them to the usual punishment of imprisonment for life
|
|
and forfeiture of their property.
|
|
|
|
Like Wolsey four years earlier, More faced the prospect of being sentenced
|
|
to prison for life, or until the king chose to release him, and like
|
|
Wolsey, he relied entirely on the king's pardon. But in other respects, the
|
|
two fallen favorites reacted differently to the same situation. Whereas
|
|
Wolsey preserved his dignity, and petitioned in the language of a humble
|
|
supplicant only to save his college, not himself, More pleaded in the most
|
|
abject fashion for his pardon. Most other courtiers would have done the
|
|
same in his predicament, though Fisher, like Wolsey, did not. Fisher
|
|
disclaimed any intention to commit misprision of treason. He said that he
|
|
knew that Elizabeth Barton had told the king that he would die within a
|
|
month if he married Anne Boleyn; but he had no idea that she had said this
|
|
to anyone else, and he could not see how she could be held to have
|
|
committed high treason if she had made this prophecy only to the king
|
|
himself.
|
|
|
|
More repudiated the nun, dissociated himself from the opposition to
|
|
Henry's divorce, and expressed his support for Henry's policy and the
|
|
marriage to Anne Boleyn. He could not justify this, like his earlier
|
|
compromises of conscience, by claiming that it enabled him to remain in the
|
|
government and to influence Henry's policy in the right direction. Did he
|
|
act simply out of the same cowardice of which he had accused Tewkesbury,
|
|
Bayfield and Bainham, when they recanted to avoid a far more terrible
|
|
ordeal than More faced? Or was he influenced by his respect for authority,
|
|
by the duty to submit to the higher powers and avoid any action which could
|
|
encourage sedition, and by his instinctive and reasoned disapproval of
|
|
anything which could be interpreted as putting the dictates of an
|
|
individual's conscience above his duty to obey the state?
|
|
|
|
When he heard that his name had been included in the bill of attainder, he
|
|
wrote two letters to Cromwell, describing all that had taken place when he
|
|
met Elizabeth Barton and her accomplices. But explanations and excuses were
|
|
not enough, and on 5 March he wrote letters of complete submission to Henry
|
|
and Cromwell. After thanking Henry for having "of your incomparable
|
|
goodness" appointed him as Lord Chancellor, he assured him that he had
|
|
revealed to Cromwell all that he had done in the case of "the wicked woman
|
|
of Canterbury". He begged the king to delete his name from the bill. "Most
|
|
gracious Sovereign, I neither will, nor well it can become me, with Your
|
|
Highness to reason and argue the matter, but in my most humble manner,
|
|
prostrate at your gracious feet, I only beseech Your Majesty with your own
|
|
high prudence and your accustomed goodness consider and weigh the matter."
|
|
He wrote that his only remaining ambition was that after his short life and
|
|
Henry's long one, "I should once meet with Your Grace again in Heaven and
|
|
there be merry with you."
|
|
|
|
His letter to Cromwell was much longer. He protested that he had never
|
|
done anything to hinder the king's pleasure in connection either with his
|
|
divorce or with Papal supremacy. When the king first asked him for his
|
|
opinion about the divorce, he had told him tthat he was not convinced that
|
|
the marriage to Catherine was unlawful, and so the king decided to employ
|
|
other counsellors to work for the divorce. Since then, he had never said
|
|
anything to anyone about the matter, and he had refused to read a book that
|
|
Catherine's confessor, Abel, had written against the divorce. Now that the
|
|
king had married Anne Boleyn, whom More called "this noble woman really
|
|
anointed Queen", he would "neither murmur at it nor dispute upon it", but
|
|
would pray for both Henry and Ane and the children of their marriage like
|
|
all other faithful subjects. As for Papal supremacy, he said that he had
|
|
never felt particularly strongly in favour of it until he read the
|
|
arguments supporting it in Henry's book _The Assertion of the Seven
|
|
Sacraments_.
|
|
|
|
More's name was deleted from the bill, and he remained at liberty. Fisher
|
|
was sentenced by the Act, but was pardoned by the king after paying a
|
|
substantial fine. He was, in fact, guilty of a far more serious offense
|
|
than any he had been charged with, for he had been secretly urging the
|
|
emperor to invade England and save the realm from schism and heresy.
|
|
|
|
Parliament also passed the Act of Succession, which enacted that the
|
|
king's commissioners might require anyone to swear an oath to uphold the
|
|
statute and the right of the children of Henry and Anne to succeed to the
|
|
throne. Anyone who refused to take the oath would be guilty of misprision
|
|
of treason, with the usual consequences. The oath was taken first by the
|
|
members of the king's council, by the bishops, and by the highest
|
|
dignitaries in the country; afterwards it was put to JPs, and by them to
|
|
heads of households, and many heads of households administered it to their
|
|
families and servants. By these means, Henry forced all the leading persons
|
|
in England either to swear to support the divorce and the right of Anne's
|
|
children to succeed to the crown, or to disclose their opposition and
|
|
suffer imprisonment for life. More was one of the first to be asked to take
|
|
the oath. He was served with a notice to appear before the commissioners at
|
|
Lambeth Palace on Monday, April 13, 1534.
|
|
|
|
On March 5, More had written to Henry and Cromwell promising that he would
|
|
never do anything to hinder Henry's marriage or the repudiation of Papal
|
|
supremacy. Thirty-nine days later, he refused to take the oath of
|
|
succession, knowing that it meant imprisonment for life. He had made
|
|
statements in the House of Lords in favor of the divorce which he knew were
|
|
untrue; he had refused to give any encouragement to the opponents of the
|
|
divorce, or even to read their books; and he had promised not to do
|
|
anything against the divorce. But he would not swear to uphold it. On this
|
|
issue More, who had so often compromised and lied, would not compromise and
|
|
would not lie. He had quite made up his mind about this, and was determined
|
|
not to give way...He had argued that it was seditious for a Protestant to
|
|
refuse to burn the Bible when ordered to do so by the king, but he would
|
|
now refuse to take an oath when ordered to do so by the king. He had always
|
|
refused to recognize the right of an individual to put his conscience
|
|
before obedience to authority, but now he would claim that his conscience
|
|
forbade him to obey authority. The persecutor was ready to endure
|
|
persecution.
|
|
|
|
On the Monday morning, a very warm spring day, More presented himself at
|
|
Lambeth Palace. A number of London clergymen had also been summoned to take
|
|
the oath that day; but though they had arrived before More, he was
|
|
interviewed first as a sign of respect due to him as a former Lord
|
|
Chancellor. Cranmer, Cromwell, Audley and the other commissioners invited
|
|
him to take the oath, but he refused. They tried to persuade him, but as he
|
|
was adamant, they suggested that he should walk in the garden and take time
|
|
to reconsider his attitude. In view of the heat of the day, he preferred to
|
|
wait indoors, while the priests who had been summoned were interviewed and
|
|
required to swear.
|
|
|
|
When More was invited in again, the commissioners told him that all the
|
|
others had sworn, and again urged him to do so. He said that he would not
|
|
criticize anyone who had sworn, but would not swear himself unless the oath
|
|
could be redrafted in a form which would make it compatible with his
|
|
conscience for him to swear it. Cranmer argued that if More would not
|
|
criticize those who sword, he must be in some doubt as to whether to swear
|
|
or not; but it was certain that a subject should obey his prince, and the
|
|
king had ordered him to swear. The certainty of the duty to obey the king
|
|
should prevail over the doubt which More felt about swearing, and More
|
|
should therefore take the oath. More was impressed by this argument, but
|
|
said that the logical consequence of it was that if a man had any doubts as
|
|
to what his conscience required him to do, an order from the king would
|
|
settle it, and he could not accept this proposition. Eventually, the
|
|
commissioners ordered him to be placed in the custody of the Abbott of
|
|
Westminster, and after being held prisoner for a few days in the abbot's
|
|
house, he was sent to the Tower. On Tuesday, Fisher refused to take the
|
|
oath, and he, too, was sent to the Tower.
|
|
|
|
More was a prisoner in the Tower for fifteen months. He was not
|
|
ill-treated, though his health deteriorated. He was allowed books and
|
|
writing materials until his last three weeks of imprisonment, and had a
|
|
servant to wait upon him, like every gentleman in prison. He was regularly
|
|
visited by his daughter, Margaret, and at least once by his wife. He had to
|
|
endure her attempts to persuade him to submit and take the oath, and thus
|
|
regain his freedom and the family property. Margaret Roper, too, tried hard
|
|
to persuade him. She herself had sworn the oath, with the qualification
|
|
that she took it as far as the law of God allowed. It was an escape clause
|
|
that the authorities were prepared to give to her, but not to More, and he
|
|
would not have accepted it if he had been offered. He repeatedly stated
|
|
that he would not condemn anyone who took the oath, but he would not take
|
|
it himself. Nor would he tell anyone, not even Meg, why he refused to take
|
|
it.
|
|
|
|
He wrote several books in the Tower, and also letters to his friends,
|
|
especially to his daughter Margaret Roper. The books and letters contain no
|
|
trace of More the humanist, More the lawyer, More the king's counsellor or
|
|
More the persecutor of heretics, but only of the More who had wished, long
|
|
ago, to spend his life in a Carthusian monastery, and the More who spent
|
|
Fridays in the New Building at Chelsea in prayer and mortification of the
|
|
flesh.
|
|
|
|
In these books, More reveals his inner feelings and his vision of the
|
|
world in their most tortured form. He sees life as a place of suffering.
|
|
"Before we come to the fruitful Mount of Olives", he wrote in _De Tristitia
|
|
Christi_:
|
|
|
|
we must (I say) cross over the valley and stream of Cedron, a valley
|
|
of tears and a stream of sadness whose waves can wash away the blackness
|
|
and filth of our sins. But if we get so weary of pain and grief that we
|
|
perversely attempt to change this world, this place of labour and penance,
|
|
into a joyful haven of rest, if we seek Heaven on earth, we cut ourselves
|
|
off forever from true happiness, and will drown ourselves in penance when
|
|
it is too late to do any good...
|
|
|
|
He was obsessed by suffering, especially the sufferings of Christ, arguing
|
|
that Christ endured far greater pain than any other martyr, even than those
|
|
whose sufferings might appear to have been greater and more prolonged; for
|
|
More was sure that Christ used his divine powers to ensure that he suffered
|
|
far greater pain than any ordinary man would have experienced in similar
|
|
circumstances...
|
|
|
|
He also wrote of the fall of Adam and Eve, which was brought about because
|
|
the woman talked too much, and because, like many gentlewomen, she was
|
|
prepared to talk to strangers, instead of saying, "My husband shall answer
|
|
you":
|
|
|
|
And because that the woman's preaching and babbling to her husband did
|
|
so much harm in the beginning, and would, if it were suffered to, proceed
|
|
do always more and more, therefore St Paul commandeth that a woman shall
|
|
not take upon her to teach her husband, but that her husband should teach
|
|
her, and that she should learn of him in silence, that is to wit, she
|
|
should sit and hear him, and hold herself her tongue. For St Paul well
|
|
foresaw, that if the wife may be suffered to speak too, she will have so
|
|
many words herself that her husband shall never have one.
|
|
|
|
In November 1534, Parliament passed the Act of Supremacy, which enacted
|
|
that the king was Supreme Head of the Church of England. Another Act was
|
|
passed that made it high treason to seek to deprive the king of any of his
|
|
titles. As a result of these two Acts, a man could be executed as a traitor
|
|
if he stated that the king was not Supreme Head of the Church. In addition
|
|
to the oath of succession, the king's subjects could now be required to
|
|
take the oath of supremacy and to swear that they believed the king to be
|
|
Supreme Head of the Church; those who refused to take the oath would be
|
|
guilty of high treason through having denied the king's titles.
|
|
|
|
In April 1535, the priors of the Charterhouses of London, Beauvale in
|
|
Nottinghamshire, and the Isle of Axeholme in Lincolnshire, and a Carthusian
|
|
monk of Sion, were asked to swear the oath of supremacy. They replied that
|
|
they would not acknowledge the king to be the Head of the Church of
|
|
England. This was enough to convict them, and they were tried and sentenced
|
|
on April 29. They were hanged, drawn and quartered at Tyburn on May 4.
|
|
Three other monks of the Charterhouse of London refused to take the oath,
|
|
and were imprisoned in the Tower. They were kept, for a time, chained up by
|
|
the leg and neck to the posts in their dungeon, where they were secretly
|
|
visited by More's adopted daughter, Margaret Clement, who brought them
|
|
food. On April 30, the day after the trial of the first Carthusians, More
|
|
was examined in the Tower by Cromwell and several lawyers in the service of
|
|
the council. Cromwell asked him whether he would acknowledge the king to be
|
|
Supreme Head of the Church; but he refused to answer. Fisher was also
|
|
interrogated in the Tower and asked whether he accepted that the king's
|
|
divorce and his marriage to Anne were valid and that he was Head of the
|
|
Church. He asked to be excused from replying, as the answer might
|
|
incriminate him.
|
|
|
|
On June 3, More was again examined in the Tower by Cromwell, Cranmer,
|
|
Audley, Suffolk and Wiltshire. He was informed that the king ordered him to
|
|
say whether he agreed that the king was Head of the Church, but again he
|
|
refused to answer. When pressed, he replied that the question was like a
|
|
double edged sword. If he did not believe the king to be Supreme Head of
|
|
the Church -- and he would not say whether he did or not -- then, by
|
|
swearing that he believed it, he would perjure his soul, and by refusing to
|
|
swear he would endanger his life. He did not think it right that a man
|
|
should be forced to answer such a question, in such circumstances, as to
|
|
what he believed. Cromwell said that More, when he was Lord Chancellor, had
|
|
forced persons suspected of heresy to answer whether or not they believed
|
|
that the Pope was Head of the Church, knowing that they would violate their
|
|
conscience by saying Yes and would be burned if they said No; so why should
|
|
More not answer his question? More said that there was a distinction
|
|
between the two cases, because at the time when he was examining heretics,
|
|
the law of every country in Christendom laid down that the Pope was Head of
|
|
the Church, whereas now the doctrine that the king was Head of the Church
|
|
was accepted in only one country and rejected in every other country in
|
|
Christendom.
|
|
|
|
A few days later, the authorities discovered that More had been writing
|
|
letters to Fisher, which were carried by More's servant. In several of
|
|
these letters, which More wrote at the end of May, he had told Fisher that
|
|
he was refusing to reply when asked for his opinions about the king's
|
|
supremacy over the Church, but suggested that Fisher should not adopt the
|
|
same line in case it was taken as proof that they had conspired together.
|
|
As a result, he was deprived of writing materials on June 12, and
|
|
apparently also of his books. He could hardly complain of this, for when he
|
|
was Lord Chancellor he had ordered that heretics should not be allowed
|
|
books or writing materials in prison. When he was questioned on June 14
|
|
about his letters to Fisher, he said that he had written only to comfort
|
|
Fisher, knowing that he was a fellow prisoner in the Tower. He also told
|
|
them that he had written to his daughter Margaret to tell her that there
|
|
was no need to worry about him, because he was afraid that Meg, who was
|
|
pregnant, might panic and attempt to flee to avoid arrest if she thought
|
|
that he had been proceeded against for treason. He told them that Margaret
|
|
had repeatedly urged him to submit and acknowledge the king's supremacy.
|
|
|
|
On May 22, Pope Paul II, hearing that Fisher was in danger of being
|
|
sentenced to death, created him a cardinal. The Pope afterwards stated that
|
|
his chief motive in doing this was to save Fisher's life by a public
|
|
demonstration of support which would deter Henry from offending all the
|
|
powers of Europe by executing a cardinal. It had the opposite effect. Henry
|
|
was infuriated when he heard the news, and is said to have declared that he
|
|
would cut off Fisher's head and send it to Rome to have the cardinal's hat
|
|
put on it. Fisher was brought to trial on June 17 on a charge of high
|
|
treason for depriving the king of one of his titles by denying that he was
|
|
Supreme Head of the Church of England. Fisher admitted that he did not
|
|
accept Henry as Head of the Church, but argued that he was not guilty, for
|
|
the statute enacted that it was high treason to deny the king's title
|
|
"maliciously", and he had not acted out of malice. This argument was
|
|
rejected, as it had been in the case of the Carthusian monks, and Fisher
|
|
was sentenced to death. Three more Carthusians were hanged, drawn and
|
|
quartered at Tyburn on June 19; and on the 22nd, Fisher, whose sentence had
|
|
been commuted by Henry to death by the axe, was beheaded on Tower Hill.
|
|
|
|
More was brought to trial on the same charge in Westminster Hall on July 1
|
|
before special Commissioners sitting with a London jury. The judges were
|
|
hardly impartial, for Cromwell, Norfolk, Suffolk, and Anne Boleyn's father
|
|
and brother, Wiltshire and Rochford, were among the commissioners, with the
|
|
Lord CHancellor, Audley, presiding. Unlike Fisher and the Carthusians, More
|
|
denied that he had ever said that the king was not Head of the Church, but
|
|
claimed that he had always refused to answer the question, and that silence
|
|
could never constitute an act of high treason. When the prosecution argued
|
|
that silence implied consent, he replied that if this was so, his silence
|
|
must be interpreted as consenting to the Act which made Henry Head of the
|
|
Church. Thus, while Fisher and the Carthusians took their stand for the
|
|
Papal Supremacy, More rested his defense on a legal quibble. The
|
|
prosecution cited the statement that he had made on June 3, and in his
|
|
letter to Fisher, that the Act was like a two-edged sword in requiring a
|
|
man either to swear against his conscience or to suffer death; but More had
|
|
been careful, in making this statement, to put it as a hypothetical case,
|
|
without admitting that he himself was in this predicament.
|
|
|
|
It was difficult for the prosecution to maintain that anything that More
|
|
had said or done constituted a malicious denial of the king's title. But
|
|
the Solicitor General, Sir Richard Rich, then gave evidence of a
|
|
conversation he had had with More on June 12, when he visited More in the
|
|
Tower in another attempt to persuade him to take the oath, and also,
|
|
apparently, to remove More's writing materials and books. (The official
|
|
report of Rich's evidence at the trial differs in some respects from
|
|
Roper's account of the incident. In his evidence, Rich said that he visited
|
|
More on June 12 to persuade him to take the oath; Roper does not give the
|
|
date, but states that it took place when Rich came, with Southwell and
|
|
Palmer, to remove More's books.)
|
|
|
|
Rich said to More that the king in Parliament could enact any law, and
|
|
that all subjects were bound to obey. He asked More whether, if Parliament
|
|
passed an Act requiring everyone to swear allegiance to Rich as king, More
|
|
would be compelled by law to comply. More admitted that he would be forced
|
|
to obey such a law, but said that this was a light case, and he would put a
|
|
higher case to Rich: if Parliament passed an Act that God should no longer
|
|
be God, would this Act take effect? Rich agreed that no Act of Parliament
|
|
could prevent God from being God, but put a half-way case to More: if
|
|
Parliament enacted that the king was Supreme Head on earth of the Church of
|
|
England, why should not More accept this, just as he would accept an Act
|
|
which made Rich king? According to Rich, More replied that the cases were
|
|
not similar, because a king can be made by Parliament and deprived by
|
|
Parliament, "to which every subject present in Parliament could give his
|
|
consent"; but as to the supremacy over the Church, a subject cannot be
|
|
bound, "because he cannot give his consent to that in Parliament; and
|
|
although the king is so accepted in England, yet many foreign countries do
|
|
not affirm the same".
|
|
|
|
More denied that Rich was speaking the truth, but, adhering to his policy
|
|
of silence, did not give his own account of the conversation. It has
|
|
generally been assumed that Rich committed perjury, in connivance with
|
|
Cromwell and the prosecution, in order to provide the evidence necessary to
|
|
convict More. This is, on the whole, the most likely explanation. Rich was
|
|
at the beginning of a long career in which he would do all that was
|
|
required of him by the authorities at every turn in royal policy. (The
|
|
unforgettable scene in Robert Bolt's play _A Man For All Seasons_, in which
|
|
More is informed that Rich has been rewarded for his perjury at the trial
|
|
by being appointed Attorney General for Wales, is a justifiable piece of
|
|
dramatic license. Rich had previously been Attorney General for Wales, but
|
|
in October 1533 had been promoted to be Solicitor General for England --
|
|
the second law officer of the Crown.)
|
|
|
|
It is unlikely that Rich succeeded in trapping More into making an
|
|
unguarded statement on June 12; but his evidence is very similar to the
|
|
statement which More himself, in his letter to Margaret Roper, states that
|
|
he made to Cromwell and the commissioners on June 3. He then argued that it
|
|
was legitimate to force a man to violate his conscience as the alternative
|
|
to being killed, in order to uphold a law which was universally recognized
|
|
throughout Christendom, but not in the case of a law that was recognized
|
|
only in England. His argument meant that a law of the English Parliament
|
|
did not in all circumstances have the binding effect of the accepted
|
|
doctrines of the international Church; and it did not perhaps need a very
|
|
great exaggeration by Rich to distort this. But even if Rich's evidence had
|
|
been true, it was obviously straining the law to hold that a man was
|
|
maliciously seeking to deprive the king of his title because he had said to
|
|
the Solicitor General, in a private conversation, that a subject is not
|
|
bound on the question of supremacy over the Church "because he cannot give
|
|
his consent to that in Parliament".
|
|
|
|
The jury were out for only a quarter of an hour before giving their
|
|
verdict of "Guilty". There is no evidence that the jury was packed, but
|
|
although most Londoners had a high opinion of More and a low opinion of
|
|
Queen Anne, they had no sympathy with anyone who resisted the king's
|
|
proceedings against that foreign priest, the Bishop of Rome. More and the
|
|
handful of Papalist supporters who opposed the breach with Rome had even
|
|
less support in London than the obstinate heretics who preached doctrinal
|
|
innovation in religion and preferred to be burned rather than recant. The
|
|
jury were obviously not impressed by More's legal hair-splitting; it was
|
|
clear enough, from his whole conduct during the preliminary examinations
|
|
and at the trial, that he refused to accept the king as Head of the Church.
|
|
|
|
Audley was about to sentence him to death, when More reminded him that in
|
|
the days when he was a judge, it was usual to ask a convicted prisoner if
|
|
he had anything to say before sentence was passed. After Audley had given
|
|
him leave to speak, he said everything that he believed about the supremacy
|
|
but had been careful not to say until the jury had given their verdict.
|
|
|
|
There are two versions of his speech. One was published in Paris a few
|
|
weeks after the trial; the other is Roper's version in his book about More,
|
|
written twenty years later, and repeated shortly afterwards by Harpsfield.
|
|
The two accounts agree in substance. More declared that Parliament had no
|
|
power to abolish the Papal supremacy over the Church. When Audley
|
|
interrupted to say that most learned doctors took the opposite view, More
|
|
said that for every bishop supporting the royal supremacy, there were a
|
|
hundred learned men throughout Christendom who supported his position; and
|
|
that against the Act of Parliament were the opinions of all the General
|
|
Councils of the Church for the last thousand years. "Not only have you no
|
|
authority, without the common consent of Christians all over the world, to
|
|
make laws and frame statutes, Acts of Parliament or Councils against the
|
|
said union of Christendom, but you and the others sin capitally in doing
|
|
so." In both accounts, More said that just as the city of London could not
|
|
make laws which contravened the laws of the realm, so the English
|
|
Parliament could not make valid laws which contravened the general law of
|
|
Christendom. Norfolk intervened to comment that More's statement had made
|
|
his wickedness plain.
|
|
|
|
According to the version published in Paris, More added that he had only
|
|
been proceeded against because of his constant opposition to Henry's
|
|
marriage. Roper and Harpsfield say nothing about this, even though they
|
|
were writing in Mary's reign, when any condemnation of the divorce of
|
|
Mary's mother and the marriage to Anne would have been very popular with
|
|
the queen and the authorities. If More did in fact say this, it was of
|
|
course untrue. Whatever More may have thought, he had not publicly opposed
|
|
Henry's marriage, and had often pointed this out to Henry and Cromwell; and
|
|
though More had been sentenced to life imprisonment for refusing to swear
|
|
the oath supporting the marriage, he was sentenced to death for refusing to
|
|
swear that the king was Head of the Church. The supremacy had become the
|
|
essential issue by 1535, and even if More had been an enthusiastic
|
|
supporter of the divorce, he would have been executed for refusing to
|
|
accept the royal supremacy. The Paris report is therefore probably wrong,
|
|
and Roper and Harpsfield right, on this point.
|
|
|
|
When More had finished, Audley passed sentence of death -- the full
|
|
sentence required by law, that More was to be hanged, cut down while still
|
|
living, castrated, his entrails cut out and burned before his eyes, and
|
|
then beheaded. As he was being taken back to the Tower, Margaret Roper and
|
|
his son, John, broke through the cordon of guards to embrace him. After he
|
|
had bidden them farewell, as he moved away, Margaret ran back, again broke
|
|
through the cordon, and embraced him again. At the Tower, he was informed
|
|
that he was to die before 9 a.m. on July 6, the Eve of St Thomas of
|
|
Canterbury's Day, and that the king, in his mercy, had commuted the
|
|
sentence to death by the axe. On the night before his execution, he sent
|
|
Margaret his hairshirt, so that noone should see it on the scaffold and so
|
|
that she could treasure that link that was a secret between the two of
|
|
them. Only in his relationship with his daughter Margaret did this strange,
|
|
tortured, cruel man reveal a tenderness and a capacity to love.
|
|
|
|
Margaret Roper could not bring herself to attend the execution, and
|
|
Margaret Clement, alone of all More's family and household, was present. As
|
|
he walked to the scaffold, people noticed that he had allowed his beard to
|
|
grow in prison. On the way, he was accosted by an embittered woman who felt
|
|
aggrieved by a judgment which he had given against her when he was Lord
|
|
Chancellor. He told her that he remembered her case well, and believed that
|
|
he had given the right decision. He was also approached by more friendly
|
|
strangers. One of them offered him a glass of wine, which he refused,
|
|
because Jesus had been offered only gall on the cross.
|
|
|
|
He had been told that the king expected him to make only a very short
|
|
speech on the scaffold, and he complied with Henry's last order to him.
|
|
After telling the people to pray for the king, he told them that he died
|
|
the king's servant, but God's first.
|
|
|
|
|
|
--
|
|
|
|
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