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+<title>The Project Gutenberg eBook of History of the English People, Volume II (of 8), by John Richard Green</title>
+<style type="text/css">
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+<h1>The Project Gutenberg eBook, History of the English People, Volume II (of
+8), by John Richard Green</h1>
+<pre>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at <a href = "https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a></pre>
+<p class="noindent">Title: History of the English People, Volume II (of 8)</p>
+<p class="noindent"> The Charter, 1216-1307; The Parliament, 1307-1400</p>
+<p class="noindent">Author: John Richard Green</p>
+<p class="noindent">Release Date: November 10, 2005 [eBook #17038]<br>
+Most recently updated: May 20, 2008</p>
+<p class="noindent">Language: English</p>
+<p class="noindent">Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1</p>
+<p class="noindent">***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK HISTORY OF THE ENGLISH PEOPLE, VOLUME II (OF 8)***</p>
+<br><br>
+<h4>E-text prepared by Paul Murray<br>
+ and the Project Gutenberg Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br>
+ (https://www.pgdp.net/)</h4>
+<br><br>
+<table border=0 bgcolor="ddddee" cellpadding=10>
+ <tr>
+ <td valign="top">
+ Note:
+ </td>
+ <td>
+ The index for the entire 8 volume
+ set of <i>History of the English People</i> was located
+ at the end of Volume VIII. For ease in
+ accessibility, it has been removed and produced as a
+ separate volume
+ (<a href="https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/25533">https://www.gutenberg.org/etext/25533</a>). </td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<br><br>
+<hr class="pg" noshade>
+<br>
+<br>
+<a name="TOP"></a>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<div class="titlepage">
+<span class="main">HISTORY<br>OF<br>THE ENGLISH PEOPLE</span>
+<span class="sub">VOLUME II</span>
+ <div class="byline">BY <span class="docauthor">JOHN RICHARD GREEN, M.A.<br>HONORARY FELLOW OF JESUS COLLEGE, OXFORD</span>
+</div>
+<ul>
+<li>
+<a name="id4522754"></a>THE CHARTER, 1216-1307</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4522760"></a>THE PARLIAMENT, 1307-1400</li>
+</ul>
+
+<ul>
+<li>
+<a name="id4522779"></a><i>First Edition, Demy 8vo, November</i> 1877;<br>
+</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4522796"></a><i>Reprinted December</i> 1877, 1881, 1885, 1890.<br>
+</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4522812"></a><i>Eversley Edition,</i> 1895.<br>
+</li>
+</ul>
+
+London
+MacMillan and Co.
+and New York
+1895
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="toc"><div class="chapters">
+<hr>
+<div class="header">CONTENTS</div>
+<table summary="Table of contents">
+<tr class="volume"><td><a href="#Vol2">VOLUME II</a></td></tr>
+<tr class="book">
+<td><a href="#Bk3">BOOK III</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3">THE CHARTER</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3">1216-1307</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch2">CHAPTER II</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch2">HENRY THE THIRD</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch2">1216-1232</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch3">CHAPTER III</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch3">THE BARON'S WAR</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch3">1232-1272</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch4">CHAPTER IV</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch4">EDWARD THE FIRST</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk3-Ch4">1272-1307</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="book">
+<td><a href="#Bk4">BOOK IV</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4">THE PARLIAMENT</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4">1307-1461</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Auth"> </a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Auth">AUTHORITIES FOR BOOK IV</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch1">CHAPTER I</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch1">EDWARD II</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch1">1307-1327</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch2">CHAPTER II</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch2">EDWARD THE THIRD</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch2">1327-1347</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch3">CHAPTER III</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch3">THE PEASANT REVOLT</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch3">1347-1381</a></td>
+</tr>
+<tr class="chapter">
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch4">CHAPTER IV</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch4">RICHARD THE SECOND</a></td>
+<td><a href="#Bk4-Ch4">1381-1400</a></td>
+</tr>
+</table>
+</div></div>
+
+<div class="toc"><div class="maps">
+<hr>
+<div class="header">LIST OF MAPS</div>
+<table summary="List of maps">
+<tr class="figure"><td><a href="images/v2-map-1.jpg">Scotland in 1290</a></td></tr>
+<tr class="figure"><td></td></tr>
+<tr class="figure"><td><a href="images/v2-map-2.jpg">France at the Treaty of Bretigny</a></td></tr>
+<tr class="figure"><td></td></tr>
+</table>
+</div></div>
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="-Page-2-001"></a>2-001]</span>
+
+<div class="volume">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Vol2"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4518028"></a>VOLUME II</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="book">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk3"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4518075"></a>BOOK III</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4518081"></a>THE CHARTER</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4518087"></a>1216-1307</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk3-Ch2"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4518137"></a>CHAPTER II</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4518143"></a>HENRY THE THIRD</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4518148"></a>1216-1232</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">William Marshal</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The death of John changed the whole face of
+English affairs. His son, Henry of Winchester,
+was but nine years old, and the pity which was
+stirred by the child's helplessness was aided by a
+sense of injustice in burthening him with the
+iniquity of his father. At his death John had
+driven from his side even the most loyal of his
+barons; but William Marshal had clung to him to
+the last, and with him was Gualo, the Legate of
+Innocent's successor, Honorius the Third. The
+position of Gualo as representative of the Papal
+overlord of the realm was of the highest importance,
+and his action showed the real attitude of
+Rome towards English freedom. The boy-king
+was hardly crowned at Gloucester when Legate
+and Earl issued in his name the very Charter
+against which his father had died fighting. Only
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-002"></a>2-002]</span>
+
+the clauses which regulated taxation and the
+summoning of parliament were as yet declared to
+be suspended. The choice of William Marshal as
+"governor of King and kingdom" gave weight to
+this step; and its effect was seen when the
+contest was renewed in 1217. Lewis was at first
+successful in the eastern counties, but the political
+reaction was aided by jealousies which broke out
+between the English and French nobles in his
+force, and the first drew gradually away from him.
+So general was the defection that at the opening
+of summer William Marshal felt himself strong
+enough for a blow at his foes. Lewis himself was
+investing Dover, and a joint army of French and
+English barons under the Count of Perche and
+Robert Fitz-Walter was besieging Lincoln, when
+gathering troops rapidly from the royal castles
+the regent marched to the relief of the latter town.
+Cooped up in its narrow streets and attacked at
+once by the Earl and the garrison, the barons fled
+in utter rout; the Count of Perche fell on the
+field, Robert Fitz-Walter was taken prisoner.
+Lewis at once retreated on London and called
+for aid from France. But a more terrible defeat
+crushed his remaining hopes. A small English
+fleet which set sail from Dover under Hubert de
+Burgh fell boldly on the reinforcements which
+were crossing under escort of Eustace the Monk,
+a well-known freebooter of the Channel. Some
+incidents of the fight light up for us the naval
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-003"></a>2-003]</span>
+
+warfare of the time. From the decks of the
+English vessels bowmen poured their arrows into
+the crowded transports, others hurled quicklime
+into their enemies' faces, while the more active
+vessels crashed with their armed prows into the
+sides of the French ships. The skill of the
+mariners of the Cinque Ports turned the day
+against the larger forces of their opponents, and
+the fleet of Eustace was utterly destroyed. The
+royal army at once closed upon London, but
+resistance was really at an end. By a treaty concluded
+at Lambeth in September Lewis promised
+to withdraw from England on payment of a sum
+which he claimed as debt; his adherents were
+restored to their possessions, the liberties of London
+and other towns confirmed, and the prisoners on
+either side set at liberty. A fresh issue of the
+Charter, though in its modified form, proclaimed
+yet more clearly the temper and policy of the Earl
+Marshal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Hubert de Burgh</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His death at the opening of 1219, after a year
+spent in giving order to the realm, brought no
+change in the system he had adopted. The control
+of affairs passed into the hands of a new legate,
+Pandulf, of Stephen Langton who had just returned
+forgiven from Rome, and of the Justiciar, Hubert
+de Burgh. It was a time of transition, and the
+temper of the Justiciar was eminently transitional.
+Bred in the school of Henry the Second, Hubert
+had little sympathy with national freedom, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-004"></a>2-004]</span>
+
+though resolute to maintain the Charter he can
+have had small love for it; his conception of good
+government, like that of his master, lay in a wise
+personal administration, in the preservation of
+order and law. But he combined with this a
+thoroughly English desire for national independence,
+a hatred of foreigners, and a reluctance to
+waste English blood and treasure in Continental
+struggles. Able as he proved himself, his task
+was one of no common difficulty. He was
+hampered by the constant interference of Rome.
+A Papal legate resided at the English court, and
+claimed a share in the administration of the realm
+as the representative of its overlord and as guardian
+of the young sovereign. A foreign party too had
+still a footing in the kingdom, for William Marshal
+had been unable to rid himself of men like Peter
+des Roches or Faukes de Breauté, who had fought
+on the royal side in the struggle against Lewis.
+Hubert had to deal too with the anarchy which
+that struggle left behind it. From the time of
+the Conquest the centre of England had been
+covered with the domains of great houses, whose
+longings were for feudal independence and whose
+spirit of revolt had been held in check partly by
+the stern rule of the kings and partly by the rise
+of a baronage sprung from the Court and settled
+for the most part in the North. The oppression
+of John united both the earlier and these newer
+houses in the struggle for the Charter. But the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-005"></a>2-005]</span>
+
+character of each remained unchanged, and the
+close of the struggle saw the feudal party break
+out in their old lawlessness and defiance of the
+Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Order
+restored</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time the anarchy of Stephen's days
+seemed to revive. But the Justiciar was resolute
+to crush it, and he was backed by the strenuous
+efforts of Stephen Langton. A new and solemn
+coronation of the young king in 1220 was followed
+by a demand for the restoration of the royal
+castles which had been seized by the barons and
+foreigners. The Earl of Chester, the head of the
+feudal baronage, though he rose in armed rebellion,
+quailed before the march of Hubert and
+the Primate's threats of excommunication. A
+more formidable foe remained in the Frenchman,
+Faukes de Breauté, the sheriff of six counties,
+with six royal castles in his hands, and allied
+both with the rebel barons and Llewelyn of
+Wales. But in 1224 his castle of Bedford was
+besieged for two months; and on its surrender
+the stern justice of Hubert hung the twenty-four
+knights and their retainers who formed the
+garrison before its walls. The blow was effectual;
+the royal castles were surrendered by the barons,
+and the land was once more at peace. Freed from
+foreign soldiery, the country was freed also from
+the presence of the foreign legate. Langton
+wrested a promise from Rome that so long as he
+lived no future legate should be sent to England,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-006"></a>2-006]</span>
+
+and with Pandulf's resignation in 1221 the direct
+interference of the Papacy in the government of
+the realm came to an end. But even these services
+of the Primate were small compared with his services
+to English freedom. Throughout his life
+the Charter was the first object of his care. The
+omission of the articles which restricted the royal
+power over taxation in the Charter which was
+published at Henry's accession in 1216 was
+doubtless due to the Archbishop's absence and
+disgrace at Rome. The suppression of disorder
+seems to have revived the older spirit of resistance
+among the royal ministers; for when Langton
+demanded a fresh confirmation of the Charter in
+Parliament at London William Brewer, one of the
+King's councillors, protested that it had been extorted
+by force and was without legal validity.
+"If you loved the King, William," the Primate
+burst out in anger, "you would not throw a
+stumbling-block in the way of the peace of the
+realm." The young king was cowed by the
+Archbishop's wrath, and promised observance of
+the Charter. But it may have been their consciousness
+of such a temper among the royal
+councillors that made Langton and the baronage
+demand two years later a fresh promulgation of
+the Charter as the price of a subsidy, and Henry's
+assent established the principle, so fruitful of constitutional
+results, that redress of wrongs precedes
+a grant to the Crown.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-007"></a>2-007]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">State of the
+Church</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These repeated sanctions of the Charter and
+the government of the realm year after year in
+accordance with its provisions were gradually
+bringing the new freedom home to the mass of
+Englishmen. But the sense of liberty was at this
+time quickened and intensified by a religious
+movement which stirred English society to its
+depths. Never had the priesthood wielded such
+boundless power over Christendom as in the days
+of Innocent the Third and his immediate successors.
+But its religious hold on the people was
+loosening day by day. The old reverence for the
+Papacy was fading away before the universal
+resentment at its political ambition, its lavish use
+of interdict and excommunication for purely
+secular ends, its degradation of the most sacred
+sentences into means of financial extortion. In
+Italy the struggle that was opening between
+Rome and Frederick the Second disclosed a spirit
+of scepticism which among the Epicurean poets
+of Florence denied the immortality of the soul
+and attacked the very foundations of the faith
+itself. In Southern Gaul, Languedoc and Provence
+had embraced the heresy of the Albigenses
+and thrown off all allegiance to the Papacy. Even
+in England, though there were no signs as yet of
+religious revolt, and though the political action
+of Rome had been in the main on the side of
+freedom, there was a spirit of resistance to its
+interference with national concerns which broke
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-008"></a>2-008]</span>
+
+out in the struggle against John. "The Pope has
+no part in secular matters," had been the reply of
+London to the interdict of Innocent. And within
+the English Church itself there was much to call
+for reform. Its attitude in the strife for the
+Charter as well as the after work of the Primate
+had made it more popular than ever; but its
+spiritual energy was less than its political. The
+disuse of preaching, the decline of the monastic
+orders into rich landowners, the non-residence
+and ignorance of the parish priests, lowered the
+religious influence of the clergy. The abuses of
+the time foiled even the energy of such men as
+Bishop Grosseteste of Lincoln. His constitutions
+forbid the clergy to haunt taverns, to gamble, to
+share in drinking bouts, to mix in the riot and
+debauchery of the life of the baronage. But
+such prohibitions witness to the prevalence of the
+evils they denounce. Bishops and deans were
+still withdrawn from their ecclesiastical duties to
+act as ministers, judges, or ambassadors. Benefices
+were heaped in hundreds at a time on royal
+favourites like John Mansel. Abbeys absorbed
+the tithes of parishes and then served them by
+half-starved vicars, while exemptions purchased
+from Rome shielded the scandalous lives of canons
+and monks from all episcopal discipline. And
+behind all this was a group of secular statesmen
+and scholars, the successors of such critics as
+Walter Map, waging indeed no open warfare with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-009"></a>2-009]</span>
+
+the Church, but noting with bitter sarcasm its
+abuses and its faults.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Friars</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To bring the world back again within the pale
+of the Church was the aim of two religious orders
+which sprang suddenly to life at the opening of
+the thirteenth century. The zeal of the Spaniard
+Dominic was roused at the sight of the lordly
+prelates who sought by fire and sword to win the
+Albigensian heretics to the faith. "Zeal," he
+cried, "must be met by zeal, lowliness by lowliness,
+false sanctity by real sanctity, preaching lies
+by preaching truth." His fiery ardour and rigid
+orthodoxy were seconded by the mystical piety,
+the imaginative enthusiasm of Francis of Assisi.
+The life of Francis falls like a stream of tender
+light across the darkness of the time. In the
+frescoes of Giotto or the verse of Dante we see
+him take Poverty for his bride. He strips himself
+of all, he flings his very clothes at his father's
+feet, that he may be one with Nature and God.
+His passionate verse claims the moon for his
+sister and the sun for his brother, he calls on his
+brother the Wind, and his sister the Water. His
+last faint cry was a "Welcome, Sister Death!"
+Strangely as the two men differed from each
+other, their aim was the same--to convert the
+heathen, to extirpate heresy, to reconcile knowledge
+with orthodoxy, above all to carry the
+Gospel to the poor. The work was to be done
+by an utter reversal of the older monasticism, by
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-010"></a>2-010]</span>
+
+seeking personal salvation in effort for the salvation
+of their fellow-men, by exchanging the solitary
+of the cloister for the preacher, the monk
+for the "brother" or friar. To force the new
+"brethren" into entire dependence on those
+among whom they laboured their vow of Poverty
+was turned into a stern reality; the "Begging
+Friars" were to subsist solely on alms, they might
+possess neither money nor lands, the very houses
+in which they lived were to be held in trust for
+them by others. The tide of popular enthusiasm
+which welcomed their appearance swept before it
+the reluctance of Rome, the jealousy of the older
+orders, the opposition of the parochial priesthood.
+Thousands of brethren gathered in a few years
+round Francis and Dominic; and the begging
+preachers, clad in coarse frock of serge with a
+girdle of rope round their waist, wandered barefooted
+as missionaries over Asia, battled with
+heresy in Italy and Gaul, lectured in the Universities,
+and preached and toiled among the poor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Friars
+and the
+Towns</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the towns especially the coming of the Friars
+was a religious revolution. They had been left
+for the most part to the worst and most ignorant
+of the clergy, the mass-priest, whose sole subsistence
+lay in his fees. Burgher and artizan were
+left to spell out what religious instruction they
+might from the gorgeous ceremonies of the
+Church's ritual or the scriptural pictures and
+sculptures which were graven on the walls of its
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-011"></a>2-011]</span>
+
+minsters. We can hardly wonder at the burst of
+enthusiasm which welcomed the itinerant preacher
+whose fervid appeal, coarse wit, and familiar story
+brought religion into the fair and the market
+place. In England, where the Black Friars of
+Dominic arrived in 1221, the Grey Friars of
+Francis in 1224, both were received with the
+same delight. As the older orders had chosen
+the country, the Friars chose the town. They
+had hardly landed at Dover before they made
+straight for London and Oxford. In their ignorance
+of the road the first two Grey Brothers lost
+their way in the woods between Oxford and
+Baldon, and fearful of night and of the floods
+turned aside to a grange of the monks of Abingdon.
+Their ragged clothes and foreign gestures,
+as they prayed for hospitality, led the porter to
+take them for jongleurs, the jesters and jugglers
+of the day, and the news of this break in the
+monotony of their lives brought prior, sacrist, and
+cellarer to the door to welcome them and witness
+their tricks. The disappointment was too much
+for the temper of the monks, and the brothers
+were kicked roughly from the gate to find their
+night's lodging under a tree. But the welcome
+of the townsmen made up everywhere for the ill-will
+and opposition of both clergy and monks.
+The work of the Friars was physical as well as
+moral. The rapid progress of population within
+the boroughs had outstripped the sanitary regulations
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-012"></a>2-012]</span>
+
+of the Middle Ages, and fever or plague
+or the more terrible scourge of leprosy festered
+in the wretched hovels of the suburbs. It was
+to haunts such as these that Francis had pointed
+his disciples, and the Grey Brethren at once fixed
+themselves in the meanest and poorest quarters
+of each town. Their first work lay in the
+noisome lazar-houses; it was amongst the lepers
+that they commonly chose the site of their homes.
+At London they settled in the shambles of Newgate;
+at Oxford they made their way to the
+swampy ground between its walls and the streams
+of Thames. Huts of mud and timber, as mean
+as the huts around them, rose within the rough
+fence and ditch that bounded the Friary. The
+order of Francis made a hard fight against the
+taste for sumptuous buildings and for greater
+personal comfort which characterized the time.
+"I did not enter into religion to build walls,"
+protested an English provincial when the brethren
+pressed for a larger house; and Albert of Pisa
+ordered a stone cloister which the burgesses of
+Southampton had built for them to be razed to
+the ground. "You need no little mountains to
+lift your heads to heaven," was his scornful reply
+to a claim for pillows. None but the sick went
+shod. An Oxford Friar found a pair of shoes
+one morning, and wore them at matins. At night
+he dreamed that robbers leapt on him in a
+dangerous pass between Gloucester and Oxford
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-013"></a>2-013]</span>
+
+with, shouts of "Kill, kill!" "I am a friar,"
+shrieked the terror-stricken brother. "You lie,"
+was the instant answer, "for you go shod." The
+Friar lifted up his foot in disproof, but the shoe
+was there. In an agony of repentance he woke
+and flung the pair out of window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Revival of Theology</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was with less success that the order struggled
+against the passion of the time for knowledge.
+Their vow of poverty, rigidly interpreted as it was
+by their founders, would have denied them the
+possession of books or materials for study. "I am
+your breviary, I am your breviary," Francis cried
+passionately to a novice who asked for a psalter.
+When the news of a great doctor's reception was
+brought to him at Paris, his countenance fell. "I
+am afraid, my son," he replied, "that such doctors
+will be the destruction of my vineyard. They are
+the true doctors who with the meekness of wisdom
+show forth good works for the edification of their
+neighbours." One kind of knowledge indeed their
+work almost forced on them. The popularity of
+their preaching soon led them to the deeper study
+of theology; within a short time after their establishment
+in England we find as many as thirty readers or lecturers
+appointed at Hereford, Leicester, Bristol, and other places,
+and a regular succession of teachers provided at each
+University. The Oxford Dominicans lectured on theology
+in the nave of their new church while philosophy was
+taught in the cloister. The first provincial of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-014"></a>2-014]</span>
+
+Grey Friars built a school in their Oxford house
+and persuaded Grosseteste to lecture there. His
+influence after his promotion to the see of Lincoln
+was steadily exerted to secure theological study
+among the Friars, as well as their establishment in
+the University; and in this work he was ably
+seconded by his scholar, Adam Marsh, or de
+Marisco, under whom the Franciscan school at
+Oxford attained a reputation throughout Christendom.
+Lyons, Paris, and Koln borrowed from
+it their professors: it was through its influence
+indeed that Oxford rose to a position hardly inferior
+to that of Paris itself as a centre of scholasticism.
+But the result of this powerful impulse was
+soon seen to be fatal to the wider intellectual
+activity which had till now characterized the
+Universities. Theology in its scholastic form
+resumed its supremacy in the schools. Its only
+efficient rivals were practical studies such as medicine
+and law. The last, as he was by far the
+greatest, instance of the freer and wider culture
+which had been the glory of the last century, was
+Roger Bacon, and no name better illustrates the
+rapidity and completeness with which it passed
+away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Roger Bacon</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Roger Bacon was the child of royalist parents
+who were driven into exile and reduced to poverty
+by the civil wars. From Oxford, where he studied
+under Edmund of Abingdon to whom he owed
+his introduction to the works of Aristotle, he
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-015"></a>2-015]</span>
+
+passed to the University of Paris, and spent his
+whole heritage there in costly studies and experiments.
+"From my youth up," he writes, "I have
+laboured at the sciences and tongues. I have
+sought the friendship of all men among the Latins
+who had any reputation for knowledge. I have
+caused youths to be instructed in languages, geometry,
+arithmetic, the construction of tables and
+instruments, and many needful things besides."
+The difficulties in the way of such studies as he
+had resolved to pursue were immense. He was
+without instruments or means of experiment.
+"Without mathematical instruments no science
+can be mastered," he complains afterwards, "and
+these instruments are not to be found among the
+Latins, nor could they be made for two or three
+hundred pounds. Besides, better tables are indispensably
+necessary, tables on which the motions
+of the heavens are certified from the beginning to
+the end of the world without daily labour, but
+these tables are worth a king's ransom and could
+not be made without a vast expense. I have often
+attempted the composition of such tables, but could
+not finish them through failure of means and the
+folly of those whom I had to employ." Books
+were difficult and sometimes even impossible to
+procure. "The scientific works of Aristotle, of
+Avicenna, of Seneca, of Cicero, and other ancients
+cannot be had without great cost; their principal
+works have not been translated into Latin, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-016"></a>2-016]</span>
+
+copies of others are not to be found in ordinary
+libraries or elsewhere. The admirable books of
+Cicero de Republica are not to be found anywhere,
+so far as I can hear, though I have made anxious
+enquiry for them in different parts of the world,
+and by various messengers. I could never find
+the works of Seneca, though I made diligent search
+for them during twenty years and more. And so
+it is with many more most useful books connected
+with the science of morals." It is only words like
+these of his own that bring home to us the keen
+thirst for knowledge, the patience, the energy of
+Roger Bacon. He returned as a teacher to Oxford,
+and a touching record of his devotion to those
+whom he taught remains in the story of John of
+London, a boy of fifteen, whose ability raised him
+above the general level of his pupils. "When he
+came to me as a poor boy," says Bacon in recommending
+him to the Pope, "I caused him to be
+nurtured and instructed for the love of God, especially
+since for aptitude and innocence I have never
+found so towardly a youth. Five or six years ago
+I caused him to be taught in languages, mathematics,
+and optics, and I have gratuitously instructed
+him with my own lips since the time that I
+received your mandate. There is no one at Paris
+who knows so much of the root of philosophy,
+though he has not produced the branches, flowers,
+and fruit because of his youth, and because he has
+had no experience in teaching. But he has the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-017"></a>2-017]</span>
+
+means of surpassing all the Latins if he live to
+grow old and goes on as he has begun."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pride with which he refers to his system
+of instruction was justified by the wide extension
+which he gave to scientific teaching in Oxford. It
+is probably of himself that he speaks when he tells
+us that "the science of optics has not hitherto
+been lectured on at Paris or elsewhere among the
+Latins, save twice at Oxford." It was a science
+on which he had laboured for ten years. But his
+teaching seems to have fallen on a barren soil.
+From the moment when the Friars settled in the
+Universities scholasticism absorbed the whole mental
+energy of the student world. The temper of the
+age was against scientific or philosophical studies.
+The older enthusiasm for knowledge was dying
+down; the study of law was the one source of
+promotion, whether in Church or state; philosophy
+was discredited, literature in its purer forms became
+almost extinct. After forty years of incessant
+study, Bacon found himself in his own words
+"unheard, forgotten, buried." He seems at one
+time to have been wealthy, but his wealth was
+gone. "During the twenty years that I have
+specially laboured in the attainment of wisdom,
+abandoning the path of common men, I have spent
+on these pursuits more than two thousand pounds,
+not to mention the cost of books, experiments,
+instruments, tables, the acquisition of languages,
+and the like. Add to all this the sacrifices I have
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-018"></a>2-018]</span>
+
+made to procure the friendship of the wise and to
+obtain well-instructed assistants." Ruined and
+baffled in his hopes, Bacon listened to the counsels
+of his friend Grosseteste and renounced the world.
+He became a friar of the order of St. Francis, an
+order where books and study were looked upon as
+hindrances to the work which it had specially
+undertaken, that of preaching among the masses
+of the poor. He had written little. So far was he
+from attempting to write that his new superiors
+prohibited him from publishing anything under
+pain of forfeiture of the book and penance of bread
+and water. But we can see the craving of his
+mind, the passionate instinct of creation which
+marks the man of genius, in the joy with which
+he seized a strange opportunity that suddenly
+opened before him. "Some few chapters on
+different subjects, written at the entreaty of
+friends," seem to have got abroad, and were
+brought by one of the Pope's chaplains under the
+notice of Clement the Fourth. The Pope at once
+invited Bacon to write. But difficulties stood in
+his way. Materials, transcription, and other expenses
+for such a work as he projected would cost
+at least, £60, and the Pope sent not a penny.
+Bacon begged help from his family, but they were
+ruined like himself. No one would lend to a
+mendicant friar, and when his friends raised the
+money he needed it was by pawning their goods in
+the hope of repayment from Clement. Nor was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-019"></a>2-019]</span>
+
+this all; the work itself, abstruse and scientific as
+was its subject, had to be treated in a clear and
+popular form to gain the Papal ear. But difficulties
+which would have crushed another man only
+roused Roger Bacon to an almost superhuman
+energy. By the close of 1267 the work was done.
+The "greater work," itself in modern form a
+closely-printed folio, with its successive summaries
+and appendices in the "lesser" and the "third"
+works (which make a good octavo more), were
+produced and forwarded to the Pope within fifteen
+months.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Opus Majus</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No trace of this fiery haste remains in the book
+itself. The "Opus Majus" is alike wonderful in
+plan and detail. Bacon's main purpose, in the
+words of Dr. Whewell, is "to urge the necessity
+of a reform in the mode of philosophizing, to set
+forth the reasons why knowledge had not made
+a greater progress, to draw back attention to
+sources of knowledge which had been unwisely
+neglected, to discover other sources which were
+yet wholly unknown, and to animate men to the
+undertaking by a prospect of the vast advantages
+which it offered." The developement of his scheme
+is on the largest scale; he gathers together the
+whole knowledge of his time on every branch of
+science which it possessed, and as he passes them
+in review he suggests improvements in nearly all.
+His labours, both here and in his after works, in
+the field of grammar and philology, his perseverance
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-020"></a>2-020]</span>
+
+in insisting on the necessity of correct texts,
+of an accurate knowledge of languages, of an
+exact interpretation, are hardly less remarkable
+than his scientific investigations. From grammar
+he passes to mathematics, from mathematics to
+experimental philosophy. Under the name of
+mathematics indeed was included all the physical
+science of the time. "The neglect of it for nearly
+thirty or forty years," pleads Bacon passionately,
+"hath nearly destroyed the entire studies of
+Latin Christendom. For he who knows not
+mathematics cannot know any other sciences; and
+what is more, he cannot discover his own ignorance
+or find its proper remedies." Geography, chronology,
+arithmetic, music, are brought into something
+of scientific form, and like rapid sketches are given
+of the question of climate, hydrography, geography,
+and astrology. The subject of optics, his own
+especial study, is treated with greater fulness; he
+enters into the question of the anatomy of the eye
+besides discussing problems which lie more strictly
+within the province of optical science. In a word,
+the "Greater Work," to borrow the phrase of Dr.
+Whewell, is "at once the Encyclopedia and the
+Novum Organum of the thirteenth century." The
+whole of the after-works of Roger Bacon--and
+treatise after treatise has of late been disentombed
+from our libraries--are but developements in detail
+of the magnificent conception he laid before
+Clement. Such a work was its own great reward.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-021"></a>2-021]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+From the world around Roger Bacon could look
+for and found small recognition. No word of
+acknowledgement seems to have reached its author
+from the Pope. If we may credit a more recent
+story, his writings only gained him a prison from
+his order. "Unheard, forgotten, buried," the old
+man died as he had lived, and it has been reserved
+for later ages to roll away the obscurity that had
+gathered round his memory, and to place first in
+the great roll of modern science the name of
+Roger Bacon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Scholasticism</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The failure of Bacon shows the overpowering
+strength of the drift towards the practical studies,
+and above all towards theology in its scholastic
+guise. Aristotle, who had been so long held at
+bay as the most dangerous foe of mediæval faith,
+was now turned by the adoption of his logical
+method in the discussion and definition of theological
+dogma into its unexpected ally. It was
+this very method that led to "that unprofitable
+subtlety and curiosity" which Lord Bacon notes
+as the vice of the scholastic philosophy. But
+"certain it is"--to continue the same great
+thinker's comment on the Friars--"that if these
+schoolmen to their great thirst of truth and unwearied
+travel of wit had joined variety of reading
+and contemplation, they had proved excellent
+lights to the great advancement of all learning and
+knowledge." What, amidst all their errors, they
+undoubtedly did was to insist on the necessity of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-022"></a>2-022]</span>
+
+rigid demonstration and a more exact use of
+words, to introduce a clear and methodical treatment
+of all subjects into discussion, and above all
+to substitute an appeal to reason for unquestioning
+obedience to authority. It was by this critical
+tendency, by the new clearness and precision
+which scholasticism gave to enquiry, that in spite
+of the trivial questions with which it often concerned
+itself it trained the human mind through
+the next two centuries to a temper which fitted it
+to profit by the great disclosure of knowledge that
+brought about the Renascence. And it is to the
+same spirit of fearless enquiry as well as to the
+strong popular sympathies which their very
+constitution necessitated that we must attribute
+the influence which the Friars undoubtedly exerted
+in the coming struggle between the people and
+the Crown. Their position is clearly and strongly
+marked throughout the whole contest. The University
+of Oxford, which soon fell under the direction of
+their teaching, stood first in its resistance to Papal
+exactions and its claim of English liberty. The
+classes in the towns, on whom the influence of the
+Friars told most directly, were steady supporters
+of freedom throughout the Barons' Wars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Its Political Influence</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Politically indeed the teaching of the schoolmen
+was of immense value, for it set on a religious
+basis and gave an intellectual form to the constitutional
+theory of the relations between king and
+people which was slowly emerging from the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-023"></a>2-023]</span>
+
+struggle with the Crown. In assuming the
+responsibility of a Christian king to God for the
+good government of his realm, in surrounding the
+pledges whether of ruler or ruled with religious
+sanctions, the mediæval Church entered its protest
+against any personal despotism. The schoolmen
+pushed further still to the doctrine of a contract
+between king and people; and their trenchant
+logic made short work of the royal claims to
+irresponsible power and unquestioning obedience.
+"He who would be in truth a king," ran a poem
+which embodies their teaching at this time in
+pungent verse--"he is a 'free king' indeed if he
+rightly rule himself and his realm. All things
+are lawful to him for the government of his realm,
+but nothing is lawful to him for its destruction.
+It is one thing to rule according to a king's duty,
+another to destroy a kingdom by resisting the
+law." "Let the community of the realm advise,
+and let it be known what the generality, to whom
+their laws are best known, think on the matter.
+They who are ruled by the laws know those laws
+best; they who make daily trial of them are best
+acquainted with them; and since it is their own
+affairs which are at stake they will take the more
+care and will act with an eye to their own peace."
+"It concerns the community to see what sort of
+men ought justly to be chosen for the weal of the
+realm." The constitutional restrictions on the
+royal authority, the right of the whole nation to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-024"></a>2-024]</span>
+
+deliberate and decide on its own affairs and to
+have a voice in the selection of the administrators
+of government, had never been so clearly stated
+before. But the importance of the Friar's work
+lay in this, that the work of the scholar was
+supplemented by that of the popular preacher.
+The theory of government wrought out in cell and
+lecture-room was carried over the length and
+breadth of the land by the mendicant brother,
+begging his way from town to town, chatting with
+farmer or housewife at the cottage door, and
+setting up his portable pulpit in village green or
+market-place. His open-air sermons, ranging from
+impassioned devotion to coarse story and homely
+mother wit, became the journals as well as the
+homilies of the day; political and social questions
+found place in them side by side with spiritual
+matters; and the rudest countryman learned his
+tale of a king's oppression or a patriot's hopes as
+he listened to the rambling, passionate, humorous
+discourse of the begging friar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Henry the Third</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Never had there been more need of such a
+political education of the whole people than at the
+moment we have reached. For the triumph of
+the Charter, the constitutional government of
+Governor and Justiciar, had rested mainly on the
+helplessness of the king. As boy or youth, Henry
+the Third had bowed to the control of William
+Marshal or Langton or Hubert de Burgh. But he
+was now grown to manhood, and his character
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-025"></a>2-025]</span>
+
+was from this hour to tell on the events of his
+reign. From the cruelty, the lust, the impiety of
+his father the young king was absolutely free.
+There was a geniality, a vivacity, a refinement in
+his temper which won a personal affection for him
+even in his worst days from some who bitterly
+censured his rule. The Abbey-church of Westminster,
+with which he replaced the ruder minster
+of the Confessor, remains a monument of his
+artistic taste. He was a patron and friend of men
+of letters, and himself skilled in the "gay science"
+of the troubadour. But of the political capacity
+which was the characteristic of his house he had
+little or none. Profuse, changeable, false from sheer
+meanness of spirit, impulsive alike in good and ill,
+unbridled in temper and tongue, reckless in insult
+and wit, Henry's delight was in the display of an
+empty and prodigal magnificence, his one notion
+of government was a dream of arbitrary power.
+But frivolous as the king's mood was, he clung
+with a weak man's obstinacy to a distinct line of
+policy; and this was the policy not of Hubert or
+Langton but of John. He cherished the hope of
+recovering his heritage across the sea. He believed
+in the absolute power of the Crown; and looked
+on the pledges of the Great Charter as promises
+which force had wrested from the king and which
+force could wrest back again. France was telling
+more and more on English opinion; and the
+claim which the French kings were advancing to a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-026"></a>2-026]</span>
+
+divine and absolute power gave a sanction in
+Henry's mind to the claim of absolute authority
+which was still maintained by his favourite advisers
+in the royal council. Above all he clung to the
+alliance with the Papacy. Henry was personally
+devout; and his devotion only bound him the
+more firmly to his father's system of friendship
+with Rome. Gratitude and self-interest alike
+bound him to the Papal See. Rome had saved
+him from ruin as a child; its legate had set the
+crown on his head; its threats and excommunications
+had foiled Lewis and built up again a royal
+party. Above all it was Rome which could alone
+free him from his oath to the Charter, and which
+could alone defend him if like his father he had to
+front the baronage in arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">England and Rome</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His temper was now to influence the whole
+system of government. In 1227 Henry declared
+himself of age; and though Hubert still remained
+Justiciar every year saw him more powerless in
+his struggle with the tendencies of the king.
+The death of Stephen Langton in 1228 was a yet
+heavier blow to English freedom. In persuading
+Rome to withdraw her Legate the Primate had
+averted a conflict between the national desire for
+self-government and the Papal claims of overlordship.
+But his death gave the signal for a
+more serious struggle, for it was in the oppression
+of the Church of England by the Popes through
+the reign of Henry that the little rift first opened
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-027"></a>2-027]</span>
+
+which was destined to widen into the gulf that
+parted the one from the other at the Reformation.
+In the mediæval theory of the Papacy, as
+Innocent and his successors held it, Christendom,
+as a spiritual realm of which the Popes were the
+head, took the feudal form of the secular realms
+which lay within its pale. The Pope was its
+sovereign, the Bishops were his barons, and the
+clergy were his under vassals. As the king
+demanded aids and subsidies in case of need from
+his liegemen, so in the theory of Rome might the
+head of the Church demand aid in need from the
+priesthood. And at this moment the need of
+the Popes was sore. Rome had plunged into her
+desperate conflict with the Emperor, Frederick
+the Second, and was looking everywhere for the
+means of recruiting her drained exchequer. On
+England she believed herself to have more than
+a spiritual claim for support. She regarded the
+kingdom as a vassal kingdom, and as bound to aid
+its overlord. It was only by the promise of a
+heavy subsidy that Henry in 1229 could buy the
+Papal confirmation of Langton's successor. But
+the baronage was of other mind than Henry as to
+this claim of overlordship, and the demand of an
+aid to Rome from the laity was at once rejected
+by them. Her spiritual claim over the allegiance
+of the clergy however remained to fall back
+upon, and the clergy were in the Pope's hand.
+Gregory the Ninth had already claimed for the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-028"></a>2-028]</span>
+
+Papal See a right of nomination to some prebends
+in each cathedral church; he now demanded a
+tithe of all the moveables of the priesthood,
+and a threat of excommunication silenced their
+murmurs. Exaction followed exaction as the
+needs of the Papal treasury grew greater. The
+very rights of lay patrons were set aside, and
+under the name of "reserves" presentations to
+English benefices were sold in the Papal market,
+while Italian clergy were quartered on the best
+livings of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Fall of Hubert de Burgh</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The general indignation at last found vent in
+a wide conspiracy. In 1231 letters from "the
+whole body of those who prefer to die rather than
+be ruined by the Romans" were scattered over
+the kingdom by armed men; tithes gathered for
+the Pope or the foreign priests were seized and
+given to the poor; the Papal collectors were
+beaten and their bulls trodden under foot. The
+remonstrances of Rome only made clearer the
+national character of the movement; but as
+enquiry went on the hand of the Justiciar himself
+was seen to have been at work. Sheriffs had
+stood idly by while violence was done; royal
+letters had been shown by the rioters as approving
+their acts; and the Pope openly laid the
+charge of the outbreak on the secret connivance
+of Hubert de Burgh. No charge could have been
+more fatal to Hubert in the mind of the king.
+But he was already in full collision with the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-029"></a>2-029]</span>
+
+Justiciar on other grounds. Henry was eager
+to vindicate his right to the great heritage his
+father had lost: the Gascons, who still clung to
+him, not because they loved England but because
+they hated France, spurred him to war; and in
+1229 a secret invitation came from the Norman
+barons. But while Hubert held power no serious
+effort was made to carry on a foreign strife. The
+Norman call was rejected through his influence,
+and when a great armament gathered at Portsmouth
+for a campaign in Poitou it dispersed for
+want of transport and supplies. The young king
+drew his sword and rushed madly on the
+Justiciar, charging him with treason and corruption
+by the gold of France. But the quarrel was
+appeased and the expedition deferred for the year.
+In 1230 Henry actually took the field in Britanny
+and Poitou, but the failure of the campaign was
+again laid at the door of Hubert whose opposition
+was said to have prevented a decisive engagement.
+It was at this moment that the Papal accusation
+filled up the measure of Henry's wrath against
+his minister. In the summer of 1232 he was
+deprived of his office of Justiciar, and dragged
+from a chapel at Brentwood where threats of
+death had driven him to take sanctuary. A
+smith who was ordered to shackle him stoutly
+refused. "I will die any death," he said, "before
+I put iron on the man who freed England from
+the stranger and saved Dover from France." The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-030"></a>2-030]</span>
+
+remonstrances of the Bishop of London forced
+the king to replace Hubert in sanctuary, but
+hunger compelled him to surrender; he was
+thrown a prisoner into the Tower, and though
+soon released he remained powerless in the realm.
+His fall left England without a check to the
+rule of Henry himself.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-031"></a>2-031]</span>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk3-Ch3"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4533622"></a>CHAPTER III</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4533628"></a>THE BARON'S WAR</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4533634"></a>1232-1272</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Aliens</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once master of his realm, Henry the Third was
+quick to declare his plan of government. The
+two great checks on a merely personal rule lay as
+yet in the authority of the great ministers of
+State and in the national character of the administrative
+body which had been built up by
+Henry the Second. Both of these checks Henry
+at once set himself to remove. He would be his
+own minister. The Justiciar ceased to be the
+Lieutenant-General of the king and dwindled
+into a presiding judge of the law-courts. The
+Chancellor had grown into a great officer of State,
+and in 1226 this office had been conferred on the
+Bishop of Chichester by the advice and consent
+of the Great Council. But Henry succeeded in
+wresting the seal from him and naming to this
+as to other offices at his pleasure. His policy
+was to entrust all high posts of government to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-032"></a>2-032]</span>
+
+mere clerks of the royal chapel; trained administrators,
+but wholly dependent on the royal will.
+He found equally dependent agents of administration
+by surrounding himself with foreigners.
+The return of Peter des Roches to the royal
+councils was the first sign of the new system;
+and hosts of hungry Poitevins and Bretons were
+summoned over to occupy the royal castles and
+fill the judicial and administrative posts about
+the Court. The king's marriage in 1236 to
+Eleanor of Provence was followed by the arrival
+in England of the new queen's uncles. The
+"Savoy," as his house in the Strand was named,
+still recalls Peter of Savoy who arrived five years
+later to take for a while the chief place at Henry's
+council-board; another brother, Boniface, was
+consecrated on Archbishop Edmund's death to
+the highest post in the realm save the Crown
+itself, the Archbishoprick of Canterbury. The
+young Primate, like his brother, brought with
+him foreign fashions strange enough to English
+folk. His armed retainers pillaged the markets.
+His own archiepiscopal fist felled to the ground
+the prior of St. Bartholomew-by-Smithfield who
+opposed his visitation. London was roused by
+the outrage; on the king's refusal to do justice
+a noisy crowd of citizens surrounded the Primate's
+house at Lambeth with cries of vengeance, and
+the "handsome archbishop," as his followers
+styled him, was glad to escape over sea. This
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-033"></a>2-033]</span>
+
+brood of Provençals was followed in 1243 by the
+arrival of the Poitevin relatives of John's queen,
+Isabella of Angoulême. Aymer was made Bishop
+of Winchester; William of Valence received at
+a later time the earldom of Pembroke. Even the
+king's jester was a Poitevin. Hundreds of their
+dependants followed these great nobles to find a
+fortune in the English realm. The Poitevin lords
+brought in their train a bevy of ladies in search
+of husbands, and three English earls who were in
+royal wardship were wedded by the king to
+foreigners. The whole machinery of administration
+passed into the hands of men who were
+ignorant and contemptuous of the principles of
+English government or English law. Their rule
+was a mere anarchy; the very retainers of the
+royal household turned robbers and pillaged
+foreign merchants in the precincts of the Court;
+corruption invaded the judicature; at the close
+of this period of misrule Henry de Bath, a
+justiciary, was proved to have openly taken
+bribes and to have adjudged to himself disputed
+estates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Henry
+and the
+Baronage</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That misgovernment of this kind should have
+gone on unchecked in defiance of the provisions of
+the Charter was owing to the disunion and
+sluggishness of the English baronage. On the
+first arrival of the foreigners Richard, the Earl
+Marshal, a son of the great Regent, stood forth
+as their leader to demand the expulsion of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-034"></a>2-034]</span>
+
+strangers from the royal Council. Though deserted
+by the bulk of the nobles he defeated the foreign
+troops sent against him and forced the king to
+treat for peace. But at this critical moment the
+Earl was drawn by an intrigue of Peter des Roches
+to Ireland; he fell in a petty skirmish, and the
+barons were left without a head. The interposition
+of a new primate, Edmund of Abingdon,
+forced the king to dismiss Peter from court; but
+there was no real change of system, and the remonstrances
+of the Archbishop and of Robert
+Grosseteste, the Bishop of Lincoln, remained fruitless.
+In the long interval of misrule the financial
+straits of the king forced him to heap exaction on
+exaction. The Forest Laws were used as a means
+of extortion, sees and abbeys were kept vacant,
+loans were wrested from lords and prelates, the
+Court itself lived at free quarters wherever it
+moved. Supplies of this kind however were utterly
+insufficient to defray the cost of the king's prodigality.
+A sixth of the royal revenue was wasted
+in pensions to foreign favourites. The debts of
+the Crown amounted to four times its annual
+income. Henry was forced to appeal for aid to
+the great Council of the realm, and aid was granted
+in 1237 on promise of control in its expenditure
+and on condition that the king confirmed the
+Charter. But Charter and promise were alike disregarded;
+and in 1242 the resentment of the
+barons expressed itself in a determined protest and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-035"></a>2-035]</span>
+
+a refusal of further subsidies. In spite of their refusal
+however Henry gathered money enough for a
+costly expedition for the recovery of Poitou. The
+attempt ended in failure and shame. At Taillebourg
+the king's force fled in disgraceful rout before the
+French as far as Saintes, and only the sudden
+illness of Lewis the Ninth and a disease which
+scattered his army saved Bordeaux from the
+conquerors. The treasury was utterly drained,
+and Henry was driven in 1244 to make a fresh
+appeal with his own mouth to the baronage. But
+the barons had now rallied to a plan of action, and
+we can hardly fail to attribute their union to the
+man who appears at their head. This was the
+Earl of Leicester, Simon of Montfort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon
+of Montfort</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Simon was the son of another Simon of Montfort,
+whose name had become memorable for his ruthless
+crusade against the Albigensian heretics in Southern
+Gaul, and who had inherited the Earldom of
+Leicester through his mother, a sister and co-heiress
+of the last Earl of the house of Beaumont.
+But as Simon's tendencies were for the most part
+French John had kept the revenues of the earldom
+in his own hands, and on his death the claim of
+his elder son, Amaury, was met by the refusal of
+Henry the Third to accept a divided allegiance.
+The refusal marks the rapid growth of that sentiment
+of nationality which the loss of Normandy
+had brought home. Amaury chose to remain
+French, and by a family arrangement with the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-036"></a>2-036]</span>
+
+king's sanction the honour of Leicester passed in
+1231 to his younger brother Simon. His choice
+made Simon an Englishman, but his foreign blood
+still moved the jealousy of the barons, and this
+jealousy was quickened by a secret match in 1238
+with Eleanor, the king's sister and widow of the
+second William Marshal. The match formed probably
+part of a policy which Henry pursued
+throughout his reign of bringing the great earldoms
+into closer connexion with the Crown. That of
+Chester had fallen to the king through the extinction
+of the family of its earls; Cornwall was held
+by his brother, Richard; Salisbury by his cousin.
+Simon's marriage linked the Earldom of Leicester
+to the royal house. But it at once brought Simon
+into conflict with the nobles and the Church. The
+baronage, justly indignant that such a step should
+have been taken without their consent, for the
+queen still remained childless and Eleanor's
+children by one whom they looked on as a stranger
+promised to be heirs of the Crown, rose in a revolt
+which failed only through the desertion of their
+head, Earl Richard of Cornwall, who was satisfied
+with Earl Simon's withdrawal from the Royal
+Council. The censures of the Church on Eleanor's
+breach of a vow of chaste widowhood which she
+had made at her first husband's death were averted
+with hardly less difficulty by a journey to Rome.
+It was after a year of trouble that Simon returned
+to England to reap as it seemed the fruits of his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-037"></a>2-037]</span>
+
+high alliance. He was now formally made Earl of
+Leicester and re-entered the Royal Council. But
+it is probable that he still found there the old
+jealousy which had forced from him a pledge of
+retirement after his marriage; and that his enemies
+now succeeded in winning over the king. In a few
+months, at any rate, he found the changeable king
+alienated from him, he was driven by a burst of
+royal passion from the realm, and was forced to
+spend seven months in France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon's
+early action</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Henry's anger passed as quickly as it had risen,
+and in the spring of 1240 the Earl was again
+received with honour at court. It was from this
+moment however that his position changed. As
+yet it had been that of a foreigner, confounded in
+the eyes of the nation at large with the Poitevins and
+Provençals who swarmed about the court. But in
+the years of retirement which followed Simon's
+return to England his whole attitude was reversed.
+There was as yet no quarrel with the king: he
+followed him in a campaign across the Channel,
+and shared in his defeat at Saintes. But he was
+a friend of Grosseteste and a patron of the Friars,
+and became at last known as a steady opponent of
+the misrule about him. When prelates and barons
+chose twelve representatives to confer with Henry
+in 1244 Simon stood with Earl Richard of Cornwall
+at the head of them. A definite plan of reform
+disclosed his hand. The confirmation of the
+Charter was to be followed by the election of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-038"></a>2-038]</span>
+
+Justiciar, Chancellor, Treasurer, in the Great
+Council. Nor was this restoration of a responsible
+ministry enough; a perpetual Council was to
+attend the king and devise further reforms. The
+plan broke against Henry's resistance and a Papal
+prohibition; but from this time the Earl took his
+stand in the front rank of the patriot leaders. The
+struggle of the following years was chiefly with the
+exactions of the Papacy, and Simon was one of the
+first to sign the protest which the Parliament in
+1246 addressed to the court of Rome. He was
+present at the Lent Parliament of 1248, and we
+can hardly doubt that he shared in its bold rebuke
+of the king's misrule and its renewed demand for
+the appointment of the higher officers of state by
+the Council. It was probably a sense of the danger
+of leaving at home such a centre of all efforts
+after reform that brought Henry to send him in
+the autumn of 1248 as Seneschal of Gascony to
+save for the Crown the last of its provinces over
+sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon in Gascony</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Threatened by France and by Navarre without
+as well as by revolt within, the loss of Gascony
+seemed close at hand; but in a few months the
+stern rule of the new Seneschal had quelled every
+open foe within or without its bounds. To bring
+the province to order proved a longer and a harder
+task. Its nobles were like the robber-nobles of the
+Rhine: "they rode the country by night," wrote
+the Earl, "like thieves, in parties of twenty or
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-039"></a>2-039]</span>
+
+thirty or forty," and gathered in leagues against
+the Seneschal, who set himself to exact their dues
+to the Crown and to shield merchant and husbandman
+from their violence. For four years Earl
+Simon steadily warred down these robber bands,
+storming castles where there was need, and bridling
+the wilder country with a chain of forts. Hard
+as the task was, his real difficulty lay at home.
+Henry sent neither money nor men; and the Earl
+had to raise both from his own resources, while the
+men whom he was fighting found friends in Henry's
+council-chamber. Again and again Simon was recalled
+to answer charges of tyranny and extortion
+made by the Gascon nobles and pressed by his
+enemies at home on the king. Henry's feeble and
+impulsive temper left him open to pressure like
+this; and though each absence of the Earl from the
+province was a signal for fresh outbreaks of disorder
+which only his presence repressed, the
+deputies of its nobles were still admitted to the
+council-table and commissions sent over to report
+on the Seneschal's administration. The strife
+came to a head in 1252, when the commissioners
+reported that stern as Simon's rule had been the
+case was one in which sternness was needful. The
+English barons supported Simon, and in the face of
+their verdict Henry was powerless. But the king
+was now wholly with his enemies; and his anger
+broke out in a violent altercation. The Earl
+offered to resign his post if the money he had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-040"></a>2-040]</span>
+
+spent was repaid him, and appealed to Henry's
+word. Henry hotly retorted that he was bound
+by no promise to a false traitor. Simon at once
+gave Henry the lie; "and but that thou bearest
+the name of king it had been a bad hour for thee
+when thou utteredst such a word!" A formal reconciliation
+was brought about, and the Earl once
+more returned to Gascony, but before winter had
+come he was forced to withdraw to France. The
+greatness of his reputation was shown in an offer
+which its nobles made him of the regency of their
+realm during the absence of King Lewis from the
+land. But the offer was refused; and Henry,
+who had himself undertaken the pacification of
+Gascony, was glad before the close of 1253 to
+recall its old ruler to do the work he had failed
+to do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon's temper</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Earl's character had now thoroughly developed.
+He inherited the strict and severe piety
+of his father; he was assiduous in his attendance
+on religious services whether by night or day. In
+his correspondence with Adam Marsh we see him
+finding patience under his Gascon troubles in a
+perusal of the Book of Job. His life was pure
+and singularly temperate; he was noted for his
+scant indulgence in meat, drink, or sleep. Socially
+he was cheerful and pleasant in talk; but his
+natural temper was quick and ardent, his sense of
+honour keen, his speech rapid and trenchant. His
+impatience of contradiction, his fiery temper, were
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-041"></a>2-041]</span>
+
+in fact the great stumbling-blocks in his after
+career. His best friends marked honestly this
+fault, and it shows the greatness of the man that
+he listened to their remonstrances. "Better is a
+patient man," writes honest Friar Adam, "than a
+strong man, and he who can rule his own temper
+than he who storms a city." But the one characteristic
+which overmastered all was what men at that
+time called his "constancy," the firm immoveable
+resolve which trampled even death under foot in
+its loyalty to the right. The motto which Edward
+the First chose as his device, "Keep troth," was
+far truer as the device of Earl Simon. We see in
+his correspondence with what a clear discernment
+of its difficulties both at home and abroad he
+"thought it unbecoming to decline the danger of
+so great an exploit" as the reduction of Gascony
+to peace and order; but once undertaken, he persevered
+in spite of the opposition he met with, the
+failure of all support or funds from England, and
+the king's desertion of his cause, till the work was
+done. There was the same steadiness of will and
+purpose in his patriotism. The letters of Robert
+Grosseteste show how early Simon had learned to
+sympathize with the Bishop in his resistance to
+Rome, and at the crisis of the contest he offered
+him his own support and that of his associates.
+But Robert passed away, and as the tide of misgovernment
+mounted higher and higher the Earl
+silently trained himself for the day of trial. The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-042"></a>2-042]</span>
+
+fruit of his self-discipline was seen when the crisis
+came. While other men wavered and faltered
+and fell away, the enthusiastic love of the people
+clung to the grave, stern soldier who "stood like
+a pillar," unshaken by promise or threat or fear of
+death, by the oath he had sworn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Matthew
+Paris</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While Simon had been warring with Gascon
+rebels affairs in England had been going from bad
+to worse. The scourge of Papal taxation fell
+heavier on the clergy. After vain appeals to
+Rome and to the king, Archbishop Edmund retired
+to an exile of despair at Pontigny, and tax-gatherer
+after tax-gatherer with powers of excommunication,
+suspension from orders, and presentation to benefices,
+descended on the unhappy priesthood. The
+wholesale pillage kindled a wide spirit of resistance.
+Oxford gave the signal by hunting a Papal legate
+out of the city amid cries of "usurer" and
+"simoniac" from the mob of students. Fulk Fitz-Warenne
+in the name of the barons bade a Papal
+collector begone out of England. "If you tarry
+here three days longer," he added, "you and your
+company shall be cut to pieces." For a time
+Henry himself was swept away by the tide of
+national indignation. Letters from the king, the
+nobles, and the prelates, protested against the
+Papal exactions, and orders were given that no
+money should be exported from the realm. But
+the threat of interdict soon drove Henry back on
+a policy of spoliation in which he went hand in
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-043"></a>2-043]</span>
+
+hand with Rome. The temper which this oppression
+begot among even the most sober churchmen
+has been preserved for us by an annalist whose
+pages glow with the new outburst of patriotic feeling.
+Matthew Paris is the greatest, as he in reality
+is the last, of our monastic historians. The school
+of St. Alban's survived indeed till a far later time,
+but its writers dwindle into mere annalists whose
+view is bounded by the abbey precincts and whose
+work is as colourless as it is jejune. In Matthew
+the breadth and precision of the narrative, the
+copiousness of his information on topics whether
+national or European, the general fairness and
+justice of his comments, are only surpassed by the
+patriotic fire and enthusiasm of the whole. He
+had succeeded Roger of Wendover as chronicler at
+St. Alban's; and the Greater Chronicle with an
+abridgement of it which long passed under the
+name of Matthew of Westminster, a "History of
+the English," and the "Lives of the Earlier Abbots,"
+are only a few among the voluminous works which
+attest his prodigious industry. He was an artist
+as well as an historian, and many of the manuscripts
+which are preserved are illustrated by his own
+hand. A large circle of correspondents--bishops
+like Grosseteste, ministers like Hubert de Burgh,
+officials like Alexander de Swereford--furnished
+him with minute accounts of political and ecclesiastical
+proceedings. Pilgrims from the East and
+Papal agents brought news of foreign events to his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-044"></a>2-044]</span>
+
+scriptorium at St. Alban's. He had access to and
+quotes largely from state documents, charters, and
+exchequer rolls. The frequency of royal visits to
+the abbey brought him a store of political
+intelligence, and Henry himself contributed to the great
+chronicle which has preserved with so terrible a
+faithfulness the memory of his weakness and
+misgovernment. On one solemn feast-day the king
+recognized Matthew, and bidding him sit on the
+middle step between the floor and the throne
+begged him to write the story of the day's proceedings.
+While on a visit to St. Alban's he invited
+him to his table and chamber, and enumerated
+by name two hundred and fifty of the English
+baronies for his information. But all this royal
+patronage has left little mark on his work. "The
+case," as Matthew says, "of historical writers is
+hard, for if they tell the truth they provoke men,
+and if they write what is false they offend God."
+With all the fulness of the school of court
+historians, such as Benedict and Hoveden, to which
+in form he belonged, Matthew Paris combines an
+independence and patriotism which is strange to
+their pages. He denounces with the same unsparing
+energy the oppression of the Papacy and of
+the king. His point of view is neither that of a
+courtier nor of a churchman but of an Englishman,
+and the new national tone of his chronicle is but
+the echo of a national sentiment which at last
+bound nobles and yeomen and churchmen together
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-045"></a>2-045]</span>
+
+into a people resolute to wrest freedom from the Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Wales</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The nation was outraged like the Church. Two
+solemn confirmations of the Charter failed to
+bring about any compliance with its provisions. In
+1248, in 1249, and again in 1255 the great Council
+fruitlessly renewed its demand for a regular
+ministry, and the growing resolve of the nobles to
+enforce good government was seen in their offer of
+a grant on condition that the great officers of the
+Crown were appointed in the Council of the
+Baronage. But Henry refused their offer with scorn
+and sold his plate to the citizens of London to find
+payment for his household. A spirit of mutinous
+defiance broke out on the failure of all legal remedy.
+When the Earl of Norfolk refused him aid Henry
+answered with a threat. "I will send reapers and
+reap your fields for you," he said. "And I will
+send you back the heads of your reapers," replied
+the Earl. Hampered by the profusion of the court
+and the refusal of supplies, the Crown was in fact
+penniless; and yet never was money more wanted,
+for a trouble which had long pressed upon the
+English kings had now grown to a height that
+called for decisive action. Even his troubles at
+home could not blind Henry to the need of dealing
+with the difficulty of Wales. Of the three Welsh
+states into which all that remained unconquered
+of Britain had been broken by the victories of
+Deorham and Chester, two had long ceased to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-046"></a>2-046]</span>
+
+exist. The country between the Clyde and the
+Dee had been gradually absorbed by the conquests
+of Northumbria and the growth of the Scot
+monarchy. West Wales, between the British Channel
+and the estuary of the Severn, had yielded to the
+sword of Ecgberht. But a fiercer resistance prolonged
+the independence of the great central portion
+which alone in modern language preserves the
+name of Wales. Comprising in itself the largest
+and most powerful of the British kingdoms, it was
+aided in its struggle against Mercia by the weakness
+of its assailant, the youngest and feeblest of
+the English states, as well as by an internal warfare
+which distracted the energies of the invaders.
+But Mercia had no sooner risen to supremacy
+among the English kingdoms than it took the work
+of conquest vigorously in hand. Offa tore from
+Wales the border-land between the Severn and
+the Wye; the raids of his successors carried fire
+and sword into the heart of the country; and an
+acknowledgement of the Mercian overlordship was
+wrested from the Welsh princes. On the fall of
+Mercia this overlordship passed to the West-Saxon
+kings, and the Laws of Howel Dda own the payment
+of a yearly tribute by "the prince of Aberffraw"
+to "the King of London." The weakness
+of England during her long struggle with the Danes
+revived the hopes of British independence; it was
+the co-operation of the Welsh on which the northmen
+reckoned in their attack on the house of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-047"></a>2-047]</span>
+
+Ecgberht. But with the fall of the Danelaw the
+British princes were again brought to submission,
+and when in the midst of the Confessor's reign the
+Welsh seized on a quarrel between the houses of
+Leofric and Godwine to cross the border and carry
+their attacks into England itself, the victories of
+Harold reasserted the English supremacy.
+Disembarking on the coast his light-armed troops he
+penetrated to the heart of the mountains, and the
+successors of the Welsh prince Gruffydd, whose
+head was the trophy of the campaign, swore to
+observe the old fealty and render the old tribute
+to the English Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Wales and the Normans</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A far more desperate struggle began when the
+wave of Norman conquest broke on the Welsh
+frontier. A chain of great earldoms, settled by
+William along the border-land, at once bridled the
+old marauding forays. From his county palatine
+of Chester Hugh the Wolf harried Flintshire into
+a desert, Robert of Belesme in his earldom of
+Shrewsbury "slew the Welsh," says a chronicler,
+"like sheep, conquered them, enslaved them and
+flayed them with nails of iron." The earldom of
+Gloucester curbed Britain along the lower Severn.
+Backed by these greater baronies a horde of lesser
+adventurers obtained the royal "licence to make
+conquest on the Welsh." Monmouth and Abergavenny
+were seized and guarded by Norman castellans;
+Bernard of Neufmarché won the lordship
+of Brecknock; Roger of Montgomery raised
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-048"></a>2-048]</span>
+
+the town and fortress in Powysland which still
+preserves his name. A great rising of the whole
+people in the days of the second William won
+back some of this Norman spoil. The new castle
+of Montgomery was burned, Brecknock and
+Cardigan were cleared of the invaders, and the
+Welsh poured ravaging over the English border.
+Twice the Red King carried his arms fruitlessly
+among the mountains against enemies who took
+refuge in their fastnesses till famine and hardship
+drove his broken host into retreat. The wiser
+policy of Henry the First fell back on his father's
+system of gradual conquest. A new tide of invasion
+flowed along the southern coast, where the
+land was level and open and accessible from the
+sea. The attack was aided by strife in the country
+itself. Robert Fitz-Hamo, the lord of Gloucester,
+was summoned to his aid by a Welsh chieftain;
+and his defeat of Rhys ap Tewdor, the last
+prince under whom Southern Wales was united,
+produced an anarchy which enabled Robert to
+land safely on the coast of Glamorgan, to conquer
+the country round, and to divide it among his
+soldiers. A force of Flemings and Englishmen
+followed the Earl of Clare as he landed near
+Milford Haven and pushing back the British
+inhabitants settled a "Little England" in the
+present Pembrokeshire. A few daring adventurers
+accompanied the Norman Lord of Kemeys
+into Cardigan, where land might be had for the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-049"></a>2-049]</span>
+
+winning by any one who would "wage war on the Welsh."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Welsh Revival</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was at this moment, when the utter subjugation
+of the British race seemed at hand, that
+a new outburst of energy rolled back the tide of
+invasion and changed the fitful resistance of the
+separate Welsh provinces into a national effort to
+regain independence. To all outer seeming Wales
+had become utterly barbarous. Stripped of every
+vestige of the older Roman civilization by ages of
+bitter warfare, of civil strife, of estrangement from
+the general culture of Christendom, the
+unconquered Britons had sunk into a mass of savage
+herdsmen, clad in the skins and fed by the milk
+of the cattle they tended. Faithless, greedy, and
+revengeful, retaining no higher political
+organization than that of the clan, their strength
+was broken by ruthless feuds, and they were united
+only in battle or in raid against the stranger. But
+in the heart of the wild people there still lingered
+a spark of the poetic fire which had nerved it
+four hundred years before through Aneurin and
+Llywarch Hen to its struggle with the earliest
+Englishmen. At the hour of its lowest degradation
+the silence of Wales was suddenly broken by
+a crowd of singers. The song of the twelfth
+century burst forth, not from one bard or another,
+but from the nation at large. The Welsh temper
+indeed was steeped in poetry. "In every house,"
+says the shrewd Gerald de Barri, "strangers who
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-050"></a>2-050]</span>
+
+arrived in the morning were entertained till eventide
+with the talk of maidens and the music of the
+harp." A romantic literature, which was destined
+to leaven the fancy of western Europe, had grown
+up among this wild people and found an admirable
+means of utterance in its tongue. The Welsh language
+was as real a developement of the old Celtic
+language heard by Cæsar as the Romance tongues
+are developements of Cæsar's Latin, but at a far
+earlier date than any other language of modern
+Europe it had attained to definite structure and to
+settled literary form. No other mediæval literature
+shows at its outset the same elaborate and
+completed organization as that of the Welsh. But
+within these settled forms the Celtic fancy played
+with a startling freedom. In one of the later poems
+Gwion the Little transforms himself into a hare, a
+fish, a bird, a grain of wheat; but he is only the
+symbol of the strange shapes in which the Celtic fancy
+embodies itself in the romantic tales which reached
+their highest perfection in the legends of Arthur.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Welsh Poetry</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gay extravagance of these "Mabinogion"
+flings defiance to all fact, tradition, probability,
+and revels in the impossible and unreal. When
+Arthur sails into the unknown world it is in a ship
+of glass. The "descent into hell," as a Celtic poet
+paints it, shakes off the mediæval horror with the
+mediæval reverence, and the knight who achieves
+the quest spends his years of infernal durance in
+hunting and minstrelsy, and in converse with fair
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-051"></a>2-051]</span>
+
+women. The world of the Mabinogion is a world
+of pure phantasy, a new earth of marvels and
+enchantments, of dark forests whose silence is
+broken by the hermit's bell and sunny glades
+where the light plays on the hero's armour. Each
+figure as it moves across the poet's canvas is
+bright with glancing colour. "The maiden was
+clothed in a robe of flame-coloured silk, and about
+her neck was a collar of ruddy gold in which were
+precious emeralds and rubies. Her head was of
+brighter gold than the flower of the broom, her
+skin was whiter than the foam of the wave, and
+fairer were her hands and her fingers than the
+blossoms of the wood-anemone amidst the spray of
+the meadow fountain. The eye of the trained
+hawk, the glance of the falcon, was not brighter
+than hers. Her bosom was more snowy than the
+breast of the white swan, her cheek was redder
+than the reddest roses." Everywhere there is an
+Oriental profusion of gorgeous imagery, but the
+gorgeousness is seldom oppressive. The sensibility
+of the Celtic temper, so quick to perceive beauty,
+so eager in its thirst for life, its emotions, its
+adventures, its sorrows, its joys, is tempered by a
+passionate melancholy that expresses its revolt
+against the impossible, by an instinct of what is
+noble, by a sentiment that discovers the weird
+charm of nature. The wildest extravagance of
+the tale-teller is relieved by some graceful play of
+pure fancy, some tender note of feeling, some
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-052"></a>2-052]</span>
+
+magical touch of beauty. As Kulwch's greyhounds
+bound from side to side of their master's
+steed, they "sport round him like two sea-swallows."
+His spear is "swifter than the fall of
+the dewdrop from the blade of reed-grass upon the
+earth when the dew of June is at the heaviest."
+A subtle, observant love of nature and natural
+beauty takes fresh colour from the passionate
+human sentiment with which it is imbued. "I
+love the birds" sings Gwalchmai "and their sweet
+voices in the lulling songs of the wood"; he
+watches at night beside the fords "among the
+untrodden grass" to hear the nightingale and
+watch the play of the sea-mew. Even patriotism
+takes the same picturesque form. The Welsh
+poet hates the flat and sluggish land of the
+Saxon; as he dwells on his own he tells of "its
+sea-coast and its mountains, its towns on the
+forest border, its fair landscape, its dales, its
+waters, and its valleys, its white sea-mews, its
+beauteous women." Here as everywhere the
+sentiment of nature passes swiftly and subtly
+into the sentiment of a human tenderness: "I
+love its fields clothed with tender trefoil" goes on
+the song; "I love the marches of Merioneth where
+my head was pillowed on a snow-white arm." In
+the Celtic love of woman there is little of the
+Teutonic depth and earnestness, but in its stead a
+childlike spirit of delicate enjoyment, a faint
+distant flush of passion like the rose-light of dawn
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-053"></a>2-053]</span>
+
+on a snowy mountain peak, a playful delight in
+beauty. "White is my love as the apple-blossom,
+as the ocean's spray; her face shines like the
+pearly dew on Eryri; the glow of her cheeks is
+like the light of sunset." The buoyant and elastic
+temper of the French trouveur was spiritualized
+in the Welsh singers by a more refined poetic
+feeling. "Whoso beheld her was filled with her
+love. Four white trefoils sprang up wherever
+she trod." A touch of pure fancy such as this
+removes its object out of the sphere of passion
+into one of delight and reverence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Bards</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is strange to pass from the world of actual
+Welsh history into such a world as this. But side by
+side with this wayward, fanciful stream of poesy and
+romance ran a torrent of intenser song. The spirit
+of the earlier bards, their joy in battle, their love
+of freedom, broke out anew in ode after ode, in
+songs extravagant, monotonous, often prosaic, but
+fused into poetry by the intense fire of patriotism
+which glowed within them. Every fight, every
+hero had its verse. The names of older singers,
+of Taliesin, Aneurin, and Llywarch Hen, were
+revived in bold forgeries to animate the national
+resistance and to prophesy victory. It was in
+North Wales that the spirit of patriotism received
+its strongest inspiration from this burst of song.
+Again and again Henry the Second was driven
+to retreat from the impregnable fastnesses where
+the "Lords of Snowdon," the princes of the house
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-054"></a>2-054]</span>
+
+of Gruffydd ap Conan, claimed supremacy over
+the whole of Wales. Once in the pass of Consilt
+a cry arose that the king was slain, Henry of
+Essex flung down the royal standard, and the
+king's desperate efforts could hardly save his army
+from utter rout. The bitter satire of the Welsh
+singers bade him knight his horse, since its speed
+had alone saved him from capture. In a later
+campaign the invaders were met by storms of rain,
+and forced to abandon their baggage in a headlong
+flight to Chester. The greatest of the Welsh odes,
+that known to English readers in Gray's translation
+as "The Triumph of Owen," is Gwalchmai's song
+of victory over the repulse of an English fleet from
+Abermenai.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Llewelyn ap Jorwerth</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The long reign of Llewelyn the son of Jorwerth
+seemed destined to realize the hopes of his countrymen.
+The homage which he succeeded in extorting
+from the whole of the Welsh chieftains during
+a reign which lasted from 1194 to 1246 placed him
+openly at the head of his race, and gave a new
+character to its struggle with the English king.
+In consolidating his authority within his own
+domains, and in the assertion of his lordship over
+the princes of the south, Llewelyn ap Jorwerth
+aimed steadily at securing the means of striking
+off the yoke of the Saxon. It was in vain that
+John strove to buy his friendship by the hand of
+his natural daughter Johanna. Fresh raids on the
+Marches forced the king to enter Wales in 1211;
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-055"></a>2-055]</span>
+
+but though his army reached Snowdon it fell back
+like its predecessors, starved and broken before an
+enemy it could never reach. A second attack in
+the same year had better success. The chieftains
+of South Wales were drawn from their new allegiance
+to join the English forces, and Llewelyn,
+prisoned in his fastnesses, was at last driven to
+submit. But the ink of the treaty was hardly dry
+before Wales was again on fire; a common fear of
+the English once more united its chieftains, and
+the war between John and his barons soon removed
+all dread of a new invasion. Absolved from his
+allegiance to an excommunicated king, and allied
+with the barons under Fitz-Walter--too glad to enlist
+in their cause a prince who could hold in check
+the nobles of the border country where the royalist
+cause was strongest--Llewelyn seized his opportunity
+to reduce Shrewsbury, to annex Powys, the
+central district of Wales where the English influence
+had always been powerful, to clear the
+royal garrisons from Caermarthen and Cardigan,
+and to force even the Flemings of Pembroke to do
+him homage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Llewelyn
+and the
+Bards</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+England watched these efforts of the subject
+race with an anger still mingled with contempt.
+"Who knows not," exclaims Matthew Paris as he
+dwells on the new pretensions of the Welsh ruler,
+"who knows not that the Prince of Wales is a
+petty vassal of the King of England?" But the
+temper of Llewelyn's own people was far other
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-056"></a>2-056]</span>
+
+than the temper of the English chronicler. The
+hopes of Wales rose higher and higher with each
+triumph of the Lord of Snowdon. His court was
+crowded with bardic singers. "He pours," sings
+one of them, "his gold into the lap of the bard as
+the ripe fruit falls from the trees." Gold however
+was hardly needed to wake their enthusiasm.
+Poet after poet sang of "the Devastator of England,"
+the "Eagle of men that loves not to lie nor
+sleep," "towering above the rest of men with his
+long red lance," his "red helmet of battle crested
+with a fierce wolf." "The sound of his coming is
+like the roar of the wave as it rushes to the shore,
+that can neither be stayed nor hushed." Lesser
+bards strung together Llewelyn's victories in rough
+jingle of rime and hounded him on to the slaughter.
+"Be of good courage in the slaughter," sings Elidir,
+"cling to thy work, destroy England, and plunder
+its multitudes." A fierce thirst for blood runs
+through the abrupt, passionate verses of the court
+singers. "Swansea, that tranquil town, was broken
+in heaps," bursts out a triumphant bard; "St.
+Clears, with its bright white lands, it is not Saxons
+who hold it now!" "In Swansea, the key of
+Lloegria, we made widows of all the wives." "The
+dread Eagle is wont to lay corpses in rows, and to
+feast with the leader of wolves and with hovering
+ravens glutted with flesh, butchers with keen
+scent of carcases." "Better," closes the song,
+"better the grave than the life of man who sighs
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-057"></a>2-057]</span>
+
+when the horns call him forth, to the squares of
+battle."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Welsh
+hopes</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even in bardic verse Llewelyn rises high out
+of the mere mob of chieftains who live by rapine,
+and boast as the Hirlas-horn passes from hand
+to hand through the hall that "they take and give
+no quarter." "Tender-hearted, wise, witty, ingenious,"
+he was "the great Caesar" who was to
+gather beneath his sway the broken fragments of
+the Celtic race. Mysterious prophecies, the
+prophecies of Merlin the Wise which floated from
+lip to lip and were heard even along the Seine and
+the Rhine, came home again to nerve Wales to
+its last struggle with the stranger. Medrawd and
+Arthur, men whispered, would appear once more
+on earth to fight over again the fatal battle of
+Camlan in which the hero-king perished. The
+last conqueror of the Celtic race, Cadwallon, still
+lived to combat for his people. The supposed
+verses of Taliesin expressed the undying hope of a
+restoration of the Cymry. "In their hands shall
+be all the land from Britanny to Man: ... a
+rumour shall arise that the Germans are moving
+out of Britain back again to their fatherland."
+Gathered up in the strange work of Geoffry of
+Monmouth, these predictions had long been making
+a deep impression not on Wales only but on its
+conquerors. It was to meet the dreams of a yet
+living Arthur that the grave of the legendary hero-king
+at Glastonbury was found and visited by
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-058"></a>2-058]</span>
+
+Henry the Second. But neither trick nor conquest
+could shake the firm faith of the Celt in the
+ultimate victory of his race. "Think you," said
+Henry to a Welsh chieftain who joined his host,
+"that your people of rebels can withstand my
+army?" "My people," replied the chieftain, "may
+be weakened by your might, and even in great
+part destroyed, but unless the wrath of God be on
+the side of its foe it will not perish utterly. Nor
+deem I that other race or other tongue will
+answer for this corner of the world before the
+Judge of all at the last day save this people and
+tongue of Wales." So ran the popular rime,
+"Their Lord they will praise, their speech they
+shall keep, their land they shall lose--except wild
+Wales."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Provisions of Oxford</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Faith and prophecy seemed justified by the
+growing strength of the British people. The
+weakness and dissensions which characterized the
+reign of Henry the Third enabled Llewelyn ap
+Jorwerth to preserve a practical independence till
+the close of his life, when a fresh acknowledgement
+of the English supremacy was wrested from
+him by Archbishop Edmund. But the triumphs
+of his arms were renewed by Llewelyn the son of
+Gruffydd, who followed him in 1246. The raids
+of the new chieftain swept the border to the very
+gates of Chester, while his conquest of Glamorgan
+seemed to bind the whole people together in a
+power strong enough to meet any attack from the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-059"></a>2-059]</span>
+
+stranger. So pressing was the danger that it
+called the king's eldest son, Edward, to the field;
+but his first appearance in arms ended in a crushing
+defeat. The defeat however remained unavenged.
+Henry's dreams were of mightier enterprises
+than the reduction of the Welsh. The
+Popes were still fighting their weary battle against
+the House of Hohenstaufen, and were offering its
+kingdom of Sicily, which they regarded as a forfeited
+fief of the Holy See, to any power that
+would aid them in the struggle. In 1254 it was
+offered to the king's second son, Edmund. With
+imbecile pride Henry accepted the offer, prepared
+to send an army across the Alps, and pledged
+England to repay the sums which the Pope was
+borrowing for the purposes of his war. In a
+Parliament at the opening of 1257 he demanded
+an aid and a tenth from the clergy. A fresh
+demand was made in 1258. But the patience of
+the realm was at last exhausted. Earl Simon had
+returned in 1253 from his government of Gascony,
+and the fruit of his meditations during the four
+years of his quiet stay at home, a quiet broken
+only by short embassies to France and Scotland
+which showed there was as yet no open quarrel
+with Henry, was seen in a league of the baronage
+and in their adoption of a new and startling
+policy. The past half-century had shown both
+the strength and weakness of the Charter: its
+strength as a rallying-point for the baronage and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-060"></a>2-060]</span>
+
+a definite assertion of rights which the king could
+be made to acknowledge; its weakness in providing
+no means for the enforcement of its own stipulations.
+Henry had sworn again and again to
+observe the Charter and his oath was no sooner
+taken than it was unscrupulously broken. The
+barons had secured the freedom of the realm; the
+secret of their long patience during the reign of
+Henry lay in the difficulty of securing its right
+administration. It was this difficulty which Earl
+Simon was prepared to solve when action was
+forced on him by the stir of the realm. A great
+famine added to the sense of danger from Wales
+and from Scotland and to the irritation at the new
+demands from both Henry and Rome with which
+the year 1258 opened. It was to arrange for a
+campaign against Wales that Henry called a parliament
+in April. But the baronage appeared in
+arms with Gloucester and Leicester at their head.
+The king was forced to consent to the appointment
+of a committee of twenty-four to draw up
+terms for the reform of the state. The Twenty-four
+again met the Parliament at Oxford in June,
+and although half the committee consisted of royal
+ministers and favourites it was impossible to resist
+the tide of popular feeling. Hugh Bigod, one of
+the firmest adherents of the two Earls, was chosen
+as Justiciar. The claim to elect this great officer
+was in fact the leading point in the baronial
+policy. But further measures were needed to hold
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-061"></a>2-061]</span>
+
+in check such arbitrary misgovernment as had
+prevailed during the last twenty years. By the
+"Provisions of Oxford" it was agreed that the
+Great Council should assemble thrice in the year,
+whether summoned by the king or no; and on
+each occasion "the Commonalty shall elect twelve
+honest men who shall come to the Parliaments,
+and at other times when occasion shall be when
+the King and his Council shall send for them, to
+treat of the wants of the king and of his kingdom.
+And the Commonalty shall hold as established
+that which these Twelve shall do." Three permanent
+committees of barons and prelates were
+named to carry out the work of reform and
+administration. The reform of the Church was
+left to the original Twenty-four; a second Twenty-four
+negotiated the financial aids; a Permanent
+Council of Fifteen advised the king in the ordinary
+work of government. The complexity of
+such an arrangement was relieved by the fact that
+the members of each of these committees were in
+great part the same persons. The Justiciar,
+Chancellor, and the guardians of the king's
+castles swore to act only with the advice and
+assent of the Permanent Council, and the first two
+great officers, with the Treasurer, were to give
+account of their proceedings to it at the end of the
+year. Sheriffs were to be appointed for a single
+year only, no doubt by the Council, from among
+the chief tenants of the county, and no undue
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-062"></a>2-062]</span>
+
+fees were to be exacted for the administration of
+justice in their court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Government
+of the
+Barons</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A royal proclamation in the English tongue,
+the first in that tongue since the Conquest which
+has reached us, ordered the observance of these
+Provisions. The king was in fact helpless, and
+resistance came only from the foreign favourites,
+who refused to surrender the castles and honours
+which had been granted to them. But the
+Twenty-four were resolute in their action; and an
+armed demonstration of the barons drove the
+foreigners in flight over sea. The whole royal
+power was now in fact in the hands of the
+committees appointed by the Great Council. But
+the measures of the barons showed little of the
+wisdom and energy which the country had hoped
+for. In October 1259 the knighthood complained
+that the barons had done nothing but seek their
+own advantage in the recent changes. This protest
+produced the Provisions of Westminster, which
+gave protection to tenants against their feudal lords,
+regulated legal procedure in the feudal courts,
+appointed four knights in each shire to watch the
+justice of the sheriffs, and made other temporary
+enactments for the furtherance of justice. But
+these Provisions brought little fruit, and a tendency
+to mere feudal privilege showed itself in an exemption
+of all nobles and prelates from attendance at
+the Sheriff's courts. Their foreign policy was
+more vigorous and successful. All further payment
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-063"></a>2-063]</span>
+
+to Rome, whether secular or ecclesiastical,
+was prohibited, formal notice was given to the Pope
+of England's withdrawal from the Sicilian enterprise,
+peace put an end to the incursions of the
+Welsh, and negotiations on the footing of a formal
+abandonment of the king's claim to Normandy,
+Anjou, Maine, Touraine, and Poitou ended in
+October 1259 in a peace with France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon and the Baronage</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This peace, the triumph of that English policy
+which had been struggling ever since the days of
+Hubert de Burgh with the Continental policy of
+Henry and his foreign advisers, was the work of
+the Earl of Leicester. The revolution had doubtless
+been mainly Simon's doing. In the summer
+of 1258, while the great change was going on, a
+thunderstorm drove the king as he passed along
+the river to the house of the Bishop of Durham
+where the Earl was then sojourning. Simon bade
+Henry take shelter with him and have no fear of
+the storm. The king refused with petulant wit.
+"If I fear the thunder, I fear you, Sir Earl, more
+than all the thunder in the world." But Simon
+had probably small faith in the cumbrous system
+of government which the Barons devised, and it
+was with reluctance that he was brought to swear
+to the Provisions of Oxford which embodied it.
+With their home government he had little to do,
+for from the autumn of 1258 to that of 1259 he
+was chiefly busied in negotiation in France.
+But already his breach with Gloucester and the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-064"></a>2-064]</span>
+
+bulk of his fellow councillors was marked. In the
+Lent Parliament of 1259 he had reproached them,
+and Gloucester above all, with faithlessness to their
+trust. "The things we are treating of," he cried,
+"we have sworn to carry out. With such feeble
+and faithless men I care not to have ought to do!"
+The peace with France was hardly signed when
+his distrust of his colleagues was verified. Henry's
+withdrawal to the French court at the close of the
+year for the formal signature of the treaty was the
+signal for a reactionary movement. From France
+the king forbade the summoning of a Lent Parliament
+in 1260 and announced his resumption of the
+enterprise against Sicily. Both acts were distinct
+breaches of the Provisions of Oxford, but Henry
+trusted to the divisions of the Twenty-four.
+Gloucester was in open feud with Leicester; the
+Justiciar, Hugh Bigod, resigned his office in the
+spring; and both of these leaders drew cautiously
+to the king. Roger Mortimer and the Earls of
+Hereford and Norfolk more openly espoused the
+royal cause, and in February 1260 Henry had
+gained confidence enough to announce that as the
+barons had failed to keep their part of the Provisions
+he should not keep his.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Counter
+Revolution</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Earl Simon almost alone remained unshaken.
+But his growing influence was seen in the appointment
+of his supporter, Hugh Despenser, as Justiciar
+in Bigod's place, while his strength was doubled
+by the accession of the King's son Edward to his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-065"></a>2-065]</span>
+
+side. In the moment of the revolution Edward
+had vehemently supported the party of the
+foreigners. But he had sworn to observe the
+Provisions, and the fidelity to his pledge which
+remained throughout his life the chief note of his
+temper at once showed itself. Like Simon he protested
+against the faithlessness of the barons in the
+carrying out of their reforms, and it was his strenuous
+support of the petition of the knighthood that
+brought about the additional Provisions of 1259.
+He had been brought up with Earl Simon's sons,
+and with the Earl himself his relations remained
+friendly even at the later time of their fatal
+hostilities. But as yet he seems to have had no
+distrust of Simon's purposes or policy. His adhesion
+to the Earl recalled Henry from France;
+and the king was at once joined by Gloucester in
+London while Edward and Simon remained without
+the walls. But the love of father and son
+proved too strong to bear political severance, and
+Edward's reconciliation foiled the Earl's plans.
+He withdrew to the Welsh border, where fresh
+troubles were breaking out, while Henry prepared
+to deal his final blow at the government which,
+tottering as it was, still held him in check. Rome
+had resented the measures which had put an end
+to her extortions, and it was to Rome that Henry
+looked for a formal absolution from his oath to
+observe the Provisions. In June 1261 he produced
+a Bull annulling the Provisions and freeing
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-066"></a>2-066]</span>
+
+him from his oath in a Parliament at Winchester.
+The suddenness of the blow forbade open protest
+and Henry quickly followed up his victory. Hugh
+Bigod, who had surrendered the Tower and Dover
+in the spring, surrendered the other castles he held
+in the autumn. Hugh Despenser was deposed
+from the Justiciarship and a royalist, Philip Basset,
+appointed in his place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon's rising</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news of this counter-revolution reunited
+for a moment the barons. Gloucester joined Earl
+Simon in calling an autumn Parliament at St.
+Alban's, and in summoning to it three knights from
+every shire south of Trent. But the union was a
+brief one. Gloucester consented to refer the
+quarrel with the king to arbitration and the Earl
+of Leicester withdrew in August to France. He
+saw that for the while there was no means of withstanding
+Henry, even in his open defiance of the
+Provisions. Foreign soldiers were brought into
+the land; the king won back again the appointment
+of sheriffs. For eighteen months of this
+new rule Simon could do nothing but wait. But
+his long absence lulled the old jealousies against
+him. The confusion of the realm and a fresh outbreak
+of troubles in Wales renewed the disgust at
+Henry's government, while his unswerving faithfulness
+to the Provisions fixed the eyes of all
+Englishmen upon the Earl as their natural leader.
+The death of Gloucester in the summer of 1262
+removed the one barrier to action; and in the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-067"></a>2-067]</span>
+
+spring of 1263 Simon landed again in England as
+the unquestioned head of the baronial party.
+What immediately forced him to action was a
+march of Edward with a body of foreign troops
+against Llewelyn, who was probably by this time
+in communication if not in actual alliance with the
+Earl. The chief opponents of Llewelyn among
+the Marcher Lords were ardent supporters of
+Henry's misgovernment, and when a common
+hostility drew the Prince and Earl together, the
+constitutional position of Llewelyn as an English
+noble gave formal justification for co-operation
+with him. At Whitsuntide the barons met Simon
+at Oxford and finally summoned Henry to observe
+the Provisions. His refusal was met by an appeal
+to arms. Throughout the country the younger
+nobles flocked to Simon's standard, and the young
+Earl of Gloucester, Gilbert of Clare, became his
+warmest supporter. His rapid movements foiled
+all opposition. While Henry vainly strove to
+raise money and men, Simon swept the Welsh
+border, marched through Reading on Dover, and
+finally appeared before London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Mise of Amiens</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Earl's triumph was complete. Edward
+after a brief attempt at resistance was forced to
+surrender Windsor and disband his foreign troops.
+The rising of London in the cause of the barons
+left Henry helpless. But at the moment of
+triumph the Earl saw himself anew forsaken.
+The bulk of the nobles again drew towards the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-068"></a>2-068]</span>
+
+king; only six of the twelve barons who had
+formed the patriot half of the committee of 1258,
+only four of the twelve representatives of the
+community at that date, were now with the Earl.
+The dread too of civil war gave strength to the
+cry for a compromise, and at the end of the year
+it was agreed that the strife should be left to the
+arbitration of the French king, Lewis the Ninth.
+But saint and just ruler as he was, the royal power
+was in the conception of Lewis a divine thing,
+which no human power could limit or fetter, and
+his decision, which was given in January 1264,
+annulled the whole of the Provisions. Only the
+Charters granted before the Provisions were to be
+observed. The appointment and removal of all
+officers of state was to be wholly with the king,
+and he was suffered to call aliens to his councils if
+he would. The Mise of Amiens was at once confirmed
+by the Pope, and, crushing blow as it was,
+the barons felt themselves bound by the award.
+It was only the exclusion of aliens--a point which
+they had not purposed to submit to arbitration--which
+they refused to concede. Luckily Henry
+was as inflexible on this point as on the rest, and
+the mutual distrust prevented any real accommodation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Battle of Lewes</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Henry had to reckon on more than the
+baronage. Deserted as he was by the greater
+nobles, Simon was far from standing alone.
+Throughout the recent struggle the new city
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-069"></a>2-069]</span>
+
+governments of the craft-gilds, which were known
+by the name of "Communes," had shown an
+enthusiastic devotion to his cause. The queen
+was stopped in her attempt to escape from the
+Tower by an angry mob, who drove her back with
+stones and foul words. When Henry attempted
+to surprise Leicester in his quarters at Southwark,
+the Londoners burst the gates which had been
+locked by the richer burghers against him, and
+rescued him by a welcome into the city. The
+clergy and the universities went in sympathy with
+the towns, and in spite of the taunts of the
+royalists, who accused him of seeking allies against
+the nobility in the common people, the popular
+enthusiasm gave a strength to the Earl which
+sustained him even in this darkest hour of the
+struggle. He at once resolved on resistance. The
+French award had luckily reserved the rights of
+Englishmen to the liberties they had enjoyed
+before the Provisions of Oxford, and it was easy
+for Simon to prove that the arbitrary power it gave
+to the Crown was as contrary to the Charter as
+to the Provisions themselves. London was the
+first to reject the decision; in March 1264 its
+citizens mustered at the call of the town-bell at
+Saint Paul's, seized the royal officials, and plundered
+the royal parks. But an army had already
+mustered in great force at the king's summons,
+while Leicester found himself deserted by the bulk
+of the baronage. Every day brought news of ill.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-070"></a>2-070]</span>
+
+A detachment from Scotland joined Henry's forces.
+The younger De Montfort was taken prisoner.
+Northampton was captured, the king raised the
+siege of Rochester, and a rapid march of Earl
+Simon's only saved London itself from a surprise
+by Edward. But, betrayed as he was, the Earl
+remained firm to the cause. He would fight to
+the end, he said, even were he and his sons left to
+fight alone. With an army reinforced by 15,000
+Londoners, he marched in May to the relief of the
+Cinque Ports which were now threatened by the
+king. Even on the march he was forsaken by
+many of the nobles who followed him. Halting at
+Fletching in Sussex, a few miles from Lewes,
+where the royal army was encamped, Earl Simon
+with the young Earl of Gloucester offered the
+king compensation for all damage if he would
+observe the Provisions. Henry's answer was one
+of defiance, and though numbers were against him,
+the Earl resolved on battle. His skill as a soldier
+reversed the advantages of the ground; marching
+at dawn on the 14th of May he seized the heights
+eastward of the town, and moved down these slopes
+to an attack. His men with white crosses on back
+and breast knelt in prayer before the battle opened,
+and all but reached the town before their approach
+was perceived. Edward however opened the fight
+by a furious charge which broke the Londoners on
+Leicester's left. In the bitterness of his hatred for
+the insult to his mother he pursued them for four
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-071"></a>2-071]</span>
+
+miles, slaughtering three thousand men. But he
+returned to find the battle lost. Crowded in the
+narrow space between the heights and the river
+Ouse, a space broken by marshes and by the long
+street of the town, the royalist centre and left
+were crushed by Earl Simon. The Earl of Cornwall,
+now King of the Romans, who, as the mocking
+song of the victors ran, "makede him a castel
+of a mulne post" ("he weened that the mill-sails
+were mangonels" goes on the sarcastic verse), was
+taken prisoner, and Henry himself captured.
+Edward cut his way into the Priory only to join
+in his father's surrender.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon's rule</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The victory of Lewes placed Earl Simon at the
+head of the state. "Now England breathes in the
+hope of liberty," sang a poet of the time; "the
+English were despised like dogs, but now they
+have lifted up their head and their foes are
+vanquished." But the moderation of the terms
+agreed upon in the Mise of Lewes, a convention
+between the king and his captors, shows Simon's
+sense of the difficulties of his position. The
+question of the Provisions was again to be submitted
+to arbitration; and a parliament in June, to which
+four knights were summoned from every county,
+placed the administration till this arbitration was
+complete in the hands of a new council of nine to
+be nominated by the Earls of Leicester and
+Gloucester and the patriotic Bishop of Chichester.
+Responsibility to the community was provided for
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-072"></a>2-072]</span>
+
+by the declaration of a right in the body of barons
+and prelates to remove either of the Three Electors,
+who in turn could displace or appoint the members
+of the Council. Such a constitution was of a
+different order from the cumbrous and oligarchical
+committees of 1258. But it had little time to
+work in. The plans for a fresh arbitration broke
+down. Lewis refused to review his decision, and
+all schemes for setting fresh judges between the
+king and his people were defeated by a formal
+condemnation of the barons' cause issued by the
+Pope. Triumphant as he was indeed Earl Simon's
+difficulties thickened every day. The queen with
+Archbishop Boniface gathered an army in France
+for an invasion; Roger Mortimer with the border
+barons was still in arms and only held in check by
+Llewelyn. It was impossible to make binding
+terms with an imprisoned king, yet to release
+Henry without terms was to renew the war. The
+imprisonment too gave a shock to public feeling
+which thinned the Earl's ranks. In the new
+Parliament which he called at the opening of
+1265 the weakness of the patriotic party among
+the baronage was shown in the fact that only
+twenty-three earls and barons could be found to
+sit beside the hundred and twenty ecclesiastics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Summons
+of the
+Commons</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was just this sense of his weakness which
+prompted the Earl to an act that has done more
+than any incident of this struggle to immortalize
+his name. Had the strife been simply a strife for
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-073"></a>2-073]</span>
+
+power between the king and the baronage the
+victory of either would have been equally fatal in
+its results. The success of the one would have
+doomed England to a royal despotism, that of the
+other to a feudal aristocracy. Fortunately for our
+freedom the English baronage had been brought
+too low by the policy of the kings to be able to
+withstand the crown single-handed. From the
+first moment of the contest it had been forced to
+make its cause a national one. The summons of
+two knights from each county, elected in its county
+court, to a Parliament in 1254, even before the
+opening of the struggle, was a recognition of the
+political weight of the country gentry which was
+confirmed by the summons of four knights from
+every county to the Parliament assembled after
+the battle of Lewes. The Provisions of Oxford,
+in stipulating for attendance and counsel on the
+part of twelve delegates of the "commonalty,"
+gave the first indication of a yet wider appeal to
+the people at large. But it was the weakness of
+his party among the baronage at this great crisis
+which drove Earl Simon to a constitutional change
+of mighty issue in our history. As before, he
+summoned two knights from every county. But
+he created a new force in English politics when he
+summoned to sit beside them two citizens from
+every borough. The attendance of delegates from
+the towns had long been usual in the county courts
+when any matter respecting their interests was in
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-074"></a>2-074]</span>
+
+question; but it was the writ issued by Earl Simon
+that first summoned the merchant and the trader
+to sit beside the knight of the shire, the baron,
+and the bishop in the parliament of the realm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon's
+difficulties</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is only this great event however which
+enables us to understand the large and prescient
+nature of Earl Simon's designs. Hardly a few
+months had passed away since the victory of Lewes
+when the burghers took their seats at Westminster,
+yet his government was tottering to its fall. We
+know little of the Parliament's acts. It seems to
+have chosen Simon as Justiciar and to have provided
+for Edward's liberation, though he was still
+to live under surveillance at Hereford and to
+surrender his earldom of Chester to Simon, who
+was thus able to communicate with his Welsh
+allies. The Earl met the dangers from without
+with complete success. In September 1264 a
+general muster of the national forces on Barham
+Down and a contrary wind put an end to the
+projects of invasion entertained by the mercenaries
+whom the queen had collected in Flanders; the
+threats of France died away into negotiations; the
+Papal Legate was forbidden to cross the Channel,
+and his bulls of excommunication were flung into
+the sea. But the difficulties at home grew more
+formidable every day. The restraint upon Henry
+and Edward jarred against the national feeling of
+loyalty, and estranged the mass of Englishmen
+who always side with the weak. Small as the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-075"></a>2-075]</span>
+
+patriotic party among the barons had been from
+the first, it grew smaller as dissensions broke out
+over the spoils of victory. The Earl's justice and
+resolve to secure the public peace told heavily
+against him. John Giffard left him because he
+refused to allow him to exact ransom from a
+prisoner, contrary to the agreement made after
+Lewes. A greater danger opened when the young
+Earl of Gloucester, though enriched with the
+estates of the foreigners, held himself aloof from
+the Justiciar, and resented Leicester's prohibition
+of a tournament, his naming the wardens of the
+royal castles by his own authority, his holding
+Edward's fortresses on the Welsh marches by his
+own garrisons.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward and
+Gloucester</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Gloucester's later conduct proves the wisdom of
+Leicester's precautions. In the spring Parliament
+of 1265 he openly charged the Earl with violating
+the Mise of Lewes, with tyranny, and with aiming
+at the crown. Before its close he withdrew to his
+own lands in the west and secretly allied himself
+with Roger Mortimer and the Marcher Barons.
+Earl Simon soon followed him to the west, taking
+with him the king and Edward. He moved along
+the Severn, securing its towns, advanced westward
+to Hereford, and was marching at the end of May
+along bad roads into the heart of South Wales to
+attack the fortresses of Earl Gilbert in Glamorgan
+when Edward suddenly made his escape from
+Hereford and joined Gloucester at Ludlow. The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-076"></a>2-076]</span>
+
+moment had been skilfully chosen, and Edward
+showed a rare ability in the movements by which
+he took advantage of the Earl's position. Moving
+rapidly along the Severn he seized Gloucester and
+the bridges across the river, destroyed the ships
+by which Leicester strove to escape across the
+Channel to Bristol, and cut him off altogether
+from England. By this movement too he placed
+himself between the Earl and his son Simon, who
+was advancing from the east to his father's relief.
+Turning rapidly on this second force Edward surprised
+it at Kenilworth and drove it with heavy
+loss within the walls of the castle. But the success
+was more than compensated by the opportunity
+which his absence gave to the Earl of breaking
+the line of the Severn. Taken by surprise and
+isolated as he was, Simon had been forced to seek
+for aid and troops in an avowed alliance with
+Llewelyn, and it was with Welsh reinforcements
+that he turned to the east. But the seizure of his
+ships and of the bridges of the Severn held him a
+prisoner in Edward's grasp, and a fierce attack
+drove him back, with broken and starving forces,
+into the Welsh hills. In utter despair he struck
+northward to Hereford; but the absence of Edward
+now enabled him on the 2nd of August to throw
+his troops in boats across the Severn below
+Worcester. The news drew Edward quickly back
+in a fruitless counter-march to the river, for the
+Earl had already reached Evesham by a long night
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-077"></a>2-077]</span>
+
+march on the morning of the 4th, while his son,
+relieved in turn by Edward's counter-march, had
+pushed in the same night to the little town of
+Alcester. The two armies were now but some ten
+miles apart, and their junction seemed secured.
+But both were spent with long marching, and
+while the Earl, listening reluctantly to the request
+of the King who accompanied him, halted at
+Evesham for mass and dinner, the army of the
+younger Simon halted for the same purpose at
+Alcester.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Battle of Evesham</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Those two dinners doleful were, alas!" sings
+Robert of Gloucester; for through the same
+memorable night Edward was hurrying back from
+the Severn by country cross-lanes to seize the
+fatal gap that lay between them. As morning
+broke his army lay across the road that led northward
+from Evesham to Alcester. Evesham lies
+in a loop of the river Avon where it bends to the
+south; and a height on which Edward ranged his
+troops closed the one outlet from it save across
+the river. But a force had been thrown over the
+river under Mortimer to seize the bridges, and all
+retreat was thus finally cut off. The approach of
+Edward's army called Simon to the front, and for
+the moment he took it for his son's. Though the
+hope soon died away a touch of soldierly pride
+moved him as he recognised in the orderly advance
+of his enemies a proof of his own training. "By
+the arm of St. James," he cried, "they come on
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-078"></a>2-078]</span>
+
+in wise fashion, but it was from me that they
+learnt it." A glance however satisfied him of the
+hopelessness of a struggle; it was impossible for
+a handful of horsemen with a mob of half-armed
+Welshmen to resist the disciplined knighthood of
+the royal army. "Let us commend our souls to
+God," Simon said to the little group around him,
+"for our bodies are the foe's." He bade Hugh
+Despenser and the rest of his comrades fly from
+the field. "If he died," was the noble answer,
+"they had no will to live." In three hours the
+butchery was over. The Welsh fled at the first
+onset like sheep, and were cut ruthlessly down in
+the cornfields and gardens where they sought
+refuge. The little group of knights around Simon
+fought desperately, falling one by one till the
+Earl was left alone. So terrible were his sword-strokes
+that he had all but gained the hill-top
+when a lance-thrust brought his horse to the
+ground, but Simon still rejected the summons to
+yield till a blow from behind felled him mortally
+wounded to the ground. Then with a last cry of
+"It is God's grace," the soul of the great patriot
+passed away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Royalist reaction</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The triumphant blare of trumpets which welcomed
+the rescued king into Evesham, "his men
+weeping for joy," rang out in bitter contrast to
+the mourning of the realm. It sounded like the
+announcement of a reign of terror. The rights
+and laws for which men had toiled and fought so
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-079"></a>2-079]</span>
+
+long seemed to have been swept away in an hour.
+Every town which had supported Earl Simon was
+held to be at the king's mercy, its franchises to
+be forfeited. The Charter of Lynn was annulled;
+London was marked out as the special object of
+Henry's vengeance, and the farms and merchandise
+of its citizens were seized as first-fruits of its
+plunder. The darkness which on that fatal
+morning hid their books from the monks of
+Evesham as they sang in choir was but a presage
+of the gloom which fell on the religious houses.
+From Ramsey, from Evesham, from St. Alban's
+rose the same cry of havoc and rapine. But the
+plunder of monk and burgess was little to the
+vast sentence of confiscation which the mere fact
+of rebellion was held to have passed on all the
+adherents of Earl Simon. To "disinherit" these
+of their lands was to confiscate half the estates of
+the landed gentry of England; but the hotter
+royalists declared them disinherited, and Henry
+was quick to lavish their lands away on favourites
+and foreigners. The very chroniclers of their
+party recall the pillage with shame. But all
+thought of resistance lay hushed in a general
+terror. Even the younger Simon "saw no other
+rede" than to release his prisoners. His army,
+after finishing its meal, was again on its march to
+join the Earl when the news of his defeat met
+it, heralded by a strange darkness that, rising
+suddenly in the north-west and following as it
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-080"></a>2-080]</span>
+
+were on Edward's track, served to shroud the
+mutilations and horrors of the battle-field. The
+news was soon fatally confirmed. Simon himself
+could see from afar his father's head borne off on
+a spear-point to be mocked at Wigmore. But the
+pursuit streamed away southward and westward
+through the streets of Tewkesbury, heaped with
+corpses of the panic-struck Welshmen whom the
+townsmen slaughtered without pity; and there
+was no attack as the little force fell back through
+the darkness and big thunder-drops in despair
+upon Kenilworth. "I may hang up my axe," are
+the bitter words which a poet attributes to their
+leader, "for feebly have I gone"; and once
+within the castle he gave way to a wild sorrow,
+day after day tasting neither meat nor drink.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was roused into action again by news
+of the shameful indignities which the Marcher
+Lords had offered to the body of the great Earl
+before whom they had trembled so long. The
+knights around him broke out at the tidings in a
+passionate burst of fury, and clamoured for the
+blood of Richard of Cornwall and his son, who
+were prisoners in the castle. But Simon had
+enough nobleness left to interpose. "To God
+and him alone was it owing" Richard owned
+afterwards, "that I was snatched from death."
+The captives were not only saved, but set free.
+A Parliament had been called at Winchester at
+the opening of September, and its mere assembly
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-081"></a>2-081]</span>
+
+promised an end to the reign of utter lawlessness.
+A powerful party, too, was known to exist in the
+royal camp which, hostile as it had shown itself
+to Earl Simon, shared his love for English liberties,
+and the liberation of Richard was sure to aid its
+efforts. At the head of this party stood the
+young Earl of Gloucester, Gilbert of Clare, to
+whose action above all the Earl's overthrow was
+due. And with Gilbert stood Edward himself.
+The passion for law, the instinct of good government,
+which were to make his reign so memorable
+in our history, had declared themselves from the
+first. He had sided with the barons at the outset
+of their struggle with Henry; he had striven to
+keep his father true to the Provisions of Oxford.
+It was only when the figure of Earl Simon seemed
+to tower above that of Henry himself, when the
+Crown seemed falling into bondage, that Edward
+passed to the royal side; and now that the danger
+which he dreaded was over he returned to his
+older attitude. In the first flush of victory, while
+the doom of Simon was as yet unknown, Edward
+had stood alone in desiring his captivity against
+the cry of the Marcher Lords for his blood. When
+all was done he wept over the corpse of his cousin
+and playfellow, Henry de Montfort, and followed
+the Earl's body to the tomb. But great as was
+Edward's position after the victory of Evesham,
+his moderate counsels were as yet of little avail.
+His efforts in fact were met by those of Henry's
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-082"></a>2-082]</span>
+
+second son, Edmund, who had received the lands
+and earldom of Earl Simon, and whom the dread
+of any restoration of the house of De Montfort
+set at the head of the ultra-royalists. Nor was
+any hope of moderation to be found in the Parliament
+which met in September 1265. It met in
+the usual temper of a restoration-Parliament to
+legalize the outrages of the previous month. The
+prisoners who had been released from the dungeons
+of the barons poured into Winchester to add fresh
+violence to the demands of the Marchers. The
+wives of the captive loyalists and the widows of
+the slain were summoned to give fresh impulse to
+the reaction. Their place of meeting added fuel
+to the fiery passions of the throng, for Winchester
+was fresh from its pillage by the younger Simon
+on his way to Kenilworth, and its stubborn
+loyalty must have been fanned into a flame by
+the losses it had endured. In such an assembly
+no voice of moderation could find a hearing.
+The four bishops who favoured the national cause,
+the bishops of London and Lincoln, of Worcester
+and Chichester, were excluded from it, and the
+heads of the religious houses were summoned for
+the mere purpose of extortion. Its measures
+were but a confirmation of the violence which
+had been wrought. All grants made during the
+king's "captivity" were revoked. The house of
+De Montfort was banished from the realm. The
+charter of London was annulled. The adherents
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-083"></a>2-083]</span>
+
+of Earl Simon were disinherited and seizin of
+their lands was given to the king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Simon's Miracles</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Henry at once appointed commissioners to
+survey and take possession of his spoil while he
+moved to Windsor to triumph in the humiliation
+of London. Its mayor and forty of its chief
+citizens waited in the castle yard only to be
+thrown into prison in spite of a safe-conduct, and
+Henry entered his capital in triumph as into an
+enemy's city. The surrender of Dover came to
+fill his cup of joy, for Richard and Amaury of
+Montfort had sailed with the Earl's treasure to
+enlist foreign mercenaries, and it was by this
+port that their force was destined to land. But a
+rising of the prisoners detained there compelled
+its surrender in October, and the success of the
+royalists seemed complete. In reality their difficulties
+were but beginning. Their triumph over
+Earl Simon had been a triumph over the religious
+sentiment of the time, and religion avenged itself
+in its own way. Everywhere the Earl's death
+was looked upon as a martyrdom; and monk and
+friar united in praying for the souls of the men
+who fell at Evesham as for soldiers of Christ. It
+was soon whispered that heaven was attesting the
+sanctity of De Montfort by miracles at his tomb.
+How great was the effect of this belief was seen in
+the efforts of King and Pope to suppress the
+miracles, and in their continuance not only
+through the reign of Edward the First but even
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-084"></a>2-084]</span>
+
+in the days of his successor. But its immediate
+result was a sudden revival of hope. "Sighs are
+changed into songs of praise," breaks out a monk
+of the time, "and the greatness of our former joy
+has come to life again!" Nor was it in miracles
+alone that the "faithful," as they proudly styled
+themselves, began to look for relief "from the
+oppression of the malignants." A monk of St.
+Alban's who was penning a eulogy of Earl Simon
+in the midst of this uproar saw the rise of a new
+spirit of resistance in the streets of the little
+town. In dread of war it was guarded and
+strongly closed with bolts and bars, and refused
+entrance to all strangers, and above all to horsemen,
+who wished to pass through. The Constable
+of Hertford, an old foe of the townsmen, boasted
+that spite of bolts and bars he would enter the
+place and carry off four of the best villeins captive.
+He contrived to make his way in; but as he
+loitered idly about a butcher who passed by heard
+him ask his men how the wind stood. The
+butcher guessed his design to burn the town, and
+felled him to the ground. The blow roused the
+townsmen. They secured the Constable and his
+followers, struck off their heads, and fixed them
+at the four corners of the borough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Younger Simon</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The popular reaction gave fresh heart to the
+younger Simon. Quitting Kenilworth, he joined
+in November John D'Eyvill and Baldewin Wake in
+the Isle of Axholme where the Disinherited were
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-085"></a>2-085]</span>
+
+gathering in arms. So fast did horse and foot
+flow in to him that Edward himself hurried into
+Lincolnshire to meet this new danger. He saw
+that the old strife was just breaking out again.
+The garrison of Kenilworth scoured the country;
+the men of the Cinque Ports, putting wives and
+children on board their barks, swept the Channel
+and harried the coasts; while Llewelyn, who had
+brought about the dissolution of Parliament by a
+raid upon Chester, butchered the forces sent
+against him and was master of the border. The
+one thing needed to link the forces of resistance
+together was a head, and such a head the
+appearance of Simon at Axholme seemed to
+promise. But Edward was resolute in his plan of
+conciliation. Arriving before the camp at the
+close of 1265, he at once entered into negotiations
+with his cousin, and prevailed on him to quit the
+island and appear before the king. Richard of
+Cornwall welcomed Simon at the court, he
+presented him to Henry as the saviour of his life,
+and on his promise to surrender Kenilworth Henry
+gave him the kiss of peace. In spite of the
+opposition of Roger Mortimer and the Marcher
+Lords success seemed to be crowning this bold
+stroke of the peace party when the Earl of
+Gloucester interposed. Desirous as he was of
+peace, the blood of De Montfort lay between him
+and the Earl's sons, and the safety of the one lay
+in the ruin of the other. In the face of this
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-086"></a>2-086]</span>
+
+danger Earl Gilbert threw his weight into the scale
+of the ultra-royalists, and peace became impossible.
+The question of restitution was shelved by a
+reference to arbitrators; and Simon, detained in
+spite of a safe-conduct, moved in Henry's train at
+Christmas to witness the surrender of Kenilworth
+which had been stipulated as the price of his full
+reconciliation with the king. But hot blood was
+now stirred again on both sides. The garrison
+replied to the royal summons by a refusal to
+surrender. They had received ward of the castle,
+they said, not from Simon but from the Countess,
+and to none but her would they give it up. The
+refusal was not likely to make Simon's position an
+easier one. On his return to London the award
+of the arbitrators bound him to quit the realm and
+not to return save with the assent of king and
+baronage when all were at peace. He remained
+for a while in free custody at London; but
+warnings that he was doomed to lifelong imprisonment
+drove him to flight, and he finally sought a
+refuge over sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Ban of
+Kenilworth</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His escape set England again on fire. Llewelyn
+wasted the border; the Cinque Ports held the sea;
+the garrison of Kenilworth pushed their raids as
+far as Oxford; Baldewin Wake with a band of
+the Disinherited threw himself into the woods and
+harried the eastern counties; Sir Adam Gurdon, a
+knight of gigantic size and renowned prowess,
+wasted with a smaller party the shires of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-087"></a>2-087]</span>
+
+south. In almost every county bands of outlaws
+were seeking a livelihood in rapine and devastation,
+while the royal treasury stood empty and the
+enormous fine imposed upon London had been
+swept into the coffers of French usurers. But a
+stronger hand than the king's was now at the
+head of affairs, and Edward met his assailants
+with untiring energy. King Richard's son, Henry
+of Almaine, was sent with a large force to the
+north; Mortimer hurried to hold the Welsh
+border; Edmund was despatched to Warwick to
+hold Kenilworth in check; while Edward himself
+marched at the opening of March to the south.
+The Berkshire woods were soon cleared, and at
+Whitsuntide Edward succeeded in dispersing Adam
+Gurdon's band and in capturing its renowned
+leader in single combat. The last blow was
+already given to the rising in the north, where
+Henry of Almaine surprised the Disinherited at
+Chesterfield and took their leader, the Earl of
+Derby, in his bed. Though Edmund had done
+little but hold the Kenilworth knights in check,
+the submission of the rest of the country now
+enabled the royal army to besiege it in force. But
+the king was penniless, and the Parliament which
+he called to replenish his treasury in August
+showed the resolve of the nation that the strife
+should cease. They would first establish peace, if
+peace were possible, they said, and then answer
+the king's demand. Twelve commissioners, with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-088"></a>2-088]</span>
+
+Earl Gilbert at their head, were appointed on
+Henry's assent to arrange terms on reconciliation.
+They at once decided that none should be utterly
+disinherited for their part in the troubles, but that
+liberty of redemption should be left open to all.
+Furious at the prospect of being forced to disgorge
+their spoil, Mortimer and the ultra-royalists broke
+out in mad threats of violence, even against the
+life of the Papal legate who had pressed for the
+reconciliation. But the power of the ultra-royalists
+was over. The general resolve was not to be
+shaken by the clamour of a faction, and Mortimer's
+rout at Brecknock by Llewelyn, the one defeat
+that chequered the tide of success, had damaged
+that leader's influence. Backed by Edward and
+Earl Gilbert, the legate met their opposition with
+a threat of excommunication, and Mortimer withdrew
+sullenly from the camp. Fresh trouble in
+the country and the seizure of the Isle of Ely by
+a band of the Disinherited quickened the labours
+of the Twelve. At the close of September they
+pronounced their award, restoring the lands to
+all who made submission on a graduated scale of
+redemption, promising indemnity for all wrong
+done during the troubles, and leaving the restoration
+of the house of De Montfort to the royal will.
+But to these provisions was added an emphatic
+demand that "the king fully keep and observe
+those liberties of the Church, charters of liberties,
+and forest charters, which he is expressly and by
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-089"></a>2-089]</span>
+
+his own mouth bound to preserve and keep."
+"Let the King," they add, "establish on a lasting
+foundation those concessions which he has hitherto
+made of his own will and not on compulsion, and
+those needful ordinances which have been devised
+by his subjects and by his own good pleasure."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Close of the Struggle</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With this Award the struggle came to an end.
+The garrison of Kenilworth held out indeed till
+November, and the full benefit of the Ban was
+only secured when Earl Gilbert in the opening of
+the following year suddenly appeared in arms and
+occupied London. But the Earl was satisfied, the
+Disinherited were at last driven from Ely, and
+Llewelyn was brought to submission by the
+appearance of an army at Shrewsbury. All was
+over by the close of 1267. His father's age and
+weakness, his own brilliant military successes, left
+Edward practically in possession of the royal
+power; and his influence at once made itself felt.
+There was no attempt to return to the misrule of
+Henry's reign, to his projects of continental
+aggrandizement or internal despotism. The constitutional
+system of government for which the Barons
+had fought was finally adopted by the Crown, and
+the Parliament of Marlborough which assembled
+in November 1267 renewed the provisions by
+which the baronage had remedied the chief abuses
+of the time in their Provisions of Oxford and
+Westminster. The appointment of all officers of
+state indeed was jealously reserved to the crown.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-090"></a>2-090]</span>
+
+But the royal expenditure was brought within
+bounds. Taxation was only imposed with the
+assent of the Great Council. So utterly was the
+land at rest that Edward felt himself free to take
+the cross in 1268 and to join the Crusade which
+was being undertaken by St. Lewis of France.
+He reached Tunis only to find Lewis dead and his
+enterprise a failure, wintered in Sicily, made his
+way to Acre in the spring of 1271, and spent more
+than a year in exploits which want of force
+prevented from growing into a serious campaign.
+He was already on his way home when the death
+of Henry the Third in November 1272 called him
+to the throne.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-091"></a>2-091]</span>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk3-Ch4"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4537421"></a>CHAPTER IV</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4537427"></a>EDWARD THE FIRST</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4537432"></a>1272-1307</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward's Temper</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his own day and among his own subjects
+Edward the First was the object of an almost
+boundless admiration. He was in the truest
+sense a national king. At the moment when
+the last trace of foreign conquest passed away,
+when the descendants of those who won and
+those who lost at Senlac blended for ever into
+an English people, England saw in her ruler no
+stranger but an Englishman. The national tradition
+returned in more than the golden hair or the
+English name which linked him to our earlier
+kings. Edward's very temper was English to the
+core. In good as in evil he stands out as the
+typical representative of the race he ruled, like
+them wilful and imperious, tenacious of his rights,
+indomitable in his pride, dogged, stubborn, slow
+of apprehension, narrow in sympathy, but like
+them, too, just in the main, unselfish, laborious,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-092"></a>2-092]</span>
+
+conscientious, haughtily observant of truth and
+self-respect, temperate, reverent of duty, religious.
+It is this oneness with the character of his people
+which parts the temper of Edward from what had
+till now been the temper of his house. He inherited
+indeed from the Angevins their fierce
+and passionate wrath; his punishments, when he
+punished in anger, were without pity; and a
+priest who ventured at a moment of storm into
+his presence with a remonstrance dropped dead
+from sheer fright at his feet. But his nature
+had nothing of the hard selfishness, the vindictive
+obstinacy which had so long characterized the
+house of Anjou. His wrath passed as quickly as it
+gathered; and for the most part his conduct was
+that of an impulsive, generous man, trustful, averse
+from cruelty, prone to forgive. "No man ever
+asked mercy of me," he said in his old age, "and
+was refused." The rough soldierly nobleness of his
+nature broke out in incidents like that at Falkirk
+where he lay on the bare ground among his men,
+or in his refusal during a Welsh campaign to
+drink of the one cask of wine which had been
+saved from marauders. "It is I who have brought
+you into this strait," he said to his thirsty fellow-soldiers,
+"and I will have no advantage of you in
+meat or drink." Beneath the stern imperiousness
+of his outer bearing lay in fact a strange tenderness
+and sensitiveness to affection. Every subject
+throughout his realm was drawn closer to the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-093"></a>2-093]</span>
+
+king who wept bitterly at the news of his
+father's death though it gave him a crown,
+whose fiercest burst of vengeance was called out
+by an insult to his mother, whose crosses rose
+as memorials of his love and sorrow at every
+spot where his wife's bier rested. "I loved her
+tenderly in her lifetime," wrote Edward to Eleanor's
+friend, the Abbot of Cluny; "I do not cease to
+love her now she is dead." And as it was with
+mother and wife, so it was with his people at
+large. All the self-concentrated isolation of the
+foreign kings disappeared in Edward. He was the
+first English ruler since the Conquest who loved
+his people with a personal love and craved for
+their love back again. To his trust in them we
+owe our Parliament, to his care for them the
+great statutes which stand in the forefront of our
+laws. Even in his struggles with her England
+understood a temper which was so perfectly her
+own, and the quarrels between king and people
+during his reign are quarrels where, doggedly
+as they fought, neither disputant doubted for a
+moment the worth or affection of the other. Few
+scenes in our history are more touching than a
+scene during the long contest over the Charter,
+when Edward stood face to face with his people in
+Westminster Hall, and with a sudden burst of tears
+owned himself frankly in the wrong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Influence of Chivalry</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was just this sensitiveness, this openness
+to outer impressions and outer influences, that led
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-094"></a>2-094]</span>
+
+to the strange contradictions which meet us in
+Edward's career. His reign was a time in which a
+foreign, influence told strongly on our manners, our
+literature, our national spirit, for the sudden rise
+of France into a compact and organized monarchy
+was now making its influence dominant in Western
+Europe. The "chivalry" so familiar to us in the
+pages of Froissart, that picturesque mimicry of high
+sentiment, of heroism, love, and courtesy before
+which all depth and reality of nobleness disappeared
+to make room for the coarsest profligacy, the narrowest
+caste-spirit, and a brutal indifference to
+human suffering, was specially of French creation.
+There was a nobleness in Edward's nature from
+which the baser influences of this chivalry fell
+away. His life was pure, his piety, save when it
+stooped to the superstition of the time, manly and
+sincere, while his high sense of duty saved him
+from the frivolous self-indulgence of his successors.
+But he was far from being wholly free from the
+taint of his age. His passionate desire was to be
+a model of the fashionable chivalry of his day.
+His frame was that of a born soldier--tall, deep-chested,
+long of limb, capable alike of endurance
+or action, and he shared to the full his people's
+love of venture and hard fighting. When he
+encountered Adam Gurdon after Evesham he
+forced him single-handed to beg for mercy. At
+the opening of his reign he saved his life by sheer
+fighting in a tournament at Challon. It was this
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-095"></a>2-095]</span>
+
+love of adventure which lent itself to the frivolous
+unreality of the new chivalry. His fame as a
+general seemed a small thing to Edward when
+compared with his fame as a knight. At his
+"Round Table of Kenilworth" a hundred lords
+and ladies, "clad all in silk," renewed the faded
+glories of Arthur's Court. The false air of
+romance which was soon to turn the gravest
+political resolutions into outbursts of sentimental
+feeling appeared in his "Vow of the Swan," when
+rising at the royal board he swore on the dish
+before him to avenge on Scotland the murder of
+Comyn. Chivalry exerted on him a yet more
+fatal influence in its narrowing of his sympathy
+to the noble class and in its exclusion of the
+peasant and the craftsman from all claim to pity.
+"Knight without reproach" as he was, he looked
+calmly on at the massacre of the burghers of
+Berwick, and saw in William Wallace nothing but
+a common robber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Influence of Legality</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French notion of chivalry had hardly more
+power over Edward's mind than the French conception
+of kingship, feudality, and law. The rise
+of a lawyer class was everywhere hardening customary
+into written rights, allegiance into subjection,
+loose ties such as commendation into a
+definite vassalage. But it was specially through
+French influence, the influence of St. Lewis and
+his successors, that the imperial theories of the
+Roman Law were brought to bear upon this
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-096"></a>2-096]</span>
+
+natural tendency of the time. When the "sacred
+majesty" of the Cæsars was transferred by a legal
+fiction to the royal head of a feudal baronage
+every constitutional relation was changed. The
+"defiance" by which a vassal renounced service
+to his lord became treason, his after resistance
+"sacrilege." That Edward could appreciate what
+was sound and noble in the legal spirit around
+him was shown in his reforms of our judicature
+and our Parliament; but there was something
+as congenial to his mind in its definiteness, its
+rigidity, its narrow technicalities. He was never
+wilfully unjust, but he was too often captious in
+his justice, fond of legal chicanery, prompt to take
+advantage of the letter of the law. The high conception
+of royalty which he borrowed from St.
+Lewis united with this legal turn of mind in the
+worst acts of his reign. Of rights or liberties
+unregistered in charter or roll Edward would
+know nothing, while his own good sense was
+overpowered by the majesty of his crown. It
+was incredible to him that Scotland should revolt
+against a legal bargain which made her national
+independence conditional on the terms extorted
+from a claimant of her throne; nor could he view
+in any other light but as treason the resistance of
+his own baronage to an arbitrary taxation which
+their fathers had borne.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">His Moral Grandeur</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is in the anomalies of such a character as
+this, in its strange mingling of justice and wrong-doing,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-097"></a>2-097]</span>
+
+of grandeur and littleness, that we must
+look for any fair explanation of much that has
+since been bitterly blamed in Edward's conduct
+and policy. But what none of these anomalies
+can hide from us is the height of moral temper
+which shows itself in the tenor of his rule.
+Edward was every inch a king; but his notion
+of kingship was a lofty and a noble one. He
+loved power; he believed in his sovereign rights
+and clung to them with a stubborn tenacity. But
+his main end in clinging to them was the welfare
+of his people. Nothing better proves the self-command
+which he drew from the purpose he set
+before him than his freedom from the common
+sin of great rulers--the lust of military glory.
+He was the first of our kings since William the
+Conqueror who combined military genius with
+political capacity; but of the warrior's temper, of
+the temper that finds delight in war, he had little
+or none. His freedom from it was the more
+remarkable that Edward was a great soldier. His
+strategy in the campaign before Evesham marked
+him as a consummate general. Earl Simon was
+forced to admire the skill of his advance on the
+fatal field, and the operations by which he met
+the risings that followed it were a model of
+rapidity and military grasp. In his Welsh campaigns
+he was soon to show a tenacity and force
+of will which wrested victory out of the midst of
+defeat. He could head a furious charge of horse
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-098"></a>2-098]</span>
+
+as at Lewes, or organize a commissariat which
+enabled him to move army after army across the
+harried Lowlands. In his old age he was quick
+to discover the value of the English archery and
+to employ it as a means of victory at Falkirk.
+But master as he was of the art of war, and forced
+from time to time to show his mastery in great
+campaigns, in no single instance was he the
+assailant. He fought only when he was forced
+to fight; and when fighting was over he turned
+back quietly to the work of administration and
+the making of laws.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">His Political
+Genius</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+War in fact was with Edward simply a means
+of carrying out the ends of statesmanship, and it
+was in the character of his statesmanship that his
+real greatness made itself felt. His policy was an
+English policy; he was firm to retain what was
+left of the French dominion of his race, but he
+abandoned from the first all dreams of recovering
+the wider dominions which his grandfather had
+lost. His mind was not on that side of the
+Channel, but on this. He concentrated his
+energies on the consolidation and good government
+of England itself. We can only fairly judge
+the annexation of Wales or his attempt to annex
+Scotland if we look on his efforts in either quarter
+as parts of the same scheme of national administration
+to which we owe his final establishment of
+our judicature, our legislation, our parliament.
+The character of his action was no doubt determined
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-099"></a>2-099]</span>
+
+in great part by the general mood of his
+age, an age whose special task and aim seemed to
+be that of reducing to distinct form the principles
+which had sprung into a new and vigorous life
+during the age which preceded it. As the opening
+of the thirteenth century had been an age of
+founders, creators, discoverers, so its close was an
+age of lawyers, of rulers such as St. Lewis of
+France or Alfonso the Wise of Castille, organizers,
+administrators, framers of laws and institutions.
+It was to this class that Edward himself belonged.
+He had little of creative genius, of political
+originality, but he possessed in a high degree the
+passion for order and good government, the
+faculty of organization, and a love of law which
+broke out even in the legal chicanery to which he
+sometimes stooped. In the judicial reforms to
+which so much of his attention was directed he
+showed himself, if not an "English Justinian," at
+any rate a clear-sighted and judicious man of
+business, developing, reforming, bringing into a
+shape which has borne the test of five centuries'
+experience the institutions of his predecessors. If
+the excellence of a statesman's work is to be
+measured by its duration and the faculty it has
+shown of adapting itself to the growth and
+developement of a nation, then the work of Edward
+rises to the highest standard of excellence. Our
+law courts preserve to this very day the form
+which he gave them. Mighty as has been the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-100"></a>2-100]</span>
+
+growth of our Parliament, it has grown on the
+lines which he laid down. The great roll of
+English Statutes reaches back in unbroken series
+to the Statutes of Edward. The routine of the
+first Henry, the administrative changes which
+had been imposed on the nation by the clear head
+and imperious will of the second, were transformed
+under Edward into a political organization
+with carefully-defined limits, directed not by the
+king's will alone but by the political impulse of
+the people at large. His social legislation was
+based in the same fashion on principles which had
+already been brought into practical working by
+Henry the Second. It was no doubt in great
+measure owing to this practical sense of its
+financial and administrative value rather than to
+any foresight of its political importance that we
+owe Edward's organization of our Parliament.
+But if the institutions which we commonly associate
+with his name owe their origin to others, they
+owe their form and their perpetuity to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Constitutional Aspect of his Reign</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king's English policy, like his English
+name, was in fact the sign of a new epoch. England
+was made. The long period of national
+formation had come practically to an end. With
+the reign of Edward begins the constitutional
+England in which we live. It is not that any
+chasm separates our history before it from our
+history after it as the chasm of the Revolution
+divides the history of France, for we have traced
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-101"></a>2-101]</span>
+
+the rudiments of our constitution to the first
+moment of the English settlement in Britain.
+But it is with these as with our language. The
+tongue of Ælfred is the very tongue we speak,
+but in spite of its identity with modern English it
+has to be learned like the tongue of a stranger.
+On the other hand, the English of Chaucer is
+almost as intelligible as our own. In the first the
+historian and philologer can study the origin and
+developement of our national speech, in the last a
+schoolboy can enjoy the story of Troilus and
+Cressida or listen to the gay chat of the Canterbury
+Pilgrims. In precisely the same way a
+knowledge of our earliest laws is indispensable for
+the right understanding of later legislation, its
+origin and its developement, while the principles
+of our Parliamentary system must necessarily be
+studied in the Meetings of Wise Men before the
+Conquest or the Great Council of barons after it.
+But the Parliaments which Edward gathered at
+the close of his reign are not merely illustrative of
+the history of later Parliaments, they are absolutely
+identical with those which still sit at St.
+Stephen's. At the close of his reign King, Lords,
+Commons, the Courts of Justice, the forms of
+public administration, the relations of Church and
+State, all local divisions and provincial jurisdictions,
+in great measure the framework of society
+itself, have taken the shape which they essentially
+retain. In a word the long struggle of the constitution
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-102"></a>2-102]</span>
+
+for actual existence has come to an end.
+The contests which follow are not contests that
+tell, like those that preceded them, on the actual
+fabric of our institutions; they are simply stages
+in the rough discipline by which England has
+learned and is still learning how best to use and
+how wisely to develope the latent powers of its
+national life, how to adjust the balance of its
+social and political forces, how to adapt its constitutional
+forms to the varying conditions of the
+time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Earlier Finance</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news of his father's death found Edward
+at Capua in the opening of 1273; but the quiet
+of his realm under a regency of which Roger
+Mortimer was the practical head left him free to
+move slowly homewards. Two of his acts while
+thus journeying through Italy show that his mind
+was already dwelling on the state of English
+finance and of English law. His visit to the Pope
+at Orvieto was with a view of gaining permission
+to levy from the clergy a tenth of their income
+for the three coming years, while he drew from
+Bologna its most eminent jurist, Francesco Accursi,
+to aid in the task of legal reform. At Paris he
+did homage to Philip the Third for his French
+possessions, and then turning southward he
+devoted a year to the ordering of Gascony. It
+was not till the summer of 1274 that the king
+reached England. But he had already planned
+the work he had to do, and the measures which
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-103"></a>2-103]</span>
+
+he laid before the Parliament of 1275 were signs
+of the spirit in which he was to set about it.
+The First Statute of Westminster was rather a
+code than a statute. It contained no less than
+fifty-one clauses, and was an attempt to summarize
+a number of previous enactments contained in the
+Great Charter, the Provisions of Oxford, and the
+Statute of Marlborough, as well as to embody
+some of the administrative measures of Henry the
+Second and his son. But a more pressing need
+than that of a codification of the law was the need
+of a reorganization of finance. While the necessities
+of the Crown were growing with the widening
+of its range of administrative action, the
+revenues of the Crown admitted of no corresponding
+expansion. In the earliest times of our history
+the outgoings of the Crown were as small as its
+income. All local expenses, whether for justice
+or road-making or fortress-building, were paid by
+local funds; and the national "fyrd" served at
+its own cost in the field. The produce of a king's
+private estates with the provisions due to him
+from the public lands scattered over each county,
+whether gathered by the king himself as he
+moved over his realm, or as in later days fixed
+at a stated rate and collected by his sheriff, were
+sufficient to defray the mere expenses of the
+Court. The Danish wars gave the first shock to
+this simple system. To raise a ransom which
+freed the land from the invader, the first land-tax,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-104"></a>2-104]</span>
+
+under the name of the Danegeld, was laid on
+every hide of ground; and to this national taxation
+the Norman kings added the feudal burthens
+of the new military estates created by the Conquest,
+reliefs paid on inheritance, profits of
+marriages and wardship, and the three feudal aids.
+But foreign warfare soon exhausted these means
+of revenue; the barons and bishops in their Great
+Council were called on at each emergency for a
+grant from their lands, and at each grant a corresponding
+demand was made by the king as a
+landlord on the towns, as lying for the most part
+in the royal demesne. The cessation of Danegeld
+under Henry the Second and his levy of scutage
+made little change in the general incidence of
+taxation: it still fell wholly on the land, for even
+the townsmen paid as holders of their tenements.
+But a new principle of taxation was disclosed in
+the tithe levied for a Crusade at the close of
+Henry's reign. Land was no longer the only
+source of wealth. The growth of national prosperity,
+of trade and commerce, was creating a
+mass of personal property which offered irresistible
+temptations to the Angevin financiers. The old
+revenue from landed property was restricted and
+lessened by usage and compositions. Scutage
+was only due for foreign campaigns: the feudal
+aids only on rare and stated occasions: and
+though the fines from the shire-courts grew with
+the growth of society the dues from the public
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-105"></a>2-105]</span>
+
+lands were fixed and incapable of developement.
+But no usage fettered the Crown in dealing with
+personal property, and its growth in value promised
+a growing revenue. From the close of
+Henry the Second's reign therefore this became
+the most common form of taxation. Grants of
+from a seventh to a thirtieth of moveables, household-property,
+and stock were demanded; and it
+was the necessity of procuring their assent to
+these demands which enabled the baronage
+through the reign of Henry the Third to bring a
+financial pressure to bear on the Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Indirect Taxation</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in addition to these two forms of direct
+taxation indirect taxation also was coming more
+and more to the front. The right of the king to
+grant licences to bring goods into or to trade within
+the realm, a right springing from the need for his
+protection felt by the strangers who came there for
+purposes of traffic, laid the foundation of our taxes
+on imports. Those on exports were only a part of
+the general system of taxing personal property
+which we have already noticed. How tempting
+this source of revenue was proving we see from a
+provision of the Great Charter which forbids the
+levy of more than the ancient customs on merchants
+entering or leaving the realm. Commerce was in
+fact growing with the growing wealth of the people.
+The crowd of civil and ecclesiastical buildings which
+date from this period shows the prosperity of the
+country. Christian architecture reached its highest
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-106"></a>2-106]</span>
+
+beauty in the opening of Edward's reign; a reign
+marked by the completion of the abbey church
+of Westminster and of the cathedral church at
+Salisbury. An English noble was proud to be
+styled "an incomparable builder," while some
+traces of the art which was rising into life across
+the Alps flowed in, it may be, with the Italian
+ecclesiastics whom the Papacy forced on the English
+Church. The shrine of the Confessor at Westminster,
+the mosaic pavement beside the altar of
+the abbey, the paintings on the walls of its chapterhouse
+remind us of the schools which were springing
+up under Giotto and the Pisans. But the
+wealth which this art progress shows drew trade
+to English shores. England was as yet simply an
+agricultural country. Gascony sent her wines;
+her linens were furnished by the looms of Ghent
+and Liége; Genoese vessels brought to her fairs
+the silks, the velvets, the glass of Italy. In the
+barks of the Hanse merchants came fur and amber
+from the Baltic, herrings, pitch, timber, and naval
+stores from the countries of the north. Spain
+sent us iron and war-horses. Milan sent armour.
+The great Venetian merchant-galleys touched the
+southern coasts and left in our ports the dates of
+Egypt, the figs and currants of Greece, the silk of
+Sicily, the sugar of Cyprus and Crete, the spices
+of the Eastern seas. Capital too came from abroad.
+The bankers of Florence and Lucca were busy
+with loans to the court or vast contracts with the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-107"></a>2-107]</span>
+
+wool-growers. The bankers of Cahors had already
+dealt a death-blow to the usury of the Jew.
+Against all this England had few exports to set.
+The lead supplied by the mines of Derbyshire,
+the salt of the Worcestershire springs, the iron
+of the Weald, were almost wholly consumed at
+home. The one metal export of any worth was
+that of tin from the tin-mines of Cornwall. But
+the production of wool was fast becoming a main
+element of the nation's wealth. Flanders, the
+great manufacturing country of the time, lay
+fronting our eastern coast; and with this market
+close at hand the pastures of England found more
+and more profit in the supply of wool. The
+Cistercian order which possessed vast ranges of
+moorland in Yorkshire became famous as wool-growers;
+and their wool had been seized for
+Richard's ransom. The Florentine merchants were
+developing this trade by their immense contracts;
+we find a single company of merchants contracting
+for the purchase of the Cistercian wool throughout
+the year. It was after counsel with the Italian
+bankers that Edward devised his scheme for drawing
+a permanent revenue from this source. In
+the Parliament of 1275 he obtained the grant of
+half a mark, or six shillings and eightpence, on
+each sack of wool exported; and this grant, a
+grant memorable as forming the first legal foundation
+of our customs-revenue, at once relieved the
+necessities of the Crown.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-108"></a>2-108]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Welsh Campaign</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The grant of the wool tax enabled Edward in
+fact to deal with the great difficulty of his realm.
+The troubles of the Barons' war, the need which
+Earl Simon felt of Llewelyn's alliance to hold in
+check the Marcher Barons, had all but shaken off
+from Wales the last traces of dependence. Even
+at the close of the war the threat of an attack
+from the now united kingdom only forced Llewelyn
+to submission on a practical acknowledgement of
+his sovereignty. Although the title which Llewelyn
+ap Jorwerth claimed of Prince of North Wales was
+recognized by the English court in the earlier days
+of Henry the Third, it was withdrawn after 1229
+and its claimant known only as Prince of Aberffraw.
+But the loftier title of Prince of Wales which
+Llewelyn ap Gruffydd assumed in 1256 was
+formally conceded to him in 1267, and his right
+to receive homage from the other nobles of his
+principality was formally sanctioned. Near however
+as he seemed to the final realization of his
+aims, Llewelyn was still a vassal of the English
+Crown, and the accession of Edward to the throne
+was at once followed by the demand of homage.
+But the summons was fruitless; and the next two
+years were wasted in as fruitless negotiation. The
+kingdom, however, was now well in hand. The
+royal treasury was filled again, and in 1277 Edward
+marched on North Wales. The fabric of Welsh
+greatness fell at a single blow. The chieftains
+who had so lately sworn fealty to Llewelyn in the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-109"></a>2-109]</span>
+
+southern and central parts of the country deserted
+him to join his English enemies in their attack;
+an English fleet reduced Anglesea; and the Prince
+was cooped up in his mountain fastnesses and
+forced to throw himself on Edward's mercy. With
+characteristic moderation the conqueror contented
+himself with adding to the English dominions the
+coast-district as far as Conway and with providing
+that the title of Prince of Wales should cease at
+Llewelyn's death. A heavy fine which he had
+incurred by his refusal to do homage was remitted;
+and Eleanor, a daughter of Earl Simon of Montfort
+whom he had sought as his wife but who had been
+arrested on her way to him, was wedded to the
+Prince at Edward's court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Judicial
+Reforms</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For four years all was quiet across the Welsh
+Marches, and Edward was able again to turn his
+attention to the work of internal reconstruction.
+It is probably to this time, certainly to the earlier
+years of his reign, that we may attribute his
+modification of our judicial system. The King's
+Court was divided into three distinct tribunals,
+the Court of Exchequer which took cognizance of
+all causes in which the royal revenue was concerned;
+the Court of Common Pleas for suits between
+private persons; and the King's Bench, which had
+jurisdiction in all matters that affected the sovereign
+as well as in "pleas of the crown" or criminal causes
+expressly reserved for his decision. Each court
+was now provided with a distinct staff of judges.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-110"></a>2-110]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+Of yet greater importance than this change, which
+was in effect but the completion of a process of
+severance that had long been going on, was the
+establishment of an equitable jurisdiction side by
+side with that of the common law. In his reform
+of 1178 Henry the Second broke up the older
+King's Court, which had till then served as the
+final Court of Appeal, by the severance of the
+purely legal judges who had been gradually added
+to it from the general body of his councillors.
+The judges thus severed from the Council retained
+the name and the ordinary jurisdiction of "the
+King's Court," but the mere fact of their severance
+changed in an essential way the character of the
+justice they dispensed. The King in Council
+wielded a power which was not only judicial but
+executive; his decisions though based upon custom
+were not fettered by it, they wore the expressions
+of his will, and it was as his will that they were
+carried out by officers of the Crown. But the
+separate bench of judges had no longer this unlimited
+power at their command. They had not
+the king's right as representative of the community
+to make the law for the redress of a wrong. They
+professed simply to declare what the existing law
+was, even if it was insufficient for the full purpose
+of redress. The authority of their decision rested
+mainly on their adhesion to ancient custom or as
+it was styled the "common law" which had grown
+up in the past. They could enforce their decisions
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-111"></a>2-111]</span>
+
+only by directions to an independent officer, the
+sheriff, and here again their right was soon rigidly
+bounded by set form and custom. These bonds
+in fact became tighter every day, for their decisions
+were now beginning to be reported, and the cases
+decided by one bench of judges became authorities
+for their successors. It is plain that such a state
+of things has the utmost value in many ways,
+whether in creating in men's minds that impersonal
+notion of a sovereign law which exercises
+its imaginative force on human action, or in furnishing
+by the accumulation and sacredness of precedents
+a barrier against the invasion of arbitrary
+power. But it threw a terrible obstacle in the
+way of the actual redress of wrong. The increasing
+complexity of human action as civilization
+advanced outstripped the efforts of the law. Sometimes
+ancient custom furnished no redress for a
+wrong which sprang from modern circumstances.
+Sometimes the very pedantry and inflexibility of
+the law itself became in individual cases the highest
+injustice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Equitable
+Jurisdiction</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the consciousness of this that made men
+cling even from the first moment of the independent
+existence of these courts to the judicial power
+which still remained inherent in the Crown itself.
+If his courts fell short in any matter the duty of
+the king to do justice to all still remained, and it
+was this obligation which was recognized in the
+provision of Henry the Second by which all cases
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-112"></a>2-112]</span>
+
+in which his judges failed to do justice were
+reserved for the special cognizance of the royal
+Council itself. To this final jurisdiction of the
+King in Council Edward gave a wide developement.
+His assembly of the ministers, the higher
+permanent officials, and the law officers of the
+Crown for the first time reserved to itself in its
+judicial capacity the correction of all breaches of
+the law which the lower courts had failed to
+repress, whether from weakness, partiality, or
+corruption, and especially of those lawless outbreaks
+of the more powerful baronage which
+defied the common authority of the judges. Such
+powers were of course capable of terrible abuse,
+and it shows what real need there was felt to be
+for their exercise that though regarded with
+jealousy by Parliament the jurisdiction of the
+royal Council appears to have been steadily put
+into force through the two centuries which
+followed. In the reign of Henry the Seventh it
+took legal and statutory form in the shape of the
+Court of Star Chamber, and its powers are still
+exercised in our own day by the Judicial
+Committee of the Privy Council. But the same
+duty of the Crown to do justice where its courts
+fell short of giving due redress for wrong expressed
+itself in the jurisdiction of the Chancellor. This
+great officer of State, who had perhaps originally
+acted only as President of the Council when
+discharging its judicial functions, acquired at a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-113"></a>2-113]</span>
+
+very early date an independent judicial position
+of the same nature. It is by remembering this
+origin of the Court of Chancery that we understand
+the nature of the powers it gradually
+acquired. All grievances of the subject, especially
+those which sprang from the misconduct of
+government officials or of powerful oppressors, fell
+within its cognizance as they fell within that of
+the Royal Council, and to these were added
+disputes respecting the wardship of infants, dower,
+rent-charges, or tithes. Its equitable jurisdiction
+sprang from the defective nature and the technical
+and unbending rules of the common law. As the
+Council had given redress in cases where law
+became injustice, so the Court of Chancery
+interfered without regard to the rules of procedure
+adopted by the common law courts on the petition
+of a party for whose grievance the common law
+provided no adequate remedy. An analogous
+extension of his powers enabled the Chancellor
+to afford relief in cases of fraud, accident, or abuse
+of trust, and this side of his jurisdiction was
+largely extended at a later time by the results of
+legislation on the tenure of land by ecclesiastical
+bodies. The separate powers of the Chancellor,
+whatever was the original date at which they
+were first exercised, seem to have been thoroughly
+established under Edward the First.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Law and the
+Baronage</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What reconciled the nation to the exercise of
+powers such as these by the Crown and its council
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-114"></a>2-114]</span>
+
+was the need which was still to exist for centuries
+of an effective means of bringing the baronage
+within the reach of the law. Constitutionally the
+position of the English nobles had now become
+established. A king could no longer make laws
+or levy taxes or even make war without their
+assent. The nation reposed in them an unwavering
+trust, for they were no longer the brutal
+foreigners from whose violence the strong hand
+of a Norman ruler had been needed to protect his
+subjects; they were as English as the peasant or
+the trader. They had won English liberty by
+their swords, and the tradition of their order
+bound them to look on themselves as its natural
+guardians. The close of the Barons' War solved
+the problem which had so long troubled the realm,
+the problem how to ensure the government of the
+realm in accordance with the provisions of the
+Great Charter, by the transfer of the business of
+administration into the hands of a standing
+committee of the greater barons and prelates,
+acting as chief officers of state in conjunction with
+specially appointed ministers of the Crown. The
+body thus composed was known as the Continual
+Council; and the quiet government of the kingdom
+by this body in the long interval between the
+death of Henry the Third and his son's return
+shows how effective this rule of the nobles was.
+It is significant of the new relation which they
+were to strive to establish between themselves and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-115"></a>2-115]</span>
+
+the Crown that in the brief which announced
+Edward's accession the Council asserted that the
+new monarch mounted his throne "by the will of
+the peers." But while the political influence of
+the baronage as a leading element in the whole
+nation thus steadily mounted, the personal and
+purely feudal power of each individual baron on
+his own estates as steadily fell. The hold which
+the Crown gained on every noble family by its
+rights of wardship and marriage, the circuits of
+the royal judges, the ever-narrowing bounds
+within which baronial justice saw itself circumscribed,
+the blow dealt by scutage at their military
+power, the prompt intervention of the Council in
+their feuds, lowered the nobles more and more to
+the common level of their fellow subjects. Much
+yet remained to be done; for within the general
+body of the baronage there existed side by side
+with the nobles whose aims were purely national
+nobles who saw in the overthrow of the royal
+despotism simply a chance of setting up again
+their feudal privileges; and different as the
+English baronage, taken as a whole, was from a
+feudal <i>noblesse</i> like that of Germany or France
+there is in every military class a natural drift
+towards violence and lawlessness. Throughout
+Edward's reign his strong hand was needed to
+enforce order on warring nobles. Great earls,
+such as those of Gloucester and Hereford, carried
+on private war; in Shropshire the Earl of Arundel
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-116"></a>2-116]</span>
+
+waged his feud with Fulk Fitz Warine. To the
+lesser and poorer nobles the wealth of the trader,
+the long wain of goods as it passed along the
+highway, remained a tempting prey. Once, under
+cover of a mock tournament of monks against
+canons, a band of country gentlemen succeeded in
+introducing themselves into the great merchant
+fair at Boston; at nightfall every booth was on
+fire, the merchants robbed and slaughtered, and
+the booty carried off to ships which lay ready
+at the quay. Streams of gold and silver, ran
+the tale of popular horror, flowed melted down
+the gutters to the sea; "all the money in
+England could hardly make good the loss."
+Even at the close of Edward's reign lawless bands
+of "trail-bastons," or club-men, maintained themselves
+by general outrage, aided the country nobles
+in their feuds, and wrested money and goods
+from the great tradesmen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward
+and the
+Baronage</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king was strong enough to face and
+imprison the warring earls, to hang the chiefs of
+the Boston marauders, and to suppress the
+outlaws by rigorous commissions. But the repression
+of baronial outrage was only a part of
+Edward's policy in relation to the Baronage.
+Here, as elsewhere, he had to carry out the
+political policy of his house, a policy defined by
+the great measures of Henry the Second, his
+institution of scutage, his general assize of arms,
+his extension of the itinerant judicature of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-117"></a>2-117]</span>
+
+royal judges. Forced by the first to an exact
+discharge of their military duties to the Crown,
+set by the second in the midst of a people trained
+equally with the nobles to arms, their judicial
+tyranny curbed and subjected to the king's
+justice by the third, the barons had been forced
+from their old standpoint of an isolated class to
+the new and nobler position of a people's leaders.
+Edward watched jealously over the ground which
+the Crown had gained. Immediately after his
+landing he appointed a commission of enquiry into
+the judicial franchises then existing, and on its
+report (of which the existing "Hundred-Rolls"
+are the result) itinerant justices were sent in 1278
+to discover by what right these franchises were
+held. The writs of "quo warranto" were roughly
+met here and there. Earl Warenne bared a
+rusty sword and flung it on the justices' table.
+"This, sirs," he said, "is my warrant. By the
+sword our fathers won their lands when they
+came over with the Conqueror, and by the sword
+we will keep them." But the king was far from
+limiting himself to the mere carrying out of the plans
+of Henry the Second. Henry had aimed simply
+at lowering the power of the great feudatories;
+Edward aimed rather at neutralizing their power
+by raising the whole body of landowners to the
+same level. We shall see at a later time the
+measures which were the issues of this policy, but
+in the very opening of his reign a significant step
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-118"></a>2-118]</span>
+
+pointed to the king's drift. In the summer of
+1278 a royal writ ordered all freeholders who held
+lands to the value of twenty pounds to receive
+knighthood at the king's hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward and
+the Church</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Acts as significant announced Edward's purpose
+of carrying out another side of Henry's policy,
+that of limiting in the same way the independent
+jurisdiction of the Church. He was resolute to
+force it to become thoroughly national by bearing
+its due part of the common national burthens,
+and to break its growing dependence upon Rome.
+But the ecclesiastical body was jealous of its
+position as a power distinct from the power of the
+Crown, and Edward's policy had hardly declared
+itself when in 1279 Archbishop Peckham obtained
+a canon from the clergy by which copies of the
+Great Charter, with its provisions in favour of the
+liberties of the Church, were to be affixed to the
+doors of churches. The step was meant as a
+defiant protest against all interference, and it was
+promptly forbidden. An order issued by the
+Primate to the clergy to declare to their flocks the
+sentences of excommunication directed against all
+who obtained royal writs to obstruct suits in
+church courts, or who, whether royal officers or
+no, neglected to enforce their sentences, was
+answered in a yet more emphatic way. By falling
+into the "dead hand" or "mortmain" of the
+Church land ceased to render its feudal services;
+and in 1279 the Statute "de Religiosis," or as it
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-119"></a>2-119]</span>
+
+is commonly called "of Mortmain," forbade any
+further alienation of land to religious bodies in
+such wise that it should cease to render its due
+service to the king. The restriction was probably
+no beneficial one to the country at large, for
+Churchmen were the best landlords, and it was
+soon evaded by the ingenuity of the clerical
+lawyers; but it marked the growing jealousy of
+any attempt to set aside what was national from
+serving the general need and profit of the nation.
+Its immediate effect was to stir the clergy to a
+bitter resentment. But Edward remained firm,
+and when the bishops proposed to restrict the
+royal courts from dealing with cases of patronage
+or causes which touched the chattels of Churchmen
+he met their proposals by an instant prohibition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Conquest of
+Wales</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The resentment of the clergy had soon the
+means of showing itself during a new struggle
+with Wales. The persuasions of his brother
+David, who had deserted him in the previous
+war but who deemed his desertion insufficiently
+rewarded by an English lordship, roused Llewelyn
+to a fresh revolt. A prophecy of Merlin was said
+to promise that when English money became
+round a Prince of Wales should be crowned in
+London; and at this moment a new coinage of
+copper money, coupled with a prohibition to
+break the silver penny into halves and quarters,
+as had been commonly done, was supposed to
+fulfil the prediction. In 1282 Edward marched
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-120"></a>2-120]</span>
+
+in overpowering strength into the heart of Wales.
+But Llewelyn held out in Snowdon with the
+stubbornness of despair, and the rout of an English
+force which had crossed into Anglesea prolonged
+the contest into the winter. The cost of the war
+fell on the king's treasury. Edward had called
+for but one general grant through the past eight
+years of his reign; but he was now forced to
+appeal to his people, and by an expedient hitherto
+without precedent two provincial Councils were
+called for this purpose. That for Southern
+England met at Northampton, that for Northern
+at York; and clergy and laity were summoned,
+though in separate session, to both. Two knights
+came from every shire, two burgesses from every
+borough, while the bishops brought their archdeacons,
+abbots, and the proctors of their cathedral
+clergy. The grant of the laity was quick and
+liberal. But both at York and Northampton the
+clergy showed their grudge at Edward's measures
+by long delays in supplying his treasury. Pinched
+however as were his resources and terrible as
+were the sufferings of his army through the winter
+Edward's firmness remained unbroken; and rejecting
+all suggestions of retreat he issued orders
+for the formation of a new army at Caermarthen
+to complete the circle of investment round
+Llewelyn. But the war came suddenly to an
+end. The Prince sallied from his mountain hold
+for a raid upon Radnorshire and fell in a petty
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-121"></a>2-121]</span>
+
+skirmish on the banks of the Wye. With him
+died the independence of his race. After six
+months of flight his brother David was made
+prisoner; and a Parliament summoned at Shrewsbury
+in the autumn of 1283, to which each county
+again sent its two knights and twenty boroughs
+their two burgesses, sentenced him to a traitor's
+death. The submission of the lesser chieftains
+soon followed: and the country was secured by
+the building of strong castles at Conway and
+Caernarvon, and the settlement of English barons
+on the confiscated soil. The Statute of Wales
+which Edward promulgated at Rhuddlan in 1284
+proposed to introduce English law and the English
+administration of justice and government into
+Wales. But little came of the attempt; and it
+was not till the time of Henry the Eighth that
+the country was actually incorporated with England
+and represented in the English Parliament.
+What Edward had really done was to break the
+Welsh resistance. The policy with which he
+followed up his victory (for the "massacre of the
+bards" is a mere fable) accomplished its end, and
+though two later rebellions and a ceaseless strife
+of the natives with the English towns in their
+midst showed that the country was still far from
+being reconciled to its conquest, it ceased to be
+any serious danger to England for a hundred
+years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">New Legislation</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the work of conquest Edward again
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-122"></a>2-122]</span>
+
+turned to the work of legislation. In the midst
+of his struggle with Wales he had shown his care
+for the commercial classes by a Statute of Merchants
+in 1283, which provided for the registration
+of the debts of leaders and for their recovery by
+distraint of the debtor's goods and the imprisonment
+of his person. The close of the war saw two
+measures of even greater importance. The second
+Statute of Westminster which appeared in 1285
+is a code of the same sort as the first, amending
+the Statutes of Mortmain, of Merton, and of
+Gloucester, as well as the laws of dower and
+advowson, remodelling the system of justices of
+assize, and curbing the abuses of manorial jurisdiction.
+In the same year appeared the greatest
+of Edward's measures for the enforcement of
+public order. The Statute of Winchester revived
+and reorganized the old institutions of national
+police and national defence. It regulated the
+action of the hundred, the duty of watch and
+ward, and the gathering of the fyrd or militia of
+the realm as Henry the Second had moulded it
+into form in his Assize of Arms. Every man was
+bound to hold himself in readiness, duly armed,
+for the king's service in case of invasion or revolt,
+and to pursue felons when hue and cry was made
+after them. Every district was held responsible
+for crimes committed within its bounds; the gates
+of each town were to be shut at nightfall; and all
+strangers were required to give an account of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-123"></a>2-123]</span>
+
+themselves to the magistrates of any borough
+which they entered. By a provision which illustrates
+at once the social and physical condition of
+the country at the time all brushwood was ordered
+to be destroyed within a space of two hundred
+feet on either side of the public highway as a
+security for travellers against sudden attacks from
+robbers. To enforce the observance of this act
+knights were appointed in every shire under the
+name of Conservators of the Peace, a name which
+as the benefit of these local magistrates was more
+sensibly felt and their powers were more largely
+extended was changed into that which they still
+retain of Justices of the Peace. So orderly however
+was the realm that Edward was able in 1286
+to pass over sea to his foreign dominions, and to
+spend the next three years in reforming their
+government. But the want of his guiding hand
+was at last felt; and the Parliament of 1289
+refused a new tax till the king came home again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">"Quia Emptores"</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He returned to find the Earls of Gloucester and
+Hereford at war, and his judges charged with
+violence and corruption. The two Earls were
+brought to peace, and Earl Gilbert allied closely to
+the royal house by a marriage with the king's
+daughter Johanna. After a careful investigation
+the judicial abuses were recognized and amended.
+Two of the chief justices were banished from the
+realm and their colleagues imprisoned and fined.
+But these administrative measures were only preludes
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-124"></a>2-124]</span>
+
+to a great legislative act which appeared in
+1290. The Third Statute of Westminster, or, to
+use the name by which it is more commonly
+known, the Statute "Quia Emptores," is one of
+those legislative efforts which mark the progress
+of a wide social revolution in the country at large.
+The number of the greater barons was diminishing
+every day, while the number of the country gentry
+and of the more substantial yeomanry was increasing
+with the increase of the national wealth.
+The increase showed itself in a growing desire to
+become proprietors of land. Tenants of the barons
+received under-tenants on condition of their rendering
+them similar services to those which they
+themselves rendered to their lords; and the baronage,
+while duly receiving the services in compensation
+for which they had originally granted their
+lands in fee, saw with jealousy the feudal profits
+of these new under-tenants, the profits of wardships
+or of reliefs and the like, in a word the
+whole increase in the value of the estate consequent
+on its subdivision and higher cultivation,
+passing into other hands than their own. The
+purpose of the statute "Quia Emptores" was to
+check this process by providing that in any case
+of alienation the sub-tenant should henceforth
+hold, not of the tenant, but directly of the superior
+lord. But its result was to promote instead of
+hindering the transfer and subdivision of land.
+The tenant who was compelled before the passing
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-125"></a>2-125]</span>
+
+of the statute to retain in any case so much of
+the estate as enabled him to discharge his feudal
+services to the overlord of whom he held it, was
+now enabled by a process analogous to the modern
+sale of "tenant-right," to transfer both land and
+services to new holders. However small the
+estates thus created might be, the bulk were held
+directly of the Crown; and this class of lesser
+gentry and freeholders grew steadily from this
+time in numbers and importance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Crown and the Jews</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The year which saw "Quia Emptores" saw a
+step which remains the great blot upon Edward's
+reign. The work abroad had exhausted the royal
+treasury, and he bought a grant from his Parliament
+by listening to their wishes in the matter of
+the Jews. Jewish traders had followed William
+the Conqueror from Normandy, and had been
+enabled by his protection to establish themselves
+in separate quarters or "Jewries" in all larger
+English towns. The Jew had no right or citizenship
+in the land. The Jewry in which he lived
+was exempt from the common law. He was
+simply the king's chattel, and his life and goods
+were at the king's mercy. But he was too valuable
+a possession to be lightly thrown away. If the
+Jewish merchant had no standing-ground in the
+local court the king enabled him to sue before
+a special justiciary; his bonds were deposited for
+safety in a chamber of the royal palace at Westminster;
+he was protected against the popular
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-126"></a>2-126]</span>
+
+hatred in the free exercise of his religion and
+allowed to build synagogues and to manage his
+own ecclesiastical affairs by means of a chief rabbi.
+The royal protection was dictated by no spirit of
+tolerance or mercy. To the kings the Jew was a
+mere engine of finance. The wealth which he
+accumulated was wrung from him whenever the
+crown had need, and torture and imprisonment
+were resorted to when milder means failed. It
+was the gold of the Jew that filled the royal
+treasury at the outbreak of war or of revolt. It
+was in the Hebrew coffers that the foreign kings
+found strength, to hold their baronage at bay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Popular Hatred of the Jews</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That the presence of the Jew was, at least in the
+earlier years of his settlement, beneficial to the
+nation at large there can be little doubt. His
+arrival was the arrival of a capitalist; and heavy
+as was the usury he necessarily exacted in the
+general insecurity of the time his loans gave an
+impulse to industry. The century which followed
+the Conquest witnessed an outburst of architectural
+energy which covered the land with castles and
+cathedrals; but castle and cathedral alike owed
+their erection to the loans of the Jew. His own
+example gave a new vigour to domestic architecture.
+The buildings which, as at Lincoln and Bury St.
+Edmund's, still retain their name of "Jews'
+Houses" were almost the first houses of stone
+which superseded the mere hovels of the English
+burghers. Nor was their influence simply
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-127"></a>2-127]</span>
+
+industrial. Through their connexion with the
+Jewish schools in Spain and the East they opened
+a way for the revival of physical sciences. A
+Jewish medical school seems to have existed at
+Oxford; Roger Bacon himself studied under
+English rabbis. But the general progress of civilization
+now drew little help from the Jew, while
+the coming of the Cahorsine and Italian bankers
+drove him from the field of commercial finance.
+He fell back on the petty usury of loans to the
+poor, a trade necessarily accompanied with much
+of extortion and which roused into fiercer life the
+religious hatred against their race. Wild stories
+floated about of children carried off to be circumcised
+or crucified, and a Lincoln boy who was
+found slain in a Jewish house was canonized
+by popular reverence as "St. Hugh." The first
+work of the Friars was to settle in the Jewish
+quarters and attempt their conversion, but the
+popular fury rose too fast for these gentler means
+of reconciliation. When the Franciscans saved
+seventy Jews from hanging by their prayer to
+Henry the Third the populace angrily refused the
+brethren alms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Jewish Defiance</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all this growing hate was met with a bold
+defiance. The picture which is commonly drawn
+of the Jew as timid, silent, crouching under
+oppression, however truly it may represent the
+general position of his race throughout mediæval
+Europe, is far from being borne out by historical
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-128"></a>2-128]</span>
+
+fact on this side the Channel. In England the
+attitude of the Jew, almost to the very end, was
+an attitude of proud and even insolent defiance.
+He knew that the royal policy exempted him from
+the common taxation, the common justice, the
+common obligations of Englishmen. Usurer,
+extortioner as the realm held him to be, the royal
+justice would secure him the repayment of his
+bonds. A royal commission visited with heavy
+penalties any outbreak of violence against the
+king's "chattels." The Red King actually forbade
+the conversion of a Jew to the Christian
+faith; it was a poor exchange, he said, that would
+rid him of a valuable property and give him only
+a subject. We see in such a case as that of Oxford
+the insolence that grew out of this consciousness
+of the royal protection. Here as elsewhere the
+Jewry was a town within a town, with its own
+language, its own religion and law, its peculiar
+commerce, its peculiar dress. No city bailiff could
+penetrate into the square of little alleys which lay
+behind the present Town Hall; the Church itself
+was powerless to prevent a synagogue from rising
+in haughty rivalry over against the cloister of St.
+Frideswide. Prior Philip of St. Frideswide complains
+bitterly of a certain Hebrew who stood at
+his door as the procession of the saint passed by,
+mocking at the miracles which were said to be
+wrought at her shrine. Halting and then walking
+firmly on his feet, showing his hands clenched as
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-129"></a>2-129]</span>
+
+if with palsy and then flinging open his fingers,
+the Jew claimed gifts and oblations from the
+crowd that flocked to St. Frideswide's shrine on
+the ground that such recoveries of life and limb
+were quite as real as any that Frideswide ever
+wrought. Sickness and death in the prior's story
+avenge the saint on her blasphemer, but no earthly
+power, ecclesiastical or civil, seems to have
+ventured to deal with him. A more daring act of
+fanaticism showed the temper of the Jews even at
+the close of Henry the Third's reign. As the usual
+procession of scholars and citizens returned from
+St. Frideswide's on the Ascension Day of 1268 a
+Jew suddenly burst from a group of his comrades
+in front of the synagogue, and wrenching the
+crucifix from its bearer trod it under foot. But
+even in presence of such an outrage as this the
+terror of the Crown sheltered the Oxford Jews from
+any burst of popular vengeance. The sentence of
+the king condemned them to set up a cross of marble
+on the spot where the crime was committed, but
+even this sentence was in part remitted, and a less
+offensive place was found for the cross in an open
+plot by Merton College.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Expulsion of the Jews</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up to Edward's day indeed the royal protection
+had never wavered. Henry the Second granted
+the Jews a right of burial outside every city where
+they dwelt. Richard punished heavily a massacre
+of the Jews at York, and organized a mixed court
+of Jews and Christians for the registration of their
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-130"></a>2-130]</span>
+
+contracts. John suffered none to plunder them
+save himself, though he once wrested from them a
+sum equal to a year's revenue of his realm. The
+troubles of the next reign brought in a harvest
+greater than even the royal greed could reap; the
+Jews grew wealthy enough to acquire estates; and
+only a burst of popular feeling prevented a legal
+decision which would have enabled them to own
+freeholds. But the sack of Jewry after Jewry
+showed the popular hatred during the Barons' war,
+and at its close fell on the Jews the more terrible
+persecution of the law. To the cry against usury
+and the religious fanaticism which threatened them
+was now added the jealousy with which the nation
+that had grown up round the Charter regarded all
+exceptional jurisdictions or exemptions from the
+common law and the common burthens of the
+realm. As Edward looked on the privileges of the
+Church or the baronage, so his people looked on
+the privileges of the Jews. The growing weight
+of the Parliament told against them. Statute after
+statute hemmed them in. They were forbidden
+to hold real property, to employ Christian servants,
+to move through the streets without the two white
+tablets of wool on their breasts which distinguished
+their race. They were prohibited from building
+new synagogues or eating with Christians or acting
+as physicians to them. Their trade, already
+crippled by the rivalry of the bankers of Cahors,
+was annihilated by a royal order which bade them
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-131"></a>2-131]</span>
+
+renounce usury under pain of death. At last
+persecution could do no more, and Edward, eager
+at the moment to find supplies for his treasury and
+himself swayed by the fanaticism of his subjects,
+bought the grant of a fifteenth from clergy and
+laity by consenting to drive the Jews from his
+realm. No share of the enormities which accompanied
+this expulsion can fall upon the king, for
+he not only suffered the fugitives to take their
+personal wealth with them but punished with the
+halter those who plundered them at sea. But the
+expulsion was none the less cruel. Of the sixteen
+thousand who preferred exile to apostasy few
+reached the shores of France. Many were wrecked,
+others robbed and flung overboard. One shipmaster
+turned out a crew of wealthy merchants on
+to a sandbank and bade them call a new Moses to
+save them from the sea.
+</p>
+
+<center><a href="images/v2-map-1.jpg"><img src="images/v2-map-1t.jpg" alt="Scotland in 1290"></a></center>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Scotland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the expulsion of the Jews, as from his
+nobler schemes of legal and administrative reforms,
+Edward was suddenly called away to face complex
+questions which awaited him in the North. At
+the moment which we have reached the kingdom
+of the Scots was still an aggregate of four distinct
+countries, each with its different people, its different
+tongue, its different history. The old Pictish
+kingdom across the Firth of Forth, the original
+Scot kingdom in Argyle, the district of Cumbria
+or Strathclyde, and the Lowlands which stretched
+from the Firth of Forth to the English border, had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-132"></a>2-132]</span>
+
+become united under the kings of the Scots;
+Pictland by inheritance, Cumbria by a grant from
+the English king Eadmund, the Lowlands by conquest,
+confirmed as English tradition alleged by a
+grant from Cnut. The shadowy claim of dependence
+on the English Crown which dated from the
+days when a Scotch king "commended" himself
+and his people to Ælfred's son Eadward, a claim
+strengthened by the grant of Cumbria to Malcolm
+as a "fellow worker" of the English sovereign "by
+sea and land," may have been made more real
+through this last convention. But whatever change
+the acquisition of the Lowlands made in the relation
+of the Scot kings to the English sovereigns, it
+certainly affected in a very marked way their
+relation both to England and to their own realm.
+Its first result was the fixing of the royal residence
+in their new southern dominion at Edinburgh; and
+the English civilization which surrounded them
+from the moment of this settlement on what was
+purely English ground changed the Scot kings in
+all but blood into Englishmen. The marriage of
+King Malcolm with Margaret, the sister of Eadgar
+Ætheling, not only hastened this change but
+opened a way to the English crown. Their children
+were regarded by a large party within England as
+representatives of the older royal race and as
+claimants of the throne, and this danger grew as
+William's devastation of the North not only drove
+fresh multitudes of Englishmen to settle in the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-133"></a>2-133]</span>
+
+Lowlands but filled the Scotch court with English
+nobles who fled thither for refuge. So formidable
+indeed became the pretensions of the Scot kings that
+they forced the ablest of our Norman sovereigns into
+a complete change of policy. The Conqueror and
+William the Red had met the threats of the Scot
+sovereigns by invasions which ended again and
+again in an illusory homage, but the marriage of
+Henry the First with the Scottish Matilda robbed
+the claims of the Scottish line of much of their
+force while it enabled him to draw their kings into
+far closer relations with the Norman throne. King
+David not only abandoned the ambitious dreams
+of his predecessors to place himself at the head of
+his niece Matilda's party in her contest with
+Stephen, but as Henry's brother-in-law he figured
+as the first noble of the English Court and found
+English models and English support in the work
+of organization which he attempted within his
+own dominions. As the marriage with Margaret
+had changed Malcolm from a Celtic chieftain into
+an English king, so that of Matilda brought about
+the conversion of David into a Norman and feudal
+sovereign. His court was filled with Norman
+nobles from the South, such as the Balliols and
+Bruces who were destined to play so great a part
+afterwards but who now for the first time obtained
+fiefs in the Scottish realm, and a feudal jurisprudence
+modelled on that of England was introduced
+into the Lowlands.
+</p>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-134"></a>2-134]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Scotch and
+English
+Crowns</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fresh connexion between Scotland and the
+English sovereigns began with the grant of lordships
+within England itself to the Scot kings or
+their sons. The Earldom of Northumberland was
+held by David's son Henry, that of Huntingdon
+by David, brother of William the Lion. Homage
+was sometimes rendered, whether for these lordships,
+for the Lowlands, or for the whole Scottish
+realm, but it was the capture of William the Lion
+during the revolt of the English baronage which first
+suggested to the ambition of Henry the Second the
+project of a closer dependence of Scotland on the
+English Crown. To gain his freedom William consented
+to hold his kingdom of Henry and his heirs.
+The prelates and lords of Scotland did homage to
+Henry as to their direct lord, and a right of appeal
+in all Scotch causes was allowed to the superior
+court of the English suzerain. From this bondage
+however Scotland was freed by the prodigality
+of Richard who allowed her to buy back the freedom
+she had forfeited. Both sides fell into their
+old position, but both were ceasing gradually to
+remember the distinctions between the various
+relations in which the Scot king stood for his
+different provinces to the English Crown. Scotland
+had come to be thought of as a single country;
+and the court of London transferred to the whole
+of it those claims of direct feudal suzerainty which
+at most applied only to Strathclyde, while the
+court of Edinburgh looked on the English Lowlands
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-135"></a>2-135]</span>
+
+as holding no closer relation to England
+than the Pictish lands beyond the Forth. Any
+difficulties which arose were evaded by a legal
+compromise. The Scot kings repeatedly did
+homage to the English sovereign but with a
+reservation of rights which were prudently left
+unspecified. The English king accepted the
+homage on the assumption that it was rendered
+to him as overlord of the Scottish realm, and this
+assumption was neither granted nor denied. For
+nearly a hundred years the relations of the two
+countries were thus kept peaceful and friendly,
+and the death of Alexander the Third seemed
+destined to remove even the necessity of protests
+by a closer union of the two kingdoms. Alexander
+had wedded his only daughter to the King of
+Norway, and after long negotiation the Scotch
+Parliament proposed the marriage of Margaret,
+"The Maid of Norway," the girl who was the
+only issue of this marriage and so heiress of the
+kingdom, with the son of Edward the First. It
+was however carefully provided in the marriage
+treaty which was concluded at Brigham in 1290
+that Scotland should remain a separate and free
+kingdom, and that its laws and customs should
+be preserved inviolate. No military aid was to
+be claimed by the English king, no Scotch appeal
+to be carried to an English court. But this project
+was abruptly frustrated by the child's death
+during her voyage to Scotland in the following
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-136"></a>2-136]</span>
+
+October, and with the rise of claimant after
+claimant of the vacant throne Edward was drawn
+into far other relations to the Scottish realm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Scotch
+Succession</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the thirteen pretenders to the throne of
+Scotland only three could be regarded as serious
+claimants. By the extinction of the line of
+William the Lion the right of succession passed
+to the daughters of his brother David. The claim
+of John Balliol, Lord of Galloway, rested on his
+descent from the elder of these; that of Robert
+Bruce, Lord of Annandale, on his descent from
+the second; that of John Hastings, Lord of Abergavenny,
+on his descent from the third. It is
+clear that at this crisis every one in Scotland or
+out of it recognized some sort of overlordship in
+Edward, for the Norwegian king, the Primate
+of St. Andrews, and seven of the Scotch Earls had
+already appealed to him before Margaret's death;
+and her death was followed by the consent both
+of the claimants and the Council of Regency to
+refer the question of the succession to his decision
+in a Parliament at Norham. But the overlordship
+which the Scots acknowledged was something far
+less direct and definite than the superiority which
+Edward claimed at the opening of this conference
+in May 1291. His claim was supported by excerpts
+from monastic chronicles and by the slow
+advance of an English army; while the Scotch
+lords, taken by surprise, found little help in the
+delay which was granted them. At the opening
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-137"></a>2-137]</span>
+
+of June therefore in common with nine of the
+claimants they formally admitted Edward's direct
+suzerainty. To the nobles in fact the concession
+must have seemed a small one, for like the principal
+claimants they were for the most part
+Norman in blood, with estates in both countries,
+and looking for honours and pensions from the
+English Court. From the Commons who were
+gathered with the nobles at Norham no such
+admission of Edward's claims could be extorted;
+but in Scotland, feudalized as it had been by
+David, the Commons were as yet of little weight
+and their opposition was quietly passed by. All
+the rights of a feudal suzerain were at once
+assumed by the English king; he entered into
+the possession of the country as into that of a
+disputed fief to be held by its overlord till the
+dispute was settled, his peace was sworn throughout
+the land, its castles delivered into his charge,
+while its bishops and nobles swore homage to him
+directly as their lord superior. Scotland was thus
+reduced to the subjection which she had experienced
+under Henry the Second; but the full
+discussion which followed over the various claims
+to the throne showed that while exacting to the
+full what he believed to be his right Edward
+desired to do justice to the country itself. The
+body of commissioners which the king named to
+report on the claims to the throne were mainly
+Scotch. A proposal for the partition of the realm
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-138"></a>2-138]</span>
+
+among the claimants was rejected as contrary to
+Scotch law. On the report of the commissioners
+after a twelvemonth's investigation in favour of
+Balliol as representative of the elder branch at the
+close of the year 1292, his homage was accepted
+for the whole kingdom of Scotland with a full
+acknowledgement of the services due from him to
+its overlord. The castles were at once delivered
+to the new monarch, and for a time there was
+peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward and
+Scotland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the accession of Balliol and the rendering
+of his homage for the Scottish realm the greatness
+of Edward reached its height. He was lord of
+Britain as no English king had been before. The
+last traces of Welsh independence were trodden
+under foot. The shadowy claims of supremacy
+over Scotland were changed into a direct overlordship.
+Across the one sea Edward was lord of
+Guienne, across the other of Ireland, and in
+England itself a wise and generous policy had
+knit the whole nation round his throne. Firmly
+as he still clung to prerogatives which the baronage
+were as firm not to own, the main struggle
+for the Charter was over. Justice and good
+government were secured. The personal despotism
+which John had striven to build up, the imperial
+autocracy which had haunted the imagination of
+Henry the Third, were alike set aside. The rule
+of Edward, vigorous and effective as it was, was
+a rule of law, and of law enacted not by the royal
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-139"></a>2-139]</span>
+
+will, but by the common council of the realm.
+Never had English ruler reached a greater height
+of power, nor was there any sign to warn the
+king of the troubles which awaited him. France,
+jealous as it was of his greatness and covetous of
+his Gascon possessions, he could hold at bay.
+Wales was growing tranquil. Scotland gave few
+signs of discontent or restlessness in the first year
+that followed the homage of its king. Under
+John Balliol it had simply fallen back into the
+position of dependence which it held under
+William the Lion; and Edward had no purpose
+of pushing further his rights as suzerain than
+Henry the Second had done. One claim of the
+English Crown indeed was soon a subject of dispute
+between the lawyers of the Scotch and of
+the English Council boards. Edward would have
+granted as freely as Balliol himself that though
+Scotland was a dependent kingdom it was far
+from being an ordinary fief of the English Crown.
+By feudal custom a distinction had always been
+held to exist between the relations of a dependent
+king to a superior lord and those of a vassal noble
+to his sovereign. At Balliol's homage indeed
+Edward had disclaimed any right to the ordinary
+feudal incidents of a fief, those of wardship or
+marriage, and in this disclaimer he was only repeating
+the reservations of the marriage treaty
+of Brigham. There were other customs of the
+Scotch realm as incontestable as these. Even after
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-140"></a>2-140]</span>
+
+the treaty of Falaise the Scotch king had not
+been held bound to attend the council of the
+English baronage, to do service in English warfare,
+or to contribute on the part of his Scotch realm
+to English aids. If no express acknowledgement
+of these rights had been made by Edward, for
+some time after his acceptance of Balliol's homage
+they were practically observed. The claim of
+independent justice was more doubtful, as it was
+of higher import than these. The judicial independence
+of Scotland had been expressly reserved
+in the marriage treaty. It was certain that no
+appeal from a Scotch King's Court to that of his
+overlord had been allowed since the days of
+William the Lion. But in the jurisprudence of
+the feudal lawyers the right of ultimate appeal
+was the test of sovereignty, and Edward regarded
+Balliol's homage as having placed him precisely
+in the position of William the Lion and subjected
+his decisions to those of his overlord. He was
+resolute therefore to assert the supremacy of his
+court and to receive Scotch appeals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The French
+Attack</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even here however the quarrel seemed likely to
+end only in legal bickering. Balliol at first gave
+way, and it was not till 1293 that he alleged
+himself forced by the resentment both of his
+Baronage and his people to take up an attitude of
+resistance. While appearing therefore formally at
+Westminster he refused to answer an appeal
+before the English courts save by advice of his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-141"></a>2-141]</span>
+
+Council. But real as the resentment of his barons
+may have been, it was not Scotland which really
+spurred Balliol to this defiance. His wounded
+pride had made him the tool of a power beyond
+the sea. The keenness with which France had
+watched every step of Edward's success in
+the north sprang not merely from a natural
+jealousy of his greatness but from its bearing on a
+great object of French ambition. One fragment
+of Eleanor's inheritance still remained to her
+descendants, Guienne and Gascony, the fair lands
+along the Garonne and the territory which
+stretched south of that river to the Pyrenees. It
+was this territory that now tempted the greed of
+Philip the Fair, and it was in feeding the strife
+between England and the Scotch king that Philip
+saw an opening for winning it. French envoys
+therefore brought promises of aid to the Scotch
+Court; and no sooner had these intrigues moved
+Balliol to resent the claims of his overlord than
+Philip found a pretext for open quarrel with
+Edward in the frays which went constantly on in
+the Channel between the mariners of Normandy
+and those of the Cinque Ports. They culminated
+at this moment in a great sea-fight which proved
+fatal to eight thousand Frenchmen, and for this
+Philip haughtily demanded redress. Edward saw
+at once the danger of his position. He did his best
+to allay the storm by promise of satisfaction to
+France, and by addressing threats of punishment
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-142"></a>2-142]</span>
+
+to the English seamen. But Philip still clung to
+his wrong, while the national passion which was
+to prove for a hundred years to come strong
+enough to hold down the royal policy of peace
+showed itself in a characteristic defiance with
+which the seamen of the Cinque Ports met
+Edward's menaces. "Be the King's Council well
+advised," ran this remonstrance, "that if wrong or
+grievance be done them in any fashion against
+right, they will sooner forsake wives, children, and
+all that they have, and go seek through the seas
+where they shall think to make their profit." In
+spite therefore of Edward's efforts the contest
+continued, and Philip found in it an opportunity
+to cite the king before his court at Paris for
+wrongs done to him as suzerain. It was hard for
+Edward to dispute the summons without weakening
+the position which his own sovereign courts
+had taken up towards the Scotch king, and in a
+final effort to avert the conflict the king submitted
+to a legal decision of the question, and to a formal
+cession of Guienne into Philip's hands for forty
+days in acknowledgement of his supremacy. Bitter
+as the sacrifice must have been it failed to win
+peace. The forty days had no sooner passed than
+Philip refused to restore the fortresses which had
+been left in pledge. In February 1294 he declared
+the English king contumacious, and in May
+declared his fiefs forfeited to the French Crown.
+Edward was driven to take up arms, but a revolt
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-143"></a>2-143]</span>
+
+in Wales deferred the expedition to the following
+year. No sooner however was it again taken in
+hand than it became clear that a double danger
+had to be met. The summons which Edward
+addressed to the Scotch barons to follow him in
+arms to Guienne was disregarded. It was in
+truth, as we have seen, a breach of customary law,
+and was probably meant to force Scotland into
+an open declaration of its connexion with France.
+A second summons was followed by a more formal
+refusal. The greatness of the danger threw
+Edward on England itself. For a war in Guienne
+and the north he needed supplies; but he needed
+yet more the firm support of his people in a
+struggle which, little as he foresaw its ultimate
+results, would plainly be one of great difficulty
+and danger. In 1295 he called a Parliament to
+counsel with him on the affairs of the realm, but
+with the large statesmanship which distinguished
+him he took this occasion of giving the Parliament
+a shape and organization which has left its
+assembly the most important event in English
+history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Great
+Council</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To realize its importance we must briefly
+review the changes by which the Great Council
+of the Norman kings had been gradually transforming
+itself into what was henceforth to be
+known as the English Parliament. Neither the
+Meeting of the Wise Men before the Conquest
+nor the Great Council of the Barons after it had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-144"></a>2-144]</span>
+
+been in any legal or formal way representative
+bodies. The first theoretically included all free
+holders of land, but it shrank at an early time
+into a gathering of earls, higher nobles, and
+bishops, with the officers and thegns of the royal
+household. Little change was made in the composition
+of this assembly by the Conquest, for
+the Great Council of the Norman kings was supposed
+to include all tenants who held directly
+of the Crown, the bishops and greater abbots
+(whose character as independent spiritual members
+tended more and more to merge in their position
+as barons), and the high officers of the Court.
+But though its composition remained the same,
+the character of the assembly was essentially
+altered; from a free gathering of "Wise Men" it
+sank to a Royal Court of feudal vassals. Its
+functions too seem to have become almost nominal
+and its powers to have been restricted to the
+sanctioning, without debate or possibility of
+refusal, all grants demanded from it by the
+Crown. But nominal as such a sanction might
+be, the "counsel and consent" of the Great
+Council was necessary for the legal validity of
+every considerable fiscal or political measure. Its
+existence therefore remained an effectual protest
+against the imperial theories advanced by the
+lawyers of Henry the Second which declared all
+legislative power to reside wholly in the sovereign.
+It was in fact under Henry that these assemblies
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-145"></a>2-145]</span>
+
+became more regular, and their functions more
+important. The reforms which marked his reign
+were issued in the Great Council, and even
+financial matters were suffered to be debated
+there. But it was not till the grant of the Great
+Charter that the powers of this assembly over
+taxation were formally recognized, and the
+principle established that no burthen beyond the
+customary feudal aids might be imposed "save by
+the Common Council of the Realm."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Greater and Lesser Barons</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same document first expressly regulated
+its form. In theory, as we have seen, the Great
+Council consisted of all who held land directly of
+the Crown. But the same causes which restricted
+attendance at the Witenagemot to the greater
+nobles told on the actual composition of the
+Council of Barons. While the attendance of the
+ordinary tenants in chief, the Knights or "Lesser
+Barons" as they were called, was burthensome
+from its expense to themselves, their numbers and
+their dependence on the higher nobles made the
+assembly of these knights dangerous to the
+Crown. As early therefore as the time of Henry
+the First we find a distinction recognized between
+the "Greater Barons," of whom the Council was
+usually composed, and the "Lesser Barons" who
+formed the bulk of the tenants of the Crown.
+But though the attendance of the latter had
+become rare their right of attendance remained
+intact. While enacting that the prelates and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-146"></a>2-146]</span>
+
+greater barons should be summoned by special
+writs to each gathering of the Council a remarkable
+provision of the Great Charter orders a
+general summons to be issued through the Sheriff
+to all direct tenants of the Crown. The provision
+was probably intended to rouse the lesser Baronage
+to the exercise of rights which had practically
+passed into desuetude, but as the clause is omitted
+in later issues of the Charter we may doubt
+whether the principle it embodied ever received
+more than a very limited application. There are
+traces of the attendance of a few of the lesser
+knighthood, gentry perhaps of the neighbourhood
+where the assembly was held, in some of its
+meetings under Henry the Third, but till a late
+period in the reign of his successor the Great
+Council practically remained a gathering of the
+greater barons, the prelates, and the high officers
+of the Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Constitutional Influence of Finance</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The change which the Great Charter had
+failed to accomplish was now however brought
+about by the social circumstances of the time.
+One of the most remarkable of these was a steady
+decrease in the number of the greater nobles.
+The bulk of the earldoms had already lapsed to
+the Crown through the extinction of the families
+of their possessors; of the greater baronies, many
+had practically ceased to exist by their division
+among female co-heiresses, many through the
+constant struggle of the poorer nobles to rid
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-147"></a>2-147]</span>
+
+themselves of their rank by a disclaimer so as to
+escape the burthen of higher taxation and attendance
+in Parliament which it involved. How far
+this diminution had gone we may see from the
+fact that hardly more than a hundred barons sat
+in the earlier Councils of Edward's reign. But
+while the number of those who actually exercised
+the privilege of assisting in Parliament was rapidly
+diminishing, the numbers and wealth of the
+"lesser baronage," whose right of attendance had
+become a mere constitutional tradition, was as
+rapidly increasing. The long peace and prosperity
+of the realm, the extension of its commerce and
+the increased export of wool, were swelling the
+ranks and incomes of the country gentry as well as
+of the freeholders and substantial yeomanry. We
+have already noticed the effects of the increase of
+wealth in begetting a passion for the possession of
+land which makes this reign so critical a period in
+the history of the English freeholder; but the
+same tendency had to some extent existed in the
+preceding century, and it was a consciousness of
+the growing importance of this class of rural
+proprietors which induced the barons at the
+moment of the Great Charter to make their
+fruitless attempt to induce them to take part in
+the deliberations of the Great Council. But
+while the barons desired their presence as an aid
+against the Crown, the Crown itself desired it as
+a means of rendering taxation more efficient. So
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-148"></a>2-148]</span>
+
+long as the Great Council remained a mere
+assembly of magnates it was necessary for the
+King's ministers to treat separately with the
+other orders of the state as to the amount and
+assessment of their contributions. The grant
+made in the Great Council was binding only on
+the barons and prelates who made it; but before
+the aids of the boroughs, the Church, or the
+shires could reach the royal treasury, a separate
+negotiation had to be conducted by the officers of
+the Exchequer with the reeves of each town, the
+sheriff and shire-court of each county, and the
+archdeacons of each diocese. Bargains of this
+sort would be the more tedious and disappointing
+as the necessities of the Crown increased in the
+later years of Edward, and it became a matter of
+fiscal expediency to obtain the sanction of any
+proposed taxation through the presence of these
+classes in the Great Council itself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The effort however to revive the old personal
+attendance of the lesser baronage which had broken
+down half a century before could hardly be renewed
+at a time when the increase of their
+numbers made it more impracticable than ever;
+but a means of escape from this difficulty was
+fortunately suggested by the very nature of the
+court through which alone a summons could be
+addressed to the landed knighthood. Amidst the
+many judicial reforms of Henry or Edward the
+Shire Court remained unchanged. The haunted
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-149"></a>2-149]</span>
+
+mound or the immemorial oak round which the
+assembly gathered (for the court was often held in
+the open air) were the relics of a time before the
+free kingdom had sunk into a shire and its Meetings
+of the Wise into a County Court. But save
+that the king's reeve had taken the place of the
+king and that the Norman legislation had displaced
+the Bishop and set four Coroners by the
+Sheriff's side, the gathering of the freeholders remained
+much as of old. The local knighthood, the
+yeomanry, the husbandmen of the county, were
+all represented in the crowd that gathered round
+the Sheriff, as guarded by his liveried followers he
+published the king's writs, announced his demand
+of aids, received the presentment of criminals and
+the inquest of the local jurors, assessed the taxation
+of each district, or listened solemnly to
+appeals for justice, civil and criminal, from all who
+held themselves oppressed in the lesser courts of
+the hundred or the soke. It was in the County
+Court alone that the Sheriff could legally summon
+the lesser baronage to attend the Great Council,
+and it was in the actual constitution of this
+assembly that the Crown found a solution of the
+difficulty which we have stated. For the principle
+of representation by which it was finally solved
+was coeval with the Shire Court itself. In all
+cases of civil or criminal justice the twelve sworn
+assessors of the Sheriff, as members of a class,
+though not formally deputed for that purpose,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-150"></a>2-150]</span>
+
+practically represented the judicial opinion of the
+county at large. From every hundred came
+groups of twelve sworn deputies, the "jurors"
+through whom the presentments of the district
+were made to the royal officer and with whom the
+assessment of its share in the general taxation was
+arranged. The husbandmen on the outskirts of
+the crowd, clad in the brown smock frock which
+still lingers in the garb of our carters and ploughmen,
+were broken up into little knots of five, a
+reeve and four assistants, each of which knots
+formed the representative of a rural township.
+If in fact we regard the Shire Courts as lineally
+the descendants of our earliest English Witenagemots,
+we may justly claim the principle of parliamentary
+representation as among the oldest of our
+institutions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Knights of the Shire</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was easy to give this principle a further
+extension by the choice of representatives of the
+lesser barons in the shire courts to which they
+were summoned; but it was only slowly and
+tentatively that this process was applied to the
+reconstitution of the Great Council. As early as
+the close of John's reign there are indications of
+the approaching change in the summons of "four
+discreet knights" from every county. Fresh need
+of local support was felt by both parties in the
+conflict of the succeeding reign, and Henry and
+his barons alike summoned knights from each shire
+"to meet on the common business of the realm."
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-151"></a>2-151]</span>
+
+It was no doubt with the same purpose that the
+writs of Earl Simon ordered the choice of knights
+in each shire for his famous Parliament of 1265.
+Something like a continuous attendance may be
+dated from the accession of Edward, but it was
+long before the knights were regarded as more
+than local deputies for the assessment of taxation
+or admitted to a share in the general business of
+the Great Council. The statute "Quia Emptores,"
+for instance, was passed in it before the knights
+who had been summoned could attend. Their
+participation in the deliberative power of Parliament,
+as well as their regular and continuous
+attendance, dates only from the Parliament of
+1295. But a far greater constitutional change in
+their position had already taken place through the
+extension of electoral rights to the freeholders at
+large. The one class entitled to a seat in the
+Great Council was, as we have seen, that of the
+lesser baronage; and it was of the lesser baronage
+alone that the knights were in theory the representatives.
+But the necessity of holding their
+election in the County Court rendered any restriction
+of the electoral body physically impossible.
+The court was composed of the whole body of
+freeholders, and no sheriff could distinguish the
+"aye, aye" of the yeoman from the "aye, aye"
+of the lesser baron. From the first moment therefore
+of their attendance we find the knights regarded
+not as mere representatives of the baronage
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-152"></a>2-152]</span>
+
+but as knights of the shire, and by this silent
+revolution the whole body of the rural freeholders
+were admitted to a share in the government of the
+realm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Boroughs and the Crown</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The financial difficulties of the Crown led to a
+far more radical revolution in the admission into
+the Great Council of representatives from the
+boroughs. The presence of knights from each
+shire was the recognition of an older right, but no
+right of attendance or share in the national
+"counsel and assent" could be pleaded for the
+burgesses of the towns. On the other hand the
+rapid developement of their wealth made them
+every day more important as elements in the
+national taxation. From all payment of the dues
+or fines exacted by the king as the original lord
+of the soil on which they had in most cases grown
+up the towns had long since freed themselves by
+what was called the purchase of the "farm of the
+borough"; in other words, by the commutation of
+these uncertain dues for a fixed sum paid annually
+to the Crown and apportioned by their own magistrates
+among the general body of the burghers.
+All that the king legally retained was the right
+enjoyed by every great proprietor of levying a
+corresponding taxation on his tenants in demesne
+under the name of "a free aid" whenever a grant
+was made for the national necessities by the barons
+of the Great Council. But the temptation of
+appropriating the growing wealth of the mercantile
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-153"></a>2-153]</span>
+
+class proved stronger than legal restrictions,
+and we find both Henry the Third and his son
+assuming a right of imposing taxes at pleasure and
+without any authority from the Council even over
+London itself. The burgesses could refuse indeed
+the invitation to contribute to the "free aids"
+demanded by the royal officers, but the suspension
+of their markets or trading privileges brought
+them in the end to submission. Each of these
+"free aids" however had to be extorted after a
+long wrangle between the borough and the officers
+of the Exchequer; and if the towns were driven
+to comply with what they considered an extortion
+they could generally force the Crown by evasions
+and delays to a compromise and abatement of its
+original demands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Burgesses in Parliament</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The same financial reasons therefore existed for
+desiring the presence of borough representatives
+in the Great Council as existed in the case of the
+shires; but it was the genius of Earl Simon which
+first broke through the older constitutional tradition
+and summoned two burgesses from each town
+to the Parliament of 1265. Time had indeed to
+pass before the large and statesmanlike conception
+of the great patriot could meet with full acceptance.
+Through the earlier part of Edward's reign we find
+a few instances of the presence of representatives
+from the towns, but their scanty numbers and the
+irregularity of their attendance show that they
+were summoned rather to afford financial information
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-154"></a>2-154]</span>
+
+to the Great Council than as representatives
+in it of an Estate of the Realm. But every year
+pleaded stronger and stronger for their inclusion,
+and in the Parliament of 1295 that of 1265 found
+itself at last reproduced. "It was from me that
+he learnt it," Earl Simon had cried, as he recognized
+the military skill of Edward's onset at Evesham;
+"it was from me that he learnt it," his spirit
+might have exclaimed as he saw the king gathering
+at last two burgesses "from every city, borough,
+and leading town" within his realm to sit side by
+side with the knights, nobles, and barons of the
+Great Council. To the Crown the change was
+from the first an advantageous one. The grants
+of subsidies by the burgesses in Parliament proved
+more profitable than the previous extortions of
+the Exchequer. The proportions of their grant
+generally exceeded that of the other estates.
+Their representatives too proved far more compliant
+with the royal will than the barons or
+knights of the shire; only on one occasion during
+Edward's reign did the burgesses waver from their
+general support of the Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Reluctance to attend</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was easy indeed to control them, for the
+selection of boroughs to be represented remained
+wholly in the king's hands, and their numbers
+could be increased or diminished at the king's
+pleasure. The determination was left to the
+sheriff, and at a hint from the royal Council a
+sheriff of Wilts would cut down the number of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-155"></a>2-155]</span>
+
+represented boroughs in his shire from eleven to
+three, or a sheriff of Bucks declare he could find
+but a single borough, that of Wycombe, within the
+bounds of his county. Nor was this exercise of
+the prerogative hampered by any anxiety on the
+part of the towns to claim representative privileges.
+It was hard to suspect that a power before which
+the Crown would have to bow lay in the ranks of
+soberly-clad traders, summoned only to assess the
+contributions of their boroughs, and whose attendance
+was as difficult to secure as it seemed burthensome
+to themselves and the towns who sent them.
+The mass of citizens took little or no part in their
+choice, for they were elected in the county court
+by a few of the principal burghers deputed for the
+purpose; but the cost of their maintenance, the
+two shillings a day paid to the burgess by his town
+as four were paid to the knight by his county, was
+a burden from which the boroughs made desperate
+efforts to escape. Some persisted in making no
+return to the sheriff. Some bought charters of
+exemption from the troublesome privilege. Of the
+165 who were summoned by Edward the First
+more than a third ceased to send representatives
+after a single compliance with the royal summons.
+During the whole time from the reign of Edward
+the Third to the reign of Henry the Sixth the
+sheriff of Lancashire declined to return the names
+of any boroughs at all within that county "on
+account of their poverty." Nor were the representatives
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-156"></a>2-156]</span>
+
+themselves more anxious to appear than
+their boroughs to send them. The busy country
+squire and the thrifty trader were equally reluctant
+to undergo the trouble and expense of a journey
+to Westminster. Legal measures were often
+necessary to ensure their presence. Writs still
+exist in abundance such as that by which Walter
+le Rous is "held to bail in eight oxen and four
+cart-horses to come before the King on the day
+specified" for attendance in Parliament. But in
+spite of obstacles such as these the presence of
+representatives from the boroughs may be regarded
+as continuous from the Parliament of 1295. As
+the representation of the lesser barons had widened
+through a silent change into that of the shire, so
+that of the boroughs--restricted in theory to those
+in the royal demesne--seems practically from
+Edward's time to have been extended to all who
+were in a condition to pay the cost of their representatives'
+support. By a change as silent within
+the Parliament itself the burgess, originally summoned
+to take part only in matters of taxation,
+was at last admitted to a full share in the deliberations
+and authority of the other orders of the
+State.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Parliament and the Clergy</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The admission of the burgesses and knights of
+the shire to the assembly of 1295 completed the
+fabric of our representative constitution. The
+Great Council of the Barons became the Parliament
+of the Realm. Every order of the state
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-157"></a>2-157]</span>
+
+found itself represented in this assembly, and took
+part in the grant of supplies, the work of legislation,
+and in the end the control of government.
+But though in all essential points the character of
+Parliament has remained the same from that time
+to this, there were some remarkable particulars
+in which the assembly of 1295 differed widely
+from the present Parliament at St. Stephen's.
+Some of these differences, such as those which
+sprang from the increased powers and changed
+relations of the different orders among themselves,
+we shall have occasion to consider at a later time.
+But a difference of a far more startling kind than
+these lay in the presence of the clergy. If there
+is any part in the parliamentary scheme of Edward
+the First which can be regarded as especially his
+own, it is his project for the representation of the
+ecclesiastical order. The King had twice at least
+summoned its "proctors" to Great Councils before
+1295, but it was then only that the complete
+representation of the Church was definitely
+organized by the insertion of a clause in the writ
+which summoned a bishop to Parliament requiring
+the personal attendance of all archdeacons, deans,
+or priors of cathedral churches, of a proctor for
+each cathedral chapter, and two for the clergy
+within his diocese. The clause is repeated in the
+writs of the present day, but its practical effect
+was foiled almost from the first by the resolute
+opposition of those to whom it was addressed.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-158"></a>2-158]</span>
+
+What the towns failed in doing the clergy actually
+did. Even when forced to comply with the royal
+summons, as they seem to have been forced during
+Edward's reign, they sat jealously by themselves,
+and their refusal to vote supplies in any but their
+own provincial assemblies, or convocations, of
+Canterbury and York left the Crown without a
+motive for insisting on their continued attendance.
+Their presence indeed, though still at times granted
+on some solemn occasions, became so pure a
+formality that by the end of the fifteenth century
+it had sunk wholly into desuetude. In their
+anxiety to preserve their existence as an isolated
+and privileged order the clergy flung away a power
+which, had they retained it, would have ruinously
+hampered the healthy developement of the state.
+To take a single instance, it is difficult to see how
+the great changes of the Reformation could have
+been brought about had a good half of the House
+of Commons consisted purely of churchmen, whose
+numbers would have been backed by the weight of
+their property as possessors of a third of the landed
+estates of the realm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Parliament at Westminster</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A hardly less important difference may be found
+in the gradual restriction of the meetings of
+Parliament to Westminster. The names of
+Edward's statutes remind us of its convocation at
+the most various quarters, at Winchester, Acton
+Burnell, Northampton. It was at a later time that
+Parliament became settled in the straggling village
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-159"></a>2-159]</span>
+
+which had grown up in the marshy swamp of the
+Isle of Thorns beside the palace whose embattled
+pile towered over the Thames and the new Westminster
+which was still rising in Edward's day on
+the site of the older church of the Confessor. It
+is possible that, while contributing greatly to its
+constitutional importance, this settlement of the
+Parliament may have helped to throw into the
+background its character as a supreme court of
+appeal. The proclamation by which it was called
+together invited "all who had any grace to demand
+of the King in Parliament, or any plaint to make
+of matters which could not be redressed or determined
+by ordinary course of law, or who had been
+in any way aggrieved by any of the King's
+ministers or justices or sheriffs, or their bailiffs, or
+any other officer, or have been unduly assessed,
+rated, charged, or surcharged to aids, subsidies,
+or taxes," to deliver their petitions to receivers
+who sat in the Great Hall of the Palace of Westminster.
+The petitions were forwarded to the
+King's Council, and it was probably the extension
+of the jurisdiction of that body and the rise of the
+Court of Chancery which reduced this ancient right
+of the subject to the formal election of "Triers of
+Petitions" at the opening of every new Parliament
+by the House of Lords, a usage which is still
+continued. But it must have been owing to some
+memory of the older custom that the subject
+always looked for redress against injuries from the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-160"></a>2-160]</span>
+
+Crown or its ministers to the Parliament of the
+realm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Conquest of Scotland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The subsidies granted by the Parliament of
+1295 furnished the king with the means of warfare
+with both Scotland and France while they
+assured him of the sympathy of his people in the
+contest. But from the first the reluctance of
+Edward to enter on the double war was strongly
+marked. The refusal of the Scotch baronage to
+obey his summons had been followed on Balliol's
+part by two secret steps which made a struggle
+inevitable, by a request to Rome for absolution
+from his oath of fealty and by a treaty of alliance
+with Philip the Fair. As yet however no open
+breach had taken place, and while Edward in 1296
+summoned his knighthood to meet him in the
+north he called a Parliament at Newcastle in the
+hope of bringing about an accommodation with the
+Scot king. But all thought of accommodation
+was roughly ended by the refusal of Balliol to
+attend the Parliament, by the rout of a small body
+of English troops, and by the Scotch investment
+of Carlisle. Taken as he was by surprise, Edward
+showed at once the vigour and rapidity of his
+temper. His army marched upon Berwick. The
+town was a rich and well-peopled one, and although
+a wooden stockade furnished its only rampart the
+serried ranks of citizens behind it gave little hope
+of an easy conquest. Their taunts indeed stung
+the king to the quick. As his engineers threw
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-161"></a>2-161]</span>
+
+up rough entrenchments for the besieging army
+the burghers bade him wait till he won the town
+before he began digging round it. "Kynge
+Edward," they shouted, "waune thou havest
+Berwick, pike thee; waune thou havest geten,
+dike thee." But the stockade was stormed with
+the loss of a single knight, nearly eight thousand
+of the citizens were mown down in a ruthless
+carnage, and a handful of Flemish traders who
+held the town-hall stoutly against all assailants
+were burned alive in it. The massacre only ceased
+when a procession of priests bore the host to the
+king's presence, praying for mercy. Edward with
+a sudden and characteristic burst of tears called off
+his troops; but the town was ruined for ever, and
+the greatest merchant city of northern Britain
+sank from that time into a petty seaport.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Berwick Edward received Balliol's formal
+defiance. "Has the fool done this folly?" the
+king cried in haughty scorn; "if he will not
+come to us, we will come to him." The terrible
+slaughter however had done its work, and his
+march northward was a triumphal progress.
+Edinburgh, Stirling, and Perth opened their gates,
+Bruce joined the English army, and Balliol himself
+surrendered and passed without a blow from his
+throne to an English prison. No further punishment
+however was exacted from the prostrate
+realm. Edward simply treated it as a fief, and
+declared its forfeiture to be the legal consequence
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-162"></a>2-162]</span>
+
+of Balliol's treason. It lapsed in fact to its
+suzerain; and its earls, barons, and gentry swore
+homage in Parliament at Berwick to Edward as
+their king. The sacred stone on which its older
+sovereigns had been installed, an oblong block
+of limestone which legend asserted to have been
+the pillow of Jacob as angels ascended and
+descended upon him, was removed from Scone and
+placed in Westminster by the shrine of the
+Confessor. It was enclosed by Edward's order in
+a stately seat, which became from that hour the
+coronation chair of English kings. To the king
+himself the whole business must have seemed
+another and easier conquest of Wales, and the
+mercy and just government which had followed
+his first success followed his second also. The
+government of the new dependency was entrusted
+to John of Warenne, Earl of Surrey, at the head
+of an English Council of Regency. Pardon was
+freely extended to all who had resisted the
+invasion, and order and public peace were rigidly
+enforced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Confirmation of the Charters</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the triumph, rapid and complete as it was,
+had more than exhausted the aids granted by the
+Parliament. The treasury was utterly drained.
+The struggle indeed widened as every month went
+on; the costly fight with the French in Gascony
+called for supplies, while Edward was planning a
+yet costlier attack on northern France with the aid
+of Flanders. Need drove him on his return from
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-163"></a>2-163]</span>
+
+Scotland in 1297 to measures of tyrannical extortion
+which seemed to recall the times of John.
+His first blow fell on the Church. At the close of
+1294 he had already demanded half their annual
+income from the clergy, and so terrible was his
+wrath at their resistance that the Dean of St.
+Paul's, who stood forth to remonstrate, dropped
+dead of sheer terror at his feet. "If any oppose
+the King's demand," said a royal envoy in the
+midst of the Convocation, "let him stand up that
+he may be noted as an enemy to the King's peace."
+The outraged Churchmen fell back on an untenable
+plea that their aid was due solely to Rome, and
+alleged the bull of "Clericis Laicos," issued by
+Boniface the Eighth at this moment, a bull which
+forbade the clergy to pay secular taxes from their
+ecclesiastical revenues, as a ground for refusing to
+comply with further taxation. In 1297 Archbishop
+Winchelsey refused on the ground of this
+bull to make any grant, and Edward met his
+refusal by a general outlawry of the whole order.
+The King's Courts were closed, and all justice
+denied to those who refused the king aid. By
+their actual plea the clergy had put themselves
+formally in the wrong, and the outlawry soon
+forced them to submission; but their aid did little
+to recruit the exhausted treasury. The pressure
+of the war steadily increased, and far wider measures
+of arbitrary taxation were needful to equip
+an expedition which Edward prepared to lead in
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-164"></a>2-164]</span>
+
+person to Flanders. The country gentlemen were
+compelled to take up knighthood or to compound
+for exemption from the burthensome honour, and
+forced contributions of cattle and corn were demanded
+from the counties. Edward no doubt
+purposed to pay honestly for these supplies, but
+his exactions from the merchant class rested on
+a deliberate theory of his royal rights. He looked
+on the customs as levied absolutely at his pleasure,
+and the export duty on wool--now the staple
+produce of the country--was raised to six times
+its former amount. Although he infringed no
+positive provision of charter or statute in his
+action, it was plain that his course really undid all
+that had been gained by the Barons' war. But
+the blow had no sooner been struck than Edward
+found stout resistance within his realm. The
+barons drew together and called a meeting for the
+redress of their grievances. The two greatest of
+the English nobles, Humfrey de Bohun, Earl of
+Hereford, and Roger Bigod, Earl of Norfolk, placed
+themselves at the head of the opposition. The
+first was Constable, the second Earl Marshal, and
+Edward bade them lead a force to Gascony as his
+lieutenants while he himself sailed to Flanders.
+Their departure would have left the Baronage
+without leaders, and the two earls availed themselves
+of a plea that they were not bound to foreign
+service save in attendance on the king to refuse
+obedience to the royal orders. "By God, Sir
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-165"></a>2-165]</span>
+
+Earl," swore the king to the Earl Marshal, "you
+shall either go or hang!" "By God, Sir King,"
+was the cool reply, "I will neither go nor hang!"
+Both parties separated in bitter anger; the king
+to seize fresh wool, to outlaw the clergy, and to
+call an army to his aid; the barons to gather in
+arms, backed by the excommunication of the
+Primate. But the strife went no further than
+words. Ere the Parliament he had convened
+could meet, Edward had discovered his own powerlessness;
+Winchelsey offered his mediation; and
+Edward confirmed the Great Charter and the
+Charter of Forests as the price of a grant from
+the clergy and a subsidy from the Commons. With
+one of those sudden revulsions of feeling of which
+his nature was capable the king stood before his
+people in Westminster Hall and owned with a
+burst of tears that he had taken their substance
+without due warrant of law. His passionate
+appeal to their loyalty wrested a reluctant assent
+to the prosecution, of the war, and in August
+Edward sailed for Flanders, leaving his son regent
+of the realm. But the crisis had taught the need
+of further securities against the royal power, and
+as Edward was about to embark the barons demanded
+his acceptance of additional articles to the
+Charter, expressly renouncing his right of taxing
+the nation without its own consent. The king
+sailed without complying, but Winchelsey joined
+the two earls and the citizens of London in forbidding
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-166"></a>2-166]</span>
+
+any levy of supplies till the Great Charter
+with these clauses was again confirmed, and the
+trouble in Scotland as well as the still pending
+strife with France left Edward helpless in the
+barons' hands. The Great Charter and the Charter
+of the Forests were solemnly confirmed by him at
+Ghent in November; and formal pardon was issued
+to the Earls of Hereford and Norfolk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Revolt of Scotland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The confirmation of the Charter, the renunciation
+of any right to the exactions by which the
+people were aggrieved, the pledge that the king
+would no more take "such aids, tasks, and prizes
+but by common assent of the realm," the promise
+not to impose on wool any heavy customs or
+"maltôte" without the same assent, was the close
+of the great struggle which had begun at Runnymede.
+The clauses so soon removed from the
+Great Charter were now restored; and, evade them
+as they might, the kings were never able to free
+themselves from the obligation to seek aid solely
+from the general consent of their subjects. It was
+Scotland which had won this victory for English
+freedom. At the moment when Edward and the
+earls stood face to face the king saw his work in
+the north suddenly undone. Both the justice and
+injustice of the new rule proved fatal to it. The
+wrath of the Scots, already kindled by the intrusion
+of English priests into Scotch livings and by the
+grant of lands across the border to English barons,
+was fanned to fury by the strict administration of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-167"></a>2-167]</span>
+
+law and the repression of feuds and cattle-lifting.
+The disbanding too of troops, which was caused
+by the penury of the royal exchequer, united with
+the licence of the soldiery who remained to quicken
+the national sense of wrong. The disgraceful submission
+of their leaders brought the people themselves
+to the front. In spite of a hundred years
+of peace the farmer of Fife or the Lowlands and
+the artizan of the towns remained stout-hearted
+Northumbrian Englishmen. They had never consented
+to Edward's supremacy, and their blood
+rose against the insolent rule of the stranger.
+The genius of an outlaw knight, William Wallace,
+saw in their smouldering discontent a hope of freedom
+for his country, and his daring raids on outlying
+parties of the English soldiery roused the
+country at last into revolt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Wallace</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of Wallace himself, of his life or temper, we
+know little or nothing; the very traditions of his
+gigantic stature and enormous strength are dim
+and unhistorical. But the instinct of the Scotch
+people has guided it aright in choosing him for its
+national hero. He was the first to assert freedom
+as a national birthright, and amidst the despair
+of nobles and priests to call the people itself to
+arms. At the head of an army drawn principally
+from the coast districts north of the Tay, which
+were inhabited by a population of the same blood
+as that of the Lowlands, Wallace in September
+1297 encamped near Stirling, the pass between the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-168"></a>2-168]</span>
+
+north and the south, and awaited the English
+advance. It was here that he was found by the
+English army. The offers of John of Warenne
+were scornfully rejected: "We have come," said
+the Scottish leader, "not to make peace, but to
+free our country." The position of Wallace behind
+a loop of Forth was in fact chosen with consummate
+skill. The one bridge which crossed the river was
+only broad enough to admit two horsemen abreast;
+and though the English army had been passing
+from daybreak but half its force was across at noon
+when Wallace closed on it and cut it after a short
+combat to pieces in sight of its comrades. The
+retreat of the Earl of Surrey over the border left
+Wallace head of the country he had freed, and for
+a few months he acted as "Guardian of the Realm"
+in Balliol's name, and headed a wild foray into
+Northumberland in which the barbarous cruelties
+of his men left a bitter hatred behind them which
+was to wreak its vengeance in the later bloodshed
+of the war. His reduction of Stirling Castle at
+last called Edward to the field. In the spring of
+1298 the king's diplomacy had at last wrung a
+truce for two years from Philip the Fair; and he
+at once returned to England to face the troubles
+in Scotland. Marching northward with a larger
+host than had ever followed his banner, he was
+enabled by treachery to surprise Wallace as he fell
+back to avoid an engagement, and to force him on
+the twenty-second of July to battle near Falkirk.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-169"></a>2-169]</span>
+
+The Scotch force consisted almost wholly of foot,
+and Wallace drew up his spearmen in four great
+hollow circles or squares, the outer ranks kneeling
+and the whole supported by bowmen within, while
+a small force of horse were drawn up as a reserve
+in the rear. It was the formation of Waterloo,
+the first appearance in our history since the day of
+Senlac of "that unconquerable British infantry"
+before which chivalry was destined to go down.
+For a moment it had all Waterloo's success. "I
+have brought you to the ring, hop (dance) if you
+can," are words of rough humour that reveal the
+very soul of the patriot leader, and the serried
+ranks answered well to his appeal. The Bishop of
+Durham who led the English van shrank wisely
+from the look of the squares. "Back to your mass,
+Bishop," shouted the reckless knights behind him,
+but the body of horse dashed itself vainly on the
+wall of spears. Terror spread through the English
+army, and its Welsh auxiliaries drew off in a body
+from the field. But the generalship of Wallace
+was met by that of the king. Drawing his bowmen
+to the front, Edward riddled the Scottish
+ranks with arrows and then hurled his cavalry
+afresh on the wavering line. In a moment all
+was over, the maddened knights rode in and out
+of the broken ranks, slaying without mercy.
+Thousands fell on the field, and Wallace himself
+escaped with difficulty, followed by a handful of
+men.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-170"></a>2-170]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Second Conquest of Scotland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But ruined as the cause of freedom seemed, his
+work was done. He had roused Scotland into life,
+and even a defeat like Falkirk left her unconquered.
+Edward remained master only of the ground he
+stood on: want of supplies forced him at last to
+retreat; and in the summer of the following year,
+1299, when Balliol, released from his English
+prison, withdrew into France, a regency of the
+Scotch nobles under Robert Bruce and John
+Comyn continued the struggle for independence.
+Troubles at home and danger from abroad stayed
+Edward's hand. The barons still distrusted his
+sincerity, and though at their demand he renewed
+the Confirmation in the spring of 1299, his attempt
+to add an evasive clause saving the right of the
+Crown proved the justice of their distrust. In
+spite of a fresh and unconditional renewal of it a
+strife over the Forest Charter went on till the
+opening of 1301 when a new gathering of the
+barons in arms with the support of Archbishop
+Winchelsey wrested from him its full execution.
+What aided freedom within was as of old the peril
+without. France was still menacing, and a claim
+advanced by Pope Boniface the Eighth at its
+suggestion to the feudal superiority over Scotland
+arrested a new advance of the king across the
+border. A quarrel however which broke out
+between Philip le Bel and the Papacy removed all
+obstacles. It enabled Edward to defy Boniface
+and to wring from France a treaty in which
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-171"></a>2-171]</span>
+
+Scotland was abandoned. In 1304 he resumed
+the work of invasion, and again the nobles flung
+down their arms as he marched to the North.
+Comyn, at the head of the Regency, acknowledged
+his sovereignty, and the surrender of Stirling
+completed the conquest of Scotland. But the
+triumph of Edward was only the prelude to the
+carrying out of his designs for knitting the two
+countries together by a generosity and wisdom
+which reveal the greatness of his statesmanship.
+A general amnesty was extended to all who had
+shared in the resistance. Wallace, who refused to
+avail himself of Edward's mercy, was captured
+and condemned to death at Westminster on charges
+of treason, sacrilege, and robbery. The head of
+the great patriot, crowned in mockery with a
+circlet of laurel, was placed upon London Bridge.
+But the execution of Wallace was the one blot on
+Edward's clemency. With a masterly boldness he
+entrusted the government of the country to a
+council of Scotch nobles, many of whom were
+freshly pardoned for their share in the war, and
+anticipated the policy of Cromwell by allotting
+ten representatives to Scotland in the Common
+Parliament of his realm. A Convocation was
+summoned at Perth for the election of these
+representatives, and a great judicial scheme which
+was promulgated in this assembly adopted the
+amended laws of King David as the base of a new
+legislation, and divided the country for judicial
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-172"></a>2-172]</span>
+
+purposes into four districts, Lothian, Galloway,
+the Highlands, and the land between the Highlands
+and the Forth, at the head of each of which were
+placed two justiciaries, the one English and the
+other Scotch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Rising of Bruce</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the conquest and settlement of Scotland
+the glory of Edward seemed again complete. The
+bitterness of his humiliation at home indeed still
+preyed upon him, and in measure after measure
+we see his purpose of renewing the strife with the
+baronage. In 1303 he found a means of evading
+his pledge to levy no new taxes on merchandise
+save by assent of the realm in a consent of the
+foreign merchants, whether procured by royal
+pressure or no, to purchase by stated payments
+certain privileges of trading. In this "New
+Custom" lay the origin of our import duties. A
+formal absolution from his promises which he
+obtained from Pope Clement the Fifth in 1305
+showed that he looked on his triumph in the North
+as enabling him to reopen the questions which he
+had yielded. But again Scotland stayed his hand.
+Only four months had passed since its submission,
+and he was preparing for a joint Parliament of
+the two nations at Carlisle, when the conquered
+country suddenly sprang again to arms. Its new
+leader was Robert Bruce, a grandson of one of
+the original claimants of the crown. The Norman
+house of Bruce formed a part of the Yorkshire
+baronage, but it had acquired through intermarriages
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-173"></a>2-173]</span>
+
+the Earldom of Carrick and the Lordship
+of Annandale. Both the claimant and his son had
+been pretty steadily on the English side in the
+contest with Balliol and Wallace, and Robert had
+himself been trained in the English court and stood
+high in the king's favour. But the withdrawal
+of Balliol gave a new force to his claims upon the
+crown, and the discovery of an intrigue which he
+had set on foot with the Bishop of St. Andrews so
+roused Edward's jealousy that Bruce fled for his
+life across the border. Early in 1306 he met
+Comyn, the Lord of Badenoch, to whose treachery
+he attributed the disclosure of his plans, in the
+church of the Grey Friars at Dumfries, and after
+the interchange of a few hot words struck him
+with his dagger to the ground. It was an outrage
+that admitted of no forgiveness, and Bruce for
+very safety was forced to assume the crown six
+weeks after in the Abbey of Scone. The news
+roused Scotland again to arms, and summoned
+Edward to a fresh contest with his unconquerable
+foe. But the murder of Comyn had changed the
+king's mood to a terrible pitilessness. He threatened
+death against all concerned in the outrage,
+and exposed the Countess of Buchan, who had set
+the crown on Bruce's head, in a cage or open
+chamber built for the purpose in one of the towers
+of Berwick. At the solemn feast which celebrated
+his son's knighthood Edward vowed on the swan
+which formed the chief dish at the banquet to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-174"></a>2-174]</span>
+
+devote the rest of his days to exact vengeance
+from the murderer himself. But even at the
+moment of the vow Bruce was already flying for
+his life to the western islands. "Henceforth" he
+said to his wife at their coronation "thou art
+Queen of Scotland and I King." "I fear" replied
+Mary Bruce "we are only playing at royalty like
+children in their games." The play was soon
+turned into bitter earnest. A small English force
+under Aymer de Valence sufficed to rout the
+disorderly levies which gathered round the new
+monarch, and the flight of Bruce left his followers
+at Edward's mercy. Noble after noble was sent
+to the block. The Earl of Athole pleaded kindred
+with royalty. "His only privilege," burst forth
+the king, "shall be that of being hanged on a
+higher gallows than the rest." Knights and priests
+were strung up side by side by the English
+justiciaries; while the wife and daughters of
+Robert Bruce were flung into Edward's prisons.
+Bruce himself had offered to capitulate to Prince
+Edward. But the offer only roused the old king
+to fury. "Who is so bold," he cried, "as to treat
+with our traitors without our knowledge?" and
+rising from his sick-bed he led his army northwards
+in the summer of 1307 to complete the conquest.
+But the hand of death was upon him, and in the
+very sight of Scotland the old man breathed his
+last at Burgh-upon-Sands.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-175"></a>2-175]</span>
+
+<div class="book">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk4"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4542669"></a>BOOK IV</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4542674"></a>THE PARLIAMENT</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4542680"></a>1307-1461</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-177"></a>2-177]</span>
+
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk4-Auth"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4542747"></a> </li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4542752"></a>AUTHORITIES FOR BOOK IV</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+For Edward the Second we have three important contemporaries:
+Thomas de la More, Trokelowe's Annals, and the
+life by a monk of Malmesbury printed by Hearne. The
+sympathies of the first are with the King, those of the last
+two with the Barons. Murimuth's short Chronicle is also
+contemporary. John Barbour's "Bruce," the great legendary
+storehouse for his hero's adventures, is historically
+worthless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Important as it is, the reign of Edward the Third is by
+no means fortunate in its annalists. The concluding part
+of the Chronicle of Walter of Hemingford or Heminburgh
+seems to have been jotted down as news of the passing
+events reached its author: it ends at the battle of Crécy.
+Hearne has published another contemporary account, that
+of Robert of Avesbury, which closes in 1356. A third
+account by Knyghton, a canon of Leicester, will be found
+in the collection of Twysden. At the end of this century
+and the beginning of the next the annals which had been
+carried on in the Abbey of St. Albans were thrown together
+by Walsingham in the "Historia Anglicana" which bears
+his name, a compilation whose history may be found in the
+prefaces to the "Chronica Monasterii S. Albani" issued in
+the Rolls Series. An anonymous chronicler whose work is
+printed in the 22nd volume of the "Archæologia" has given
+us the story of the Good Parliament, another account is
+preserved in the "Chronica Angliæ from 1328 to 1388,"
+published in the Rolls Series, and fresh light has been
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-178"></a>2-178]</span>
+
+recently thrown on the time by the publication of a
+Chronicle by Adam of Usk which extends from 1377 to
+1404. Fortunately the scantiness of historical narrative is
+compensated by the growing fulness and abundance of our
+State papers. Rymer's Foedera is rich in diplomatic and
+other documents for this period, and from this time we have
+a storehouse of political and social information in the Parliamentary
+Rolls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the French war itself our primary authority is the
+Chronicle of Jehan le Bel, a canon of the church of St.
+Lambert of Liége, who himself served in Edward's campaign
+against the Scots and spent the rest of his life at the court
+of John of Hainault. Up to the Treaty of Brétigny, where
+it closes, Froissart has done little more than copy this work,
+making however large additions from his own enquiries,
+especially in the Flemish and Breton campaigns and in the
+account of Crécy. Froissart was himself a Hainaulter of
+Valenciennes; he held a post in Queen Philippa's household
+from 1361 to 1369, and under this influence produced in
+1373 the first edition of his well-known Chronicle. A later
+edition is far less English in tone, and a third version, begun
+by him in his old age after long absence from England, is
+distinctly French in its sympathies. Froissart's vivacity
+and picturesqueness blind us to the inaccuracy of his
+details; as an historical authority he is of little value. The
+"Fasciculi Zizaniorum" in the Rolls Series with the documents
+appended to it is a work of primary authority for
+the history of Wyclif and his followers: a selection from
+his English tracts has been made by Mr. T. Arnold for the
+University of Oxford, which has also published his "Trias."
+The version of the Bible that bears his name has been edited
+with a valuable preface by the Rev. J. Forshall and Sir F.
+Madden. William Langland's poem, "The Complaint of
+Piers the Ploughman" (edited by Mr. Skeat for the Early
+English Text Society), throws a flood of light on the social
+state of England after the Treaty of Brétigny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The "Annals of Richard the Second and Henry the
+Fourth," now published by the Master of the Rolls, are our
+main authority for the period which follows Edward's death.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-179"></a>2-179]</span>
+
+They serve as the basis of the St. Albans compilation which
+bears the name of Walsingham, and from which the "Life
+of Richard" by a monk of Evesham is for the most part
+derived. The same violent Lancastrian sympathy runs
+through Walsingham and the fifth book of Knyghton's
+Chronicle. The French authorities on the other hand are
+vehemently on Richard's side. Froissart, who ends at this
+time, is supplemented by the metrical history of Creton
+("Archæologia," vol. xx.), and by the "Chronique de la
+Traison et Mort de Richart" (English Historical Society),
+both works of French authors and published in France in
+the time of Henry the Fourth, probably with the aim of
+arousing French feeling against the House of Lancaster and
+the war-policy which it had revived. The popular feeling
+in England may be seen in "Political Songs from Edward
+III. to Richard III." (Rolls Series). A poem on "The Deposition
+of Richard II." which has been published by the
+Camden Society is now ascribed to William Langland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With Henry the Fifth our historic materials become
+more abundant. We have the "Gesta Henrici Quinti" by
+Titus Livius, a chaplain in the royal army; a life by Elmham,
+prior of Lenton, simpler in style but identical in
+arrangement and facts with the former work; a biography
+by Robert Redman; a metrical chronicle by Elmham (published
+in Rolls Series in "Memorials of Henry the Fifth");
+and the meagre chronicles of Hardyng and Otterbourne.
+The King's Norman campaigns may be studied in M.
+Puiseux's "Siége de Rouen" (Caen, 1867). The "Wars of
+the English in France" and Blondel's work "De Reductione
+Normanniæ" (both in Rolls Series) give ample information
+on the military side of this and the next reign. But with
+the accession of Henry the Sixth we again enter on a period
+of singular dearth in its historical authorities. The "Procès
+de Jeanne d'Arc" (published by the Société de l'Histoire de
+France) is the only real authority for her history. For
+English affairs we are reduced to the meagre accounts of
+William of Worcester, of the Continuator of the Crowland
+Chronicle, and of Fabyan. Fabyan is a London alderman
+with a strong bias in favour of the House of Lancaster, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-180"></a>2-180]</span>
+
+his work is useful for London only. The Continuator is
+one of the best of his class; and though connected with the
+house of York, the date of his work, which appeared soon
+after Bosworth Field, makes him fairly impartial; but he is
+sketchy and deficient in information. The more copious
+narrative of Polydore Vergil is far superior to these in
+literary ability, but of later date, and strongly Lancastrian
+in tone. For the struggle between Edward and Warwick,
+the valuable narrative of "The Arrival of Edward the
+Fourth" (Camden Society) may be taken as the official
+account on the royal side. The Paston Letters are the first
+instance in English history of a family correspondence, and
+throw great light on the social condition of the time.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-181"></a>2-181]</span>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk4-Ch1"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4543058"></a>CHAPTER I</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4543064"></a>EDWARD II</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4543070"></a>1307-1327</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Parliament and the Kings</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his calling together the estates of the realm
+Edward the First determined the course of English
+history. From the first moment of its appearance
+the Parliament became the centre of English
+affairs. The hundred years indeed which follow
+its assembly at Westminster saw its rise into a
+power which checked and overawed the Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the kings in whose reigns the Parliament
+gathered this mighty strength not one was likely
+to look with indifference on the growth of a rival
+authority, and the bulk of them were men who in
+other times would have roughly checked it. What
+held their hand was the need of the Crown. The
+century and a half that followed the gathering of
+the estates at Westminster was a time of almost
+continual war, and of the financial pressure that
+springs from war. It was indeed war that had
+gathered them. In calling his Parliament Edward
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-182"></a>2-182]</span>
+
+the First sought mainly an effective means of
+procuring supplies for that policy of national
+consolidation which had triumphed in Wales and
+which seemed to be triumphing in Scotland. But
+the triumph in Scotland soon proved a delusive
+one, and the strife brought wider strifes in its
+train. When Edward wrung from Balliol an
+acknowledgement of his suzerainty he foresaw
+little of the war with France, the war with Spain,
+the quarrel with the Papacy, the upgrowth of
+social, of political, of religious revolution within
+England itself, of which that acknowledgement
+was to be the prelude. But the thicker troubles
+gathered round England the more the royal
+treasury was drained, and now that arbitrary
+taxation was impossible the one means of filling it
+lay in a summons of the Houses. The Crown was
+chained to the Parliament by a tie of absolute
+need. From the first moment of parliamentary
+existence the life and power of the estates
+assembled at Westminster hung on the question
+of supplies. So long as war went on no ruler
+could dispense with the grants which fed the war
+and which Parliament alone could afford. But it
+was impossible to procure supplies save by redressing
+the grievances of which Parliament complained
+and by granting the powers which Parliament
+demanded. It was in vain that king after king,
+conscious that war bound them to the Parliament,
+strove to rid themselves of the war. So far was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-183"></a>2-183]</span>
+
+the ambition of our rulers from being the cause of
+the long struggle that, save in the one case of
+Henry the Fifth, the desperate effort of every
+ruler was to arrive at peace. Forced as they were
+to fight, their restless diplomacy strove to draw
+from victory as from defeat a means of escape
+from the strife that was enslaving the Crown.
+The royal Council, the royal favourites, were
+always on the side of peace. But fortunately for
+English freedom peace was impossible. The pride
+of the English people, the greed of France, foiled
+every attempt at accommodation. The wisest
+ministers sacrificed themselves in vain. King
+after king patched up truces which never grew
+into treaties, and concluded marriages which
+brought fresh discord instead of peace. War went
+ceaselessly on, and with the march of war went on
+the ceaseless growth of the Parliament.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Robert Bruce</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The death of Edward the First arrested only
+for a moment the advance of his army to the
+north. The Earl of Pembroke led it across the
+border, and found himself master of the country
+without a blow. Bruce's career became that of a
+desperate adventurer, for even the Highland chiefs
+in whose fastnesses he found shelter were bitterly
+hostile to one who claimed to be king of their
+foes in the Lowlands. It was this adversity that
+transformed the murderer of Comyn into the noble
+leader of a nation's cause. Strong and of commanding
+presence, brave and genial in temper,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-184"></a>2-184]</span>
+
+Bruce bore the hardships of his career with a
+courage and hopefulness that never failed. In the
+legends that clustered round his name we see him
+listening in Highland glens to the bay of the
+bloodhounds on his track, or holding a pass single-handed
+against a crowd of savage clansmen.
+Sometimes the small band which clung to him
+were forced to support themselves by hunting and
+fishing, sometimes to break up for safety as their
+enemies tracked them to their lair. Bruce himself
+had more than once to fling off his coat-of-mail
+and scramble barefoot for very life up the crags.
+Little by little, however, the dark sky cleared.
+The English pressure relaxed. James Douglas,
+the darling of Scottish story, was the first of the
+Lowland Barons to rally to the Bruce, and his
+daring gave heart to the king's cause. Once he
+surprised his own house, which had been given to
+an Englishman, ate the dinner which was prepared
+for its new owner, slew his captives, and tossed
+their bodies on to a pile of wood at the castle gate.
+Then he staved in the wine-vats that the wine
+might mingle with their blood, and set house and
+wood-pile on fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward the Second</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A ferocity like this degraded everywhere the
+work of freedom; but the revival of the country
+went steadily on. Pembroke and the English
+forces were in fact paralyzed by a strife which had
+broken out in England between the new king and
+his baronage. The moral purpose which had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-185"></a>2-185]</span>
+
+raised his father to grandeur was wholly wanting
+in Edward the Second; he was showy, idle, and
+stubborn in temper; but he was far from being
+destitute of the intellectual quickness which
+seemed inborn in the Plantagenets. He had no
+love for his father, but he had seen him in the
+later years of his reign struggling against the
+pressure of the baronage, evading his pledges as
+to taxation, and procuring absolution from his
+promise to observe the clauses added to the
+Charter. The son's purpose was the same, that of
+throwing off what he looked on as the yoke of the
+baronage; but the means by which he designed to
+bring about his purpose was the choice of a
+minister wholly dependent on the Crown. We
+have already noticed the change by which the
+"clerks of the King's chapel," who had been the
+ministers of arbitrary government under the
+Norman and Angevin sovereigns, had been quietly
+superseded by the prelates and lords of the Continual
+Council. At the close of the late reign a
+direct demand on the part of the barons to nominate
+the great officers of state had been curtly
+rejected, but the royal choice had been practically
+limited in the selection of its ministers to the
+class of prelates and nobles, and however closely
+connected with royalty they might be such officers
+always to a great extent shared the feelings and
+opinions of their order. The aim of the young
+king seems to have been to undo the change
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-186"></a>2-186]</span>
+
+which had been silently brought about, and to
+imitate the policy of the contemporary sovereigns
+of France by choosing as his ministers men of an
+inferior position, wholly dependent on the Crown
+for their power, and representatives of nothing but
+the policy and interests of their master. Piers
+Gaveston, a foreigner sprung from a family of
+Guienne, had been his friend and companion
+during his father's reign, at the close of which he
+had been banished from the realm for his share in
+intrigues which divided Edward from his son. At
+the accession of the new king he was at once
+recalled, created Earl of Cornwall, and placed at
+the head of the administration. When Edward
+crossed the sea to wed Isabella of France, the
+daughter of Philip the Fair, a marriage planned
+by his father to provide against any further intervention
+of France in his difficulties with Scotland,
+the new minister was left as Regent in his room.
+The offence given by this rapid promotion was
+embittered by his personal temper. Gay, genial,
+thriftless, Gaveston showed in his first acts the
+quickness and audacity of Southern Gaul. The
+older ministers were dismissed, all claims of precedence
+or inheritance were set aside in the
+distribution of offices at the coronation, while
+taunts and defiances goaded the proud baronage
+to fury. The favourite was a fine soldier, and his
+lance unhorsed his opponents in tourney after
+tourney. His reckless wit flung nicknames about
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-187"></a>2-187]</span>
+
+the Court, the Earl of Lancaster was "the Actor,"
+Pembroke "the Jew," Warwick "the Black Dog."
+But taunt and defiance broke helplessly against
+the iron mass of the baronage. After a few
+months of power the formal demand of the
+Parliament for his dismissal could not be resisted,
+and in May 1308 Gaveston was formally banished
+from the realm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Thomas of Lancaster</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Edward was far from abandoning his
+favourite. In Ireland he was unfettered by the
+baronage, and here Gaveston found a refuge as
+the King's Lieutenant while Edward sought to
+obtain his recall by the intervention of France and
+the Papacy. But the financial pressure of the
+Scotch war again brought the king and his
+Parliament together in the spring of 1309. It
+was only by conceding the rights which his father
+had sought to establish of imposing import duties
+on the merchants by their own assent that he
+procured a subsidy. The firmness of the baronage
+sprang from their having found a head. In no
+point had the policy of Henry the Third more
+utterly broken down than in his attempt to
+weaken the power of the nobles by filling the
+great earldoms with kinsmen of the royal house.
+He had made Simon of Montfort his brother-in-law
+only to furnish a leader to the nation in the
+Barons' war. In loading his second son, Edmund
+Crouchback, with honours and estates he raised a
+family to greatness which overawed the Crown.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-188"></a>2-188]</span>
+
+Edmund had been created Earl of Lancaster;
+after Evesham he had received the forfeited
+Earldom of Leicester; he had been made Earl of
+Derby on the extinction of the house of Ferrers.
+His son, Thomas of Lancaster, was the son-in-law
+of Henry de Lacy, and was soon to add to these
+lordships the Earldom of Lincoln. And to the
+weight of these great baronies was added his
+royal blood. The father of Thomas had been a
+titular king of Sicily. His mother was dowager
+queen of Navarre. His half-sister by the mother's
+side was wife of the French king Philip le Bel
+and mother of the English queen Isabella. He was
+himself a grandson of Henry the Third and not
+far from the succession to the throne. Had Earl
+Thomas been a wiser and a nobler man, his adhesion
+to the cause of the baronage might have guided
+the king into a really national policy. As it was
+his weight proved irresistible. When Edward at
+the close of the Parliament recalled Gaveston the
+Earl of Lancaster withdrew from the royal
+Council, and a Parliament which met in the
+spring of 1310 resolved that the affairs of the
+realm should be entrusted for a year to a body of
+twenty-one "Ordainers" with Archbishop Winchelsey
+at their head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward and the Ordainers</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Edward with Gaveston withdrew sullenly to
+the North. A triumph in Scotland would have
+given him strength to baffle the Ordainers, but he
+had little of his father's military skill, the wasted
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-189"></a>2-189]</span>
+
+country made it hard to keep an army together,
+and after a fruitless campaign he fell back to his
+southern realm to meet the Parliament of 1311
+and the "Ordinances" which the twenty-one laid
+before it. By this long and important statute
+Gaveston was banished, other advisers were driven
+from the Council, and the Florentine bankers whose
+loans had enabled Edward to hold the baronage at
+bay sent out of the realm. The customs duties
+imposed by Edward the First were declared to be
+illegal. Its administrative provisions showed the
+relations which the barons sought to establish between
+the new Parliament and the Crown. Parliaments
+were to be called every year, and in these
+assemblies the king's servants were to be brought,
+if need were, to justice. The great officers of state
+were to be appointed with the counsel and consent
+of the baronage, and to be sworn in Parliament.
+The same consent of the barons in Parliament was
+to be needful ere the king could declare war or
+absent himself from the realm. As the Ordinances
+show, the baronage still looked on Parliament
+rather as a political organization of the nobles than
+as a gathering of the three Estates of the realm.
+The lower clergy pass unnoticed; the Commons
+are regarded as mere taxpayers whose part was
+still confined to the presentation of petitions of
+grievances and the grant of money. But even in
+this imperfect fashion the Parliament was a real
+representation of the country. The barons no
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-190"></a>2-190]</span>
+
+longer depended for their force on the rise of some
+active leader, or gathered in exceptional assemblies
+to wrest reforms from the Crown by threat of war.
+Their action was made regular and legal. Even if
+the Commons took little part in forming decisions,
+their force when formed hung on the assent of the
+knights and burgesses to them; and the grant
+which alone could purchase from the Crown the
+concessions which the Baronage demanded lay
+absolutely within the control of the Third Estate.
+It was this which made the king's struggles so
+fruitless. He assented to the Ordinances, and then
+withdrawing to the North recalled Gaveston and
+annulled them. But Winchelsey excommunicated
+the favourite, and the barons, gathering in arms,
+besieged him in Scarborough. His surrender in
+May 1312 ended the strife. The "Black Dog" of
+Warwick had sworn that the favourite should feel
+his teeth; and Gaveston flung himself in vain at
+the feet of the Earl of Lancaster, praying for pity
+"from his gentle lord." In defiance of the terms
+of his capitulation he was beheaded on Blacklow
+Hill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Bannockburn</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The king's burst of grief was as fruitless as his
+threats of vengeance; a feigned submission of the
+conquerors completed the royal humiliation, and
+the barons knelt before Edward in Westminster
+Hall to receive a pardon which seemed the deathblow
+of the royal power. But if Edward was
+powerless to conquer the baronage he could still
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-191"></a>2-191]</span>
+
+by evading the observance of the Ordinances
+throw the whole realm into confusion. The two
+years that follow Gaveston's death are among the
+darkest in our history. A terrible succession of
+famines intensified the suffering which sprang from
+the utter absence of all rule as dissension raged
+between the barons and the king. At last a
+common peril drew both parties together. The
+Scots had profited by the English troubles, and
+Bruce's "harrying of Buchan" after his defeat of
+its Earl, who had joined the English army, fairly
+turned the tide of success in his favour. Edinburgh,
+Roxburgh, Perth, and most of the Scotch fortresses
+fell one by one into King Robert's hands. The
+clergy met in council and owned him as their lawful
+lord. Gradually the Scotch barons who still
+held to the English cause were coerced into submission,
+and Bruce found himself strong enough
+to invest Stirling, the last and the most important
+of the Scotch fortresses which held out for Edward.
+Stirling was in fact the key of Scotland, and its
+danger roused England out of its civil strife to an
+effort for the recovery of its prey. At the close
+of 1313 Edward recognized the Ordinances, and a
+liberal grant from the Parliament enabled him to
+take the field. Lancaster indeed still held aloof
+on the ground that the king had not sought the
+assent of Parliament to the war, but thirty thousand
+men followed Edward to the North, and a host of
+wild marauders were summoned from Ireland and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-192"></a>2-192]</span>
+
+Wales. The army which Bruce gathered to oppose
+this inroad was formed almost wholly of footmen,
+and was stationed to the south of Stirling on a
+rising ground flanked by a little brook, the Bannockburn,
+which gave its name to the engagement.
+The battle took place on the twenty-fourth of June
+1314. Again two systems of warfare were brought
+face to face as they had been brought at Falkirk,
+for Robert like Wallace drew up his forces in
+hollow squares or circles of spearmen. The English
+were dispirited at the very outset by the failure of
+an attempt to relieve Stirling and by the issue of
+a single combat between Bruce and Henry de
+Bohun, a knight who bore down upon him as he
+was riding peacefully along the front of his army.
+Robert was mounted on a small hackney and held
+only a light battle-axe in his hand, but warding off
+his opponent's spear he cleft his skull with so
+terrible a blow that the handle of his axe was
+shattered in his grasp. At the opening of the
+battle the English archers were thrown forward to
+rake the Scottish squares, but they were without
+support and were easily dispersed by a handful of
+horse whom Bruce held in reserve for the purpose.
+The body of men-at-arms next flung themselves on
+the Scottish front, but their charge was embarrassed
+by the narrow space along which the line was
+forced to move, and the steady resistance of the
+squares soon threw the knighthood into disorder.
+"The horses that were stickit," says an exulting
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-193"></a>2-193]</span>
+
+Scotch writer, "rushed and reeled right rudely."
+In the moment of failure the sight of a body of
+camp-followers, whom they mistook for reinforcements
+to the enemy, spread panic through the
+English host. It broke in a headlong rout. Its
+thousands of brilliant horsemen were soon floundering
+in pits which guarded the level ground to
+Bruce's left, or riding in wild haste for the border.
+Few however were fortunate enough to reach it.
+Edward himself, with a body of five hundred
+knights, succeeded in escaping to Dunbar and the
+sea. But the flower of his knighthood fell into
+the hands of the victors, while the Irishry and the
+footmen were ruthlessly cut down by the country
+folk as they fled. For centuries to come the rich
+plunder of the English camp left its traces on the
+treasure-rolls and the vestment-rolls of castle and
+abbey throughout the Lowlands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Fall of Lancaster</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bannockburn left Bruce the master of Scotland:
+but terrible as the blow was England could not
+humble herself to relinquish her claim on the
+Scottish crown. Edward was eager indeed for a
+truce, but with equal firmness Bruce refused all
+negotiation while the royal title was withheld from
+him and steadily pushed on the recovery of his
+southern dominions. His progress was unhindered.
+Bannockburn left Edward powerless, and Lancaster
+at the head of the Ordainers became supreme.
+But it was still impossible to trust the king or to
+act with him, and in the dead-lock of both parties
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-194"></a>2-194]</span>
+
+the Scots plundered as they would. Their ravages
+in the North brought shame on England such as it
+had never known. At last Bruce's capture of
+Berwick in the spring of 1318 forced the king to
+give way. The Ordinances were formally accepted,
+an amnesty granted, and a small number of peers
+belonging to the barons' party added to the great
+officers of state. Had a statesman been at the
+head of the baronage the weakness of Edward
+might have now been turned to good purpose.
+But the character of the Earl of Lancaster seems
+to have fallen far beneath the greatness of his
+position. Distrustful of his cousin, yet himself incapable
+of governing, he stood sullenly aloof from
+the royal Council and the royal armies, and Edward
+was able to lay his failure in recovering Berwick
+during the campaign of 1319 to the Earl's charge.
+His influence over the country was sensibly
+weakened; and in this weakness the new advisers
+on whom the king was leaning saw a hope of
+destroying his power. These were a younger and
+elder Hugh Le Despenser, son and grandson of the
+Justiciar who had fallen beside Earl Simon at
+Evesham. Greedy and ambitious as they may
+have been, they were able men, and their policy
+was of a higher stamp than the wilful defiance of
+Gaveston. It lay, if we may gather it from the
+faint indications which remain, in a frank recognition
+of the power of the three Estates as opposed
+to the separate action of the baronage. The rise
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-195"></a>2-195]</span>
+
+of the younger Hugh, on whom the king bestowed
+the county of Glamorgan with the hand of one of
+its coheiresses, a daughter of Earl Gilbert of Gloucester,
+was rapid enough to excite general jealousy;
+and in 1321 Lancaster found little difficulty in
+extorting by force of arms his exile from the kingdom.
+But the tide of popular sympathy was already
+wavering, and it was turned to the royal
+cause by an insult offered to the queen, against
+whom Lady Badlesmere closed the doors of Ledes
+Castle. The unexpected energy shown by Edward
+in avenging this insult gave fresh strength to his
+cause. At the opening of 1322 he found himself
+strong enough to recall Despenser, and when Lancaster
+convoked the baronage to force him again
+into exile, the weakness of their party was shown
+by some negotiations into which the Earl entered
+with the Scots and by his precipitate retreat to
+the north on the advance of the royal army. At
+Boroughbridge his forces were arrested and dispersed,
+and Thomas himself, brought captive before
+Edward at Pontefract, was tried and condemned
+to death as a traitor. "Have mercy on me, King
+of Heaven," cried Lancaster, as, mounted on a grey
+pony without a bridle, he was hurried to execution,
+"for my earthly king has forsaken me." His
+death was followed by that of a number of his
+adherents and by the captivity of others; while a
+Parliament at York annulled the proceedings
+against the Despensers and repealed the Ordinances.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-196"></a>2-196]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The
+Despensers</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is to this Parliament however, and perhaps to
+the victorious confidence of the royalists, that we
+owe the famous provision which reveals the policy
+of the Despensers, the provision that all laws concerning
+"the estate of our Lord the King and his
+heirs or for the estate of the realm and the people
+shall be treated, accorded, and established in Parliaments
+by our Lord the King and by the consent
+of the prelates, earls, barons, and commonalty of
+the realm according as hath been hitherto accustomed."
+It would seem from the tenor of this
+remarkable enactment that much of the sudden
+revulsion of popular feeling had been owing to the
+assumption of all legislative action by the baronage
+alone. The same policy was seen in a reissue in
+the form of a royal Ordinance of some of the most
+beneficial provisions of the Ordinances which had
+been formally repealed. But the arrogance of the
+Despensers gave new offence; and the utter failure
+of a fresh campaign against Scotland again weakened
+the Crown. The barbarous forays in which the
+borderers under Earl Douglas were wasting Northumberland
+woke a general indignation; and a
+grant from the Parliament at York enabled Edward
+to march with a great army to the North. But
+Bruce as of old declined an engagement till the
+wasted Lowlands starved the invaders into a
+ruinous retreat. The failure forced England in the
+spring of 1323 to stoop to a truce for thirteen
+years, in the negotiation of which Bruce was suffered
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-197"></a>2-197]</span>
+
+to take the royal title. We see in this act
+of the Despensers the first of a series of such
+attempts by which minister after minister strove
+to free the Crown from the bondage under which
+the war-pressure laid it to the growing power of
+Parliament; but it ended, as these after attempts
+ended, only in the ruin of the counsellors who
+planned it. The pride of the country had been
+roused by the struggle, and the humiliation of such
+a truce robbed the Crown of its temporary popularity.
+It led the way to the sudden catastrophe
+which closed this disastrous reign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Isabella</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his struggle with the Scots Edward, like his
+father, had been hampered not only by internal
+divisions but by the harassing intervention of
+France. The rising under Bruce had been backed
+by French aid as well as by a revival of the old
+quarrel over Guienne, and on the accession of
+Charles the Fourth in 1322 a demand of homage
+for Ponthieu and Gascony called Edward over sea.
+But the Despensers dared not let him quit the
+realm, and a fresh dispute as to the right of possession
+in the Agénois brought about the seizure of the
+bulk of Gascony by a sudden attack on the part of
+the French. The quarrel verged upon open war,
+and to close it Edward's queen, Isabella, a sister of
+the French king, undertook in 1325 to revisit her
+home and bring about a treaty of peace between
+the two countries. Isabella hated the Despensers;
+she was alienated from her husband; but hatred
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-198"></a>2-198]</span>
+
+and alienation were as yet jealously concealed. At
+the close of the year the terms of peace seemed to
+be arranged; and though declining to cross the sea,
+Edward evaded the difficulty created by the demand
+for personal homage by investing his son with the
+Duchies of Aquitaine and Gascony, and despatching
+him to join his mother at Paris. The boy did
+homage to King Charles for the two Duchies, the
+question of the Agénois being reserved for legal
+decision, and Edward at once recalled his wife and
+son to England. Neither threats nor prayers however
+could induce either wife or child to return to
+his court. Roger Mortimer, the most powerful of
+the Marcher barons and a deadly foe to the Despensers,
+had taken refuge in France; and his influence
+over the queen made her the centre of a
+vast conspiracy. With the young Edward in her
+hands she was able to procure soldiers from the
+Count of Hainault by promising her son's hand to
+his daughter; the Italian bankers supplied funds;
+and after a year's preparation the Queen set sail in
+the autumn of 1326. A secret conspiracy of the
+baronage was revealed when the primate and nobles
+hurried to her standard on her landing at Orwell.
+Deserted by all and repulsed by the citizens of
+London whose aid he implored, the king fled
+hastily to the west and embarked with the Despensers
+for Lundy Island, which Despenser had
+fortified as a possible refuge; but contrary winds
+flung him again on the Welsh coast, where he fell
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-199"></a>2-199]</span>
+
+into the hands of Earl Henry of Lancaster, the
+brother of the Earl whom they had slain. The
+younger Despenser, who accompanied him, was at
+once hung on a gibbet fifty feet high, and the
+king placed in ward at Kenilworth till his fate
+could be decided by a Parliament summoned for
+that purpose at Westminster in January 1327.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Deposition
+of Edward</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The peers who assembled fearlessly revived the
+constitutional usage of the earlier English freedom,
+and asserted their right to depose a king who had
+proved himself unworthy to rule. Not a voice
+was raised in Edward's behalf, and only four prelates
+protested when the young Prince was proclaimed
+king by acclamation and presented as
+their sovereign to the multitudes without. The
+revolution took legal form in a bill which charged
+the captive monarch with indolence, incapacity, the
+loss of Scotland, the violation of his coronation
+oath and oppression of the Church and baronage;
+and on the approval of this it was resolved that
+the reign of Edward of Caernarvon had ceased and
+that the crown had passed to his son, Edward of
+Windsor. A deputation of the Parliament proceeded
+to Kenilworth to procure the assent of the
+discrowned king to his own deposition, and Edward
+"clad in a plain black gown" bowed quietly to his
+fate. Sir William Trussel at once addressed him
+in words which better than any other mark the
+nature of the step which the Parliament had
+taken. "I, William Trussel, proctor of the earls,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-200"></a>2-200]</span>
+
+barons, and others, having for this full and sufficient
+power, do render and give back to you,
+Edward, once King of England, the homage and
+fealty of the persons named in my procuracy; and
+acquit and discharge them thereof in the best
+manner that law and custom will give. And I
+now make protestation in their name that they
+will no longer be in your fealty and allegiance, nor
+claim to hold anything of you as king, but will
+account you hereafter as a private person, without
+any manner of royal dignity." A significant act followed
+these emphatic words. Sir Thomas Blount,
+the steward of the household, broke his staff of
+office, a ceremony used only at a king's death,
+and declared that all persons engaged in the royal
+service were discharged. The act of Blount was
+only an omen of the fate which awaited the miserable
+king. In the following September he was
+murdered in Berkeley Castle.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-201"></a>2-201]</span>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk4-Ch2"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4544333"></a>CHAPTER II</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4544338"></a>EDWARD THE THIRD</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4544344"></a>1327-1347</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Estate of the Commons</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The deposition of Edward the Second proclaimed
+to the world the power which the English Parliament
+had gained. In thirty years from their first
+assembly at Westminster the Estates had wrested
+from the Crown the last relic of arbitrary taxation,
+had forced on it new ministers and a new system
+of government, had claimed a right of confirming
+the choice of its councillors and of punishing their
+misconduct, and had established the principle that
+redress of grievances precedes a grant of supply.
+Nor had the time been less important in the internal
+growth of Parliament. Step by step the practical
+sense of the Houses themselves completed the
+work of Edward by bringing about change after
+change in its composition. The very division
+into a House of Lords and a House of Commons
+formed no part of the original plan of Edward the
+First; in the earlier Parliaments each of the four
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-202"></a>2-202]</span>
+
+orders of clergy, barons, knights, and burgesses
+met, deliberated, and made their grants apart from
+each other. This isolation however of the Estates
+soon showed signs of breaking down. Though the
+clergy held steadily aloof from any real union with
+its fellow-orders, the knights of the shire were
+drawn by the similarity of their social position into
+a close connexion with the lords. They seem in
+fact to have been soon admitted by the baronage
+to an almost equal position with themselves,
+whether as legislators or counsellors of the Crown.
+The burgesses on the other hand took little part
+at first in Parliamentary proceedings, save in those
+which related to the taxation of their class. But
+their position was raised by the strifes of the reign
+of Edward the Second when their aid was needed
+by the baronage in its struggle with the Crown;
+and their right to share fully in all legislative
+action was asserted in the statute of 1322. From
+this moment no proceedings can have been considered
+as formally legislative save those conducted
+in full Parliament of all the estates. In subjects
+of public policy however the barons were still regarded
+as the sole advisers of the Crown, though the
+knights of the shire were sometimes consulted with
+them. But the barons and knighthood were not
+fated to be drawn into a single body whose weight
+would have given an aristocratic impress to the
+constitution. Gradually, through causes with
+which we are imperfectly acquainted, the knights
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-203"></a>2-203]</span>
+
+of the shire drifted from their older connexion with
+the baronage into so close and intimate a union
+with the representatives of the towns that at the
+opening of the reign of Edward the Third the two
+orders are found grouped formally together, under
+the name of "The Commons." It is difficult to
+overestimate the importance of this change. Had
+Parliament remained broken up into its four orders
+of clergy, barons, knights, and citizens, its power
+would have been neutralized at every great crisis by
+the jealousies and difficulty of co-operation among
+its component parts. A permanent union of the
+knighthood and the baronage on the other hand
+would have converted Parliament into the mere
+representative of an aristocratic caste, and would
+have robbed it of the strength which it has drawn
+from its connexion with the great body of the
+commercial classes. The new attitude of the
+knighthood, their social connexion as landed gentry
+with the baronage, their political union with the
+burgesses, really welded the three orders into one,
+and gave that unity of feeling and action to our
+Parliament on which its power has ever since
+mainly depended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Scotch War</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The weight of the two Houses was seen in
+their settlement of the new government by the
+nomination of a Council with Earl Henry of
+Lancaster at its head. The Council had at once
+to meet fresh difficulties in the North. The truce
+so recently made ceased legally with Edward's
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-204"></a>2-204]</span>
+
+deposition; and the withdrawal of his royal title
+in further offers of peace warned Bruce of the
+new temper of the English rulers. Troops
+gathered on either side, and the English Council
+sought to pave the way for an attack by dividing
+Scotland against itself. Edward Balliol, a son of
+the former king John, was solemnly received as
+a vassal-king of Scotland at the English court.
+Robert was disabled by leprosy from taking the
+field in person, but the insult roused him to hurl
+his marauders again over the border under Douglas
+and Sir Thomas Randolph. The Scotch army has
+been painted for us by an eye-witness whose
+description is embodied in the work of Jehan le
+Bel. "It consisted of four thousand men-at-arms,
+knights, and esquires, well mounted, besides
+twenty thousand men bold and hardy, armed after
+the manner of their country, and mounted upon
+little hackneys that are never tied up or dressed,
+but turned immediately after the day's march to
+pasture on the heath or in the fields.... They
+bring no carriages with them on account of the
+mountains they have to pass in Northumberland,
+neither do they carry with them any provisions of
+bread or wine, for their habits of sobriety are such
+in time of war that they will live for a long time
+on flesh half-sodden without bread, and drink the
+river water without wine. They have therefore
+no occasion for pots or pans, for they dress the
+flesh of the cattle in their skins after they have
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-205"></a>2-205]</span>
+
+flayed them, and being sure to find plenty of them
+in the country which they invade they carry none
+with them. Under the flaps of his saddle each
+man carries a broad piece of metal, behind him a
+little bag of oatmeal: when they have eaten too
+much of the sodden flesh and their stomach appears
+weak and empty, they set this plate over the fire,
+knead the meal with water, and when the plate is
+hot put a little of the paste upon it in a thin cake
+like a biscuit, which they eat to warm their
+stomachs. It is therefore no wonder that they
+perform a longer day's march than other soldiers."
+Though twenty thousand horsemen and forty
+thousand foot marched under their boy-king to
+protect the border, the English troops were utterly
+helpless against such a foe as this. At one time
+the whole army lost its way in the border wastes:
+at another all traces of the enemy disappeared,
+and an offer of knighthood and a hundred marks
+was made to any who could tell where the
+Scots were encamped. But when they were
+found their position behind the Wear proved
+unassailable, and after a bold sally on the English
+camp Douglas foiled an attempt at intercepting
+him by a clever retreat. The English levies broke
+hopelessly up, and a fresh foray into Northumberland
+forced the English Court in 1328 to submit
+to peace. By the treaty of Northampton which
+was solemnly confirmed by Parliament in September
+the independence of Scotland was recognized,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-206"></a>2-206]</span>
+
+and Robert Bruce owned as its king.
+Edward formally abandoned his claim of feudal
+superiority over Scotland; while Bruce promised
+to make compensation for the damage done in the
+North, to marry his son David to Edward's sister
+Joan, and to restore their forfeited estates to
+those nobles who had sided with the English
+king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Fall of
+Mortimer</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the pride of England had been too much
+roused by the struggle with the Scots to bear this
+defeat easily, and the first result of the treaty of
+Northampton was the overthrow of the government
+which concluded it. This result was hastened by
+the pride of Roger Mortimer, who was now
+created Earl of March, and who had made himself
+supreme through his influence over Isabella and
+his exclusion of the rest of the nobles from all
+practical share in the administration of the realm.
+The first efforts to shake Roger's power were
+unsuccessful. The Earl of Lancaster stood, like
+his brother, at the head of the baronage; the
+parliamentary settlement at Edward's accession
+had placed him first in the royal Council; and it
+was to him that the task of defying Mortimer
+naturally fell. At the close of 1328 therefore
+Earl Henry formed a league with the Archbishop
+of Canterbury and with the young king's uncles,
+the Earls of Norfolk and Kent, to bring Mortimer
+to account for the peace with Scotland and the
+usurpation of the government as well as for the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-207"></a>2-207]</span>
+
+late king's murder, a murder which had been the
+work of his private partizans and which had
+profoundly shocked the general conscience. But
+the young king clave firmly to his mother, the
+Earls of Norfolk and Kent deserted to Mortimer,
+and powerful as it seemed the league broke up
+without result. A feeling of insecurity however
+spurred the Earl of March to a bold stroke at his
+opponents. The Earl of Kent, who was persuaded
+that his brother, Edward the Second, still lived a
+prisoner in Corfe Castle, was arrested on a charge
+of conspiracy to restore him to the throne, tried
+before a Parliament filled with Mortimer's adherents,
+and sent to the block. But the death of a
+prince of the royal blood roused the young king
+to resentment at the greed and arrogance of a
+minister who treated Edward himself as little
+more than a state-prisoner. A few months after
+his uncle's execution the king entered the Council
+chamber in Nottingham Castle with a force which
+he had introduced through a secret passage in the
+rock on which it stands, and arrested Mortimer
+with his own hands. A Parliament which was at
+once summoned condemned the Earl of March to
+a traitor's death, and in November 1330 he was
+beheaded at Tyburn, while the queen-mother was
+sent for the rest of her life into confinement at
+Castle Rising.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward and
+France</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Young as he was, and he had only reached his
+eighteenth year, Edward at once assumed the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-208"></a>2-208]</span>
+
+control of affairs. His first care was to restore
+good order throughout the country, which under
+the late government had fallen into ruin, and to
+free his hands by a peace with France for further
+enterprises in the North. A formal peace had
+been concluded by Isabella after her husband's
+fall; but the death of Charles the Fourth soon
+brought about new jealousies between the two
+courts. The three sons of Philip the Fair had
+followed him on the throne in succession, but all
+had now died without male issue, and Isabella, as
+Philip's daughter, claimed the crown for her son.
+The claim in any case was a hard one to make
+out. Though her brothers had left no sons, they
+had left daughters, and if female succession were
+admitted these daughters of Philip's sons would
+precede a son of Philip's daughter. Isabella met
+this difficulty by a contention that though females
+could transmit the right of succession they could
+not themselves possess it, and that her son, as the
+nearest living male descendant of Philip the Fair,
+and born in the lifetime of the king from whom
+he claimed, could claim in preference to females
+who were related to Philip in as near a degree.
+But the bulk of French jurists asserted that only
+male succession gave right to the French throne.
+On such a theory the right inheritable from Philip
+the Fair was exhausted; and the crown passed to
+the son of Philip's younger brother, Charles of
+Valois, who in fact peacefully mounted the throne
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-209"></a>2-209]</span>
+
+as Philip the Sixth. Purely formal as the claim
+which Isabella advanced seems to have been, it
+revived the irritation between the two courts, and
+though Edward's obedience to a summons which
+Philip addressed to him to do homage for Aquitaine
+brought about an agreement that both
+parties should restore the gains they had made
+since the last treaty the agreement was never
+carried out. Fresh threats of war ended in the
+conclusion of a new treaty of peace, but the
+question whether liege or simple homage was due
+for the duchies remained unsettled when the fall
+of Mortimer gave the young king full mastery of
+affairs. His action was rapid and decisive. Clad
+as a merchant, and with but fifteen horsemen at
+his back, Edward suddenly made his appearance
+in 1331 at the French court and did homage as
+fully as Philip required. The question of the
+Agénois remained unsettled, though the English
+Parliament insisted that its decision should rest
+with negotiation and not with war, but on all
+other points a complete peace was made; and the
+young king rode back with his hands free for an
+attack which he was planning on the North.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">New Scotch
+War</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The provisions of the Treaty of Northampton
+for the restitution of estates had never been fully
+carried out. Till this was done the English court
+held that the rights of feudal superiority over
+Scotland which it had yielded in the treaty
+remained in force; and at this moment an opening
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-210"></a>2-210]</span>
+
+seemed to present itself for again asserting these
+rights with success. Fortune seemed at last to
+have veered to the English side. The death of
+Robert Bruce only a year after the Treaty of
+Northampton left the Scottish throne to his son
+David, a child of but eight years old. The death
+of the king was followed by the loss of Randolph
+and Douglas; and the internal difficulties of the
+realm broke out in civil strife. To the great
+barons on either side the border the late peace
+involved serious losses, for many of the Scotch
+houses held large estates in England as many of
+the English lords held large estates in Scotland,
+and although the treaty had provided for their
+claims they had in each case been practically set
+aside. It is this discontent of the barons at the
+new settlement which explains the sudden success
+of Edward Balliol in a snatch which he made at
+the Scottish throne. Balliol's design was known
+at the English court, where he had found shelter for
+some years; and Edward, whether sincerely or
+no, forbade his barons from joining him and posted
+troops on the border to hinder his crossing it.
+But Balliol found little difficulty in making his
+attack by sea. He sailed from England at the
+head of a body of nobles who claimed estates in
+the North, landed in August 1332 on the shores of
+Fife, and after repulsing with immense loss an
+army which attacked him near Perth was crowned
+at Scone two months after his landing, while
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-211"></a>2-211]</span>
+
+David Bruce fled helplessly to France. Edward
+had given no open aid to this enterprise, but the
+crisis tempted his ambition, and he demanded and
+obtained from Balliol an acknowledgement of the
+English suzerainty. The acknowledgement however
+was fatal to Balliol himself. Surprised at
+Annan by a party of Scottish nobles, their sudden
+attack drove him in December over the border
+after a reign of but five months; and Berwick,
+which he had agreed to surrender to Edward, was
+strongly garrisoned against an English attack.
+The sudden breakdown of his vassal-king left
+Edward face to face with a new Scotch war. The
+Parliament which he summoned to advise on the
+enforcement of his claim showed no wish to plunge
+again into the contest and met him only with
+evasions and delays. But Edward had gone too
+far to withdraw. In March 1333 he appeared
+before Berwick, and besieged the town. A Scotch
+army under the regent, Sir Archibald Douglas,
+brother to the famous Sir James, advanced to its
+relief in July and attacked a covering force which
+was encamped on the strong position of Halidon
+Hill. The English bowmen however vindicated
+the fame they had first won at Falkirk and were
+soon to crown in the victory of Crécy. The
+Scotch only struggled through the marsh which
+covered the English front to be riddled with a
+storm of arrows and to break in utter rout. The
+battle decided the fate of Berwick. From that
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-212"></a>2-212]</span>
+
+time the town has remained English territory. It
+was in fact the one part of Edward's conquests
+which was preserved in the end by the English
+crown. But fragment as it was, it was always
+viewed legally as representing the realm of which it
+once formed a part. As Scotland, it had its
+chancellor, chamberlain, and other officers of State:
+and the peculiar heading of Acts of Parliament
+enacted for England "and the town of Berwick-upon-Tweed"
+still preserves the memory of its
+peculiar position. But the victory did more than
+give Berwick to England. The defeat of Douglas
+was followed by the submission of a large part of
+the Scotch nobles, by the flight of the boy-king
+David, and by the return of Balliol unopposed to
+the throne. Edward exacted a heavy price for
+his aid. All Scotland south of the Firth of Forth
+was ceded to England, and Balliol did homage as
+vassal-king for the rest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Scotland
+freed</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was at the moment of this submission that
+the young king reached the climax of his success.
+A king at fourteen, a father at seventeen, he had
+carried out at eighteen a political revolution in
+the overthrow of Mortimer, and restored at
+twenty-two the ruined work of his grandfather.
+The northern frontier was carried to its old line
+under the Northumbrian kings. His kingdom
+within was peaceful and orderly; and the strife
+with France seemed at an end. During the next
+three years Edward persisted in the line of policy
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-213"></a>2-213]</span>
+
+he had adopted, retaining his hold over Southern
+Scotland, aiding his sub-king Balliol in campaign
+after campaign against the despairing efforts of
+the nobles who still adhered to the house of
+Bruce, a party who were now headed by Robert
+the Steward of Scotland and by Earl Randolph
+of Moray. His perseverance was all but crowned
+with success, when Scotland was again saved by
+the intervention of France. The successes of
+Edward roused anew the jealousy of the French
+court. David Bruce found a refuge with Philip;
+French ships appeared off the Scotch coast and
+brought aid to the patriot nobles; and the old
+legal questions about the Agénois and Aquitaine
+were mooted afresh by the French council. For
+a time Edward staved off the contest by repeated
+embassies; but his refusal to accept Philip as a
+mediator between England and the Scots stirred
+France to threats of war. In 1335 fleets gathered
+on its coast; descents were made on the English
+shores; and troops and galleys were hired in
+Italy and the north for an invasion of England.
+The mere threat of war saved Scotland. Edward's
+forces there were drawn to the south to meet the
+looked-for attack from across the Channel; and
+the patriot party freed from their pressure at
+once drew together again. The actual declaration
+of war against France at the close of 1337 was
+the knell of Balliol's greatness; he found himself
+without an adherent and withdrew two years
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-214"></a>2-214]</span>
+
+later to the court of Edward, while David returned
+to his kingdom in 1342 and won back the
+chief fastnesses of the Lowlands. From that
+moment the freedom of Scotland was secured.
+From a war of conquest and patriotic resistance
+the struggle died into a petty strife between two
+angry neighbours, which became a mere episode
+in the larger contest which it had stirred between
+England and France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The
+Hundred
+Years War</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether in its national or in its European
+bearings it is difficult to overestimate the importance
+of the contest which was now to open
+between these two nations. To England it
+brought a social, a religious, and in the end
+a political revolution. The Peasant Revolt,
+Lollardry, and the New Monarchy were direct
+issues of the Hundred Years War. With it
+began the military renown of England; with it
+opened her struggle for the mastery of the seas.
+The pride begotten by great victories and a
+sudden revelation of warlike prowess roused the
+country not only to a new ambition, a new
+resolve to assert itself as a European power, but
+to a repudiation of the claims of the Papacy and
+an assertion of the ecclesiastical independence both
+of Church and Crown which paved the way for
+and gave its ultimate form to the English Reformation.
+The peculiar shape which English
+warfare assumed, the triumph of the yeoman and
+archer over noble and knight, gave new force to
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-215"></a>2-215]</span>
+
+the political advance of the Commons. On the
+other hand the misery of the war produced the
+first great open feud between labour and capital.
+The glory of Crécy or Poitiers was dearly bought
+by the upgrowth of English pauperism. The warlike
+temper nursed on foreign fields begot at
+home a new turbulence and scorn of law, woke
+a new feudal spirit in the baronage, and sowed in
+the revolution which placed a new house on the
+throne the seeds of that fatal strife over the
+succession which troubled England to the days
+of Elizabeth. Nor was the contest of less import
+in the history of France. If it struck her for
+the moment from her height of pride, it raised
+her in the end to the front rank among the states
+of Europe. It carried her boundaries to the
+Rhone and the Pyrenees. It wrecked alike the
+feudal power of her <i>noblesse</i> and the hopes of
+constitutional liberty which might have sprung
+from the emancipation of the peasant or the
+action of the burgher. It founded a royal
+despotism which reached its height in Richelieu
+and finally plunged France into the gulf of the
+Revolution.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Imperial
+Alliance</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of these mighty issues little could be foreseen
+at the moment when Philip and Edward declared
+war. But from the very first the war took
+European dimensions. The young king saw
+clearly the greater strength of France. The
+weakness of the Empire, the captivity of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-216"></a>2-216]</span>
+
+Papacy at Avignon, left her without a rival
+among European powers. The French chivalry
+was the envy of the world, and its military fame
+had just been heightened by a victory over the
+Flemish communes at Cassel. In numbers, in
+wealth, the French people far surpassed their
+neighbours over the Channel. England can
+hardly have counted more than four millions of
+inhabitants, France boasted of twenty. The
+clinging of our kings to their foreign dominions
+is explained by the fact that their subjects in
+Gascony, Aquitaine, and Poitou must have
+equalled in number their subjects in England.
+There was the same disproportion in the wealth
+of the two countries and, as men held then, in
+their military resources. Edward could bring
+only eight thousand men-at-arms to the field.
+Philip, while a third of his force was busy elsewhere,
+could appear at the head of forty thousand.
+Of the revolution in warfare which was to reverse
+this superiority, to make the footman rather than
+the horseman the strength of an army, the world
+and even the English king, in spite of Falkirk
+and Halidon, as yet recked little. Edward's
+whole energy was bent on meeting the strength
+of France by a coalition of powers against her,
+and his plans were helped by the dread which
+the great feudatories of the empire who lay
+nearest to him, the Duke of Brabant, the Counts
+of Hainault and Gelders, the Markgrave of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-217"></a>2-217]</span>
+
+Juliers, felt of French annexation. They listened
+willingly enough to his offers. Sixty thousand
+crowns purchased the alliance of Brabant. Lesser
+subsidies bought that of the two counts and the
+Markgrave. The king's work was helped indeed
+by his domestic relations. The Count of Hainault
+was Edward's father-in-law; he was also the
+father-in-law of the Count of Gelders. But the
+marriage of a third of the Count's daughters
+brought the English king a more important
+ally. She was wedded to the Emperor, Lewis of
+Bavaria, and the connexion that thus existed
+between the English and Imperial Courts facilitated
+the negotiations which ended in a formal
+alliance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Its Relation
+to the
+Papacy</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the league had a more solid ground. The
+Emperor, like Edward, had his strife with France.
+His strife sprang from the new position of the
+Papacy. The removal of the Popes to Avignon
+which followed on the quarrel of Boniface the
+Eighth with Philip le Bel and the subjection to
+the French court which resulted from it affected
+the whole state of European politics. In the
+ever-recurring contest between the Papacy and
+the Empire France had of old been the lieutenant
+of the Roman See. But with the settlement at
+Avignon the relation changed, and the Pope
+became the lieutenant of France. Instead of the
+Papacy using the French kings in its war of ideas
+against the Empire the French kings used the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-218"></a>2-218]</span>
+
+Papacy as an instrument in their political rivalry
+with the Emperors. But if the position of the
+Pope drew Lewis to the side of England, it had
+much to do with drawing Edward to the side of
+Lewis. It was this that made the alliance, fruitless
+as it proved in a military sense, so memorable
+in its religious results. Hitherto England had
+been mainly on the side of the Popes in their
+strife against the Emperors. Now that the Pope
+had become a tool in the hands of a power which
+was to be its great enemy, the country was driven
+to close alliances with the Empire and to an evergrowing
+alienation from the Roman See. In
+Scotch affairs the hostility of the Popes had been
+steady and vexatious ever since Edward the
+First's time, and from the moment that this fresh
+struggle commenced they again showed their
+French partizanship. When Lewis made a last
+appeal for peace, Philip of Valois made Benedict
+XII. lay down as a condition that the Emperor
+should form no alliance with an enemy of France.
+The quarrel of both England and Germany with
+the Papacy at once grew ripe. The German Diet
+met to declare that the Imperial power came from
+God alone, and that the choice of an Emperor
+needed no Papal confirmation, while Benedict
+replied by a formal excommunication of Lewis.
+England on the other hand entered on a religious
+revolution when she stood hand in hand with an
+excommunicated power. It was significant that
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-219"></a>2-219]</span>
+
+though worship ceased in Flanders on the Pope's
+interdict, the English priests who were brought
+over set the interdict at nought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Failure of
+the Alliance</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The negotiation of this alliance occupied the
+whole of 1337; it ended in a promise of the
+Emperor on payment of 3000 gold florins to
+furnish two thousand men-at-arms. In the opening
+of 1338 an attack of Philip on the Agénois
+forced Edward into open war. His profuse expenditure
+however brought little fruit. Though
+Edward crossed to Antwerp in the summer, the
+year was spent in negotiations with the princes of
+the Lower Rhine and in an interview with the
+Emperor at Coblentz, where Lewis appointed him
+Vicar-General of the Emperor for all territories
+on the left bank of the Rhine. The occupation
+of Cambray, an Imperial fief, by the French king
+gave a formal ground for calling the princes of
+this district to Edward's standard. But already
+the great alliance showed signs of yielding.
+Edward, uneasy at his connexion with an
+Emperor under the ban of the Church and
+harassed by vehement remonstrances from the
+Pope, entered again into negotiations with France
+in the winter of 1338; and Lewis, alarmed in
+his turn, listened to fresh overtures from Benedict,
+who held out vague hopes of reconciliation while
+he threatened a renewed excommunication if
+Lewis persisted in invading France. The non-arrival
+of the English subsidy decided the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-220"></a>2-220]</span>
+
+Emperor to take no personal part in the war, and
+the attitude of Lewis told on the temper of
+Edward's German allies. Though all joined him
+in the summer of 1339 on his formal summons of
+them as Vicar-General of the Empire, and his
+army when it appeared before Cambray numbered
+forty thousand men, their ardour cooled as the
+town held out. Philip approached it from the
+south, and on Edward's announcing his resolve
+to cross the river and attack him he was at once
+deserted by the two border princes who had most
+to lose from a contest with France, the Counts of
+Hainault and Namur. But the king was still
+full of hope. He pushed forward to the country
+round St. Quentin between the head waters of the
+Somme and the Oise with the purpose of forcing
+a decisive engagement. But he found Philip
+strongly encamped, and declaring their supplies
+exhausted his allies at once called for a retreat.
+It was in vain that Edward moved slowly for a
+week along the French border. Philip's position
+was too strongly guarded by marshes and entrenchments
+to be attacked, and at last the allies would
+stay no longer. At the news that the French
+king had withdrawn to the south the whole army
+in turn fell back upon Brussels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">England and
+the Papacy</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The failure of the campaign dispelled the hopes
+which Edward had drawn from his alliance with
+the Empire. With the exhaustion of his subsidies
+the princes of the Low Countries became inactive.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-221"></a>2-221]</span>
+
+The Duke of Brabant became cooler in his friendship.
+The Emperor himself, still looking to an
+accommodation with the Pope and justly jealous
+of Edward's own intrigues at Avignon, wavered
+and at last fell away. But though the alliance
+ended in disappointment it had given a new impulse
+to the grudge against the Papacy which
+began with its extortions in the reign of Henry
+the Third. The hold of Rome on the loyalty of
+England was sensibly weakening. Their transfer
+from the Eternal City to Avignon robbed the
+Popes of half the awe which they had inspired
+among Englishmen. Not only did it bring them
+nearer and more into the light of common day,
+but it dwarfed them into mere agents of French
+policy. The old bitterness at their exactions was
+revived by the greed to which they were driven
+through their costly efforts to impose a French
+and Papal Emperor on Germany as well as to
+secure themselves in their new capital on the
+Rhone. The mighty building, half fortress, half
+palace, which still awes the traveller at Avignon
+has played its part in our history. Its erection
+was to the rise of Lollardry what the erection of
+St. Peter's was to the rise of Lutheranism. Its
+massive walls, its stately chapel, its chambers
+glowing with the frescoes of Simone Memmi, the
+garden which covered its roof with a strange
+verdure, called year by year for fresh supplies of
+gold; and for this as for the wider and costlier
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-222"></a>2-222]</span>
+
+schemes of Papal policy gold could be got only
+by pressing harder and harder on the national
+churches the worst claims of the Papal court, by
+demands of first-fruits and annates from rectory
+and bishoprick, by pretensions to the right of
+bestowing all benefices which were in ecclesiastical
+patronage and by the sale of these presentations,
+by the direct taxation of the clergy, by the intrusion
+of foreign priests into English livings, by
+opening a mart for the disposal of pardons, dispensations,
+and indulgences, and by encouraging
+appeals from every ecclesiastical jurisdiction to
+the Papal court. No grievance was more bitterly
+felt than this grievance of appeals. Cases of the
+most trifling importance were called for decision
+out of the realm to a tribunal whose delays were
+proverbial and whose fees were enormous. The
+envoy of an Oxford College which sought only a
+formal licence to turn a vicarage into a rectory
+had not only to bear the expense and toil of a
+journey which then occupied some eighteen days
+but was kept dangling at Avignon for three-and-twenty
+weeks. Humiliating and vexatious however
+as these appeals were, they were but one
+among the means of extortion which the Papal
+court multiplied as its needs grew greater. The
+protest of a later Parliament, exaggerated as its
+statements no doubt are, shows the extent of the
+national irritation, if not of the grievances which
+produced it. It asserted that the taxes levied by
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-223"></a>2-223]</span>
+
+the Pope amounted to five times the amount of
+those levied by the king; that by reservations
+during the life of actual holders the Pope disposed
+of the same bishoprick four or five times over,
+receiving each time the first-fruits. "The brokers
+of the sinful city of Rome promote for money
+unlearned and unworthy caitiffs to benefices to
+the value of a thousand marks, while the poor
+and learned hardly obtain one of twenty. So
+decays sound learning. They present aliens who
+neither see nor care to see their parishioners,
+despise God's services, convey away the treasure
+of the realm, and are worse than Jews or Saracens.
+The Pope's revenue from England alone
+is larger than that of any prince in Christendom.
+God gave his sheep to be pastured, not to be
+shaven and shorn." At the close of this reign
+indeed the deaneries of Lichfield, Salisbury, and
+York, the archdeaconry of Canterbury, which
+was reputed the wealthiest English benefice, together
+with a host of prebends and preferments,
+were held by Italian cardinals and priests, while
+the Pope's collector from his office in London
+sent twenty thousand marks a year to the Papal
+treasury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Protest
+of the
+Parliament</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the greed of the Popes was no new
+grievance, though the increase of these exactions
+since the removal to Avignon gave it a new force.
+What alienated England most was their connexion
+with and dependence on France. From the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-224"></a>2-224]</span>
+
+first outset of the troubles in the North their
+attitude had been one of hostility to the English
+projects. France was too useful a supporter of
+the Papal court to find much difficulty in inducing
+it to aid in hampering the growth of English
+greatness. Boniface the Eighth released Balliol
+from his oath of fealty, and forbade Edward to
+attack Scotland on the ground that it was a fief
+of the Roman See. His intervention was met
+by a solemn and emphatic protest from the English
+Parliament; but it none the less formed a
+terrible obstacle in Edward's way. The obstacle
+was at last removed by the quarrel of Boniface
+with Philip the Fair; but the end of this quarrel
+only threw the Papacy more completely into the
+hands of France. Though Avignon remained imperial
+soil, the removal of the Popes to this city
+on the verge of their dominions made them mere
+tools of the French kings. Much no doubt of
+the endless negotiation which the Papal court
+carried on with Edward the Third in his strife
+with Philip of Valois was an honest struggle for
+peace. But to England it seemed the mere interference
+of a dependant on behalf of "our enemy
+of France." The people scorned a "French
+Pope," and threatened Papal legates with stoning
+when they landed on English shores. The alliance
+of Edward with an excommunicated Emperor,
+the bold defiance with which English priests said
+mass in Flanders when an interdict reduced the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-225"></a>2-225]</span>
+
+Flemish priests to silence, were significant tokens
+of the new attitude which England was taking up
+in the face of Popes who were leagued with its
+enemy. The old quarrel over ecclesiastical wrongs
+was renewed in a formal and decisive way. In
+1343 the Commons petitioned for the redress of
+the grievance of Papal appointments to vacant
+livings in despite of the rights of patrons or the
+Crown; and Edward formally complained to the
+Pope of his appointing "foreigners, most of them
+suspicious persons, who do not reside on their
+benefices, who do not know the faces of the flocks
+entrusted to them, who do not understand their
+language, but, neglecting the cure of souls, seek
+as hirelings only their worldly hire." In yet
+sharper words the king rebuked the Papal greed.
+"The successor of the Apostles was set over the
+Lord's sheep to feed and not to shear them."
+The Parliament declared "that they neither could
+nor would tolerate such things any longer"; and
+the general irritation moved slowly towards those
+statutes of Provisors and Praemunire which
+heralded the policy of Henry the Eighth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Flanders</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But for the moment the strife with the Papacy
+was set aside in the efforts which were needed for
+a new struggle with France. The campaign of
+1339 had not only ended in failure, it had dispelled
+the trust of Edward in an Imperial alliance.
+But as this hope faded away a fresh hope
+dawned on the king from another quarter.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-226"></a>2-226]</span>
+
+Flanders, still bleeding from the defeat of its
+burghers by the French knighthood, was his
+natural ally. England was the great wool-producing
+country of the west, but few woollen
+fabrics were woven in England. The number of
+weavers' gilds shows that the trade was gradually
+extending, and at the very outset of his reign
+Edward had taken steps for its encouragement.
+He invited Flemish weavers to settle in his
+country, and took the new immigrants, who
+chose the eastern counties for the seat of their
+trade, under his royal protection. But English
+manufactures were still in their infancy and nine-tenths
+of the English wool went to the looms of
+Bruges or of Ghent. We may see the rapid
+growth of this export trade in the fact that the
+king received in a single year more than £30,000
+from duties levied on wool alone. The woolsack
+which forms the Chancellor's seat in the House of
+Lords is said to witness to the importance which
+the government attached to this new source of
+wealth. A stoppage of this export threw half
+the population of the great Flemish towns out of
+work, and the irritation caused in Flanders by the
+interruption which this trade sustained through
+the piracies that Philip's ships were carrying on
+in the Channel showed how effective the threat
+of such a stoppage would be in securing their
+alliance. Nor was this the only ground for
+hoping for aid from the Flemish towns. Their
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-227"></a>2-227]</span>
+
+democratic spirit jostled roughly with the feudalism
+of France. If their counts clung to the
+French monarchy, the towns themselves, proud
+of their immense population, their thriving industry,
+their vast wealth, drew more and more
+to independence. Jacques van Arteveldt, a great
+brewer of Ghent, wielded the chief influence in
+their councils, and his aim was to build up a confederacy
+which might hold France in check along
+her northern border.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Flemish
+Alliance</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His plans had as yet brought no help from the
+Flemish towns, but at the close of 1339 they set
+aside their neutrality for open aid. The great
+plan of Federation which Van Arteveldt had been
+devising as a check on the aggression of France
+was carried out in a treaty concluded between
+Edward, the Duke of Brabant, the cities of
+Brussels, Antwerp, Louvain, Ghent, Bruges, Ypres,
+and seven others. By this remarkable treaty it
+was provided that war should be begun and ended
+only by mutual consent, free commerce be encouraged
+between Flanders and Brabant, and no
+change made in their commercial arrangements
+save with the consent of the whole league. By
+a subsequent treaty the Flemish towns owned
+Edward as King of France, and declared war
+against Philip of Valois. But their voice was
+decisive on the course of the campaign which
+opened in 1340. As Philip held the Upper
+Scheldt by the occupation of Cambray, so he held
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-228"></a>2-228]</span>
+
+the Lower Scheldt by that of Tournay, a fortress
+which broke the line of commerce between
+Flanders and Brabant. It was a condition of the
+Flemish alliance therefore that the war should
+open with the capture of Tournay. It was only
+at the cost of a fight however that Edward could
+now cross the Channel to undertake the siege.
+France was as superior in force at sea as on land;
+and a fleet of two hundred vessels gathered at
+Sluys to intercept him. But the fine seamanship
+of the English sailors justified the courage of their
+king in attacking this fleet with far smaller
+forces; the French ships were utterly destroyed
+and twenty thousand Frenchmen slain in the encounter.
+It was with the lustre of this great
+victory about him that Edward marched upon
+Tournay. Its siege however proved as fruitless as
+that of Cambray in the preceding year, and after
+two months of investment his vast army of one
+hundred thousand men broke up without either
+capturing the town or bringing Philip when he
+approached it to an engagement. Want of money
+forced Edward to a truce for a year, and he
+returned beggared and embittered to England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward's
+distress</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had been worsted in war as in diplomacy.
+One naval victory alone redeemed years of failure
+and expense. Guienne was all but lost, England
+was suffering from the terrible taxation, from the
+ruin of commerce, from the ravages of her coast.
+Five years of constant reverses were hard blows
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-229"></a>2-229]</span>
+
+for a king of twenty-eight who had been glorious
+and successful at twenty-three. His financial
+difficulties indeed were enormous. It was in vain
+that, availing himself of an Act which forbade the
+exportation of wool "till by the King and his
+Council it is otherwise provided," he turned for
+the time the wool-trade into a royal monopoly
+and became the sole wool exporter, buying at £3
+and selling at £20 the sack. The campaign of
+1339 brought with it a crushing debt: that of
+1340 proved yet more costly. Edward attributed
+his failure to the slackness of his ministers in
+sending money and supplies, and this to their
+silent opposition to the war. But wroth as he
+was on his return, a short struggle between the
+ministers and the king ended in a reconciliation,
+and preparations for renewed hostilities went on.
+Abroad indeed nothing could be done. The
+Emperor finally withdrew from Edward's friendship.
+A new Pope, Clement the Sixth, proved
+even more French in sentiment than his predecessor.
+Flanders alone held true of all England's
+foreign allies. Edward was powerless to attack
+Philip in the realm he claimed for his own; what
+strength he could gather was needed to prevent
+the utter ruin of the English cause in Scotland on
+the return of David Bruce. Edward's soldiers
+had been driven from the open country and confined
+to the fortresses of the Lowlands. Even
+these were at last reft away. Perth was taken by
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-230"></a>2-230]</span>
+
+siege, and the king was too late to prevent the
+surrender of Stirling. Edinburgh was captured
+by a stratagem. Only Roxburgh and Berwick
+were saved by a truce which Edward was driven
+to conclude with the Scots.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Progress of
+Parliament</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But with the difficulties of the Crown the
+weight of the two Houses made itself more and
+more sensibly felt. The almost incessant warfare
+which had gone on since the accession of Edward
+the Third consolidated and developed the power
+which they had gained from the dissensions of
+his father's reign. The need of continual grants
+brought about an assembly of Parliament year by
+year, and the subsidies that were accorded to the
+king showed the potency of the financial engine
+which the Crown could now bring into play. In
+a single year the Parliament granted twenty
+thousand sacks, or half the wool of the realm.
+Two years later the Commons voted an aid of
+thirty thousand sacks. In 1339 the barons
+granted the tenth sheep and fleece and lamb.
+The clergy granted two tenths in one year, and a
+tenth for three years in the next. But with each
+supply some step was made to greater political
+influence. In his earlier years Edward showed no
+jealousy of the Parliament. His policy was to
+make the struggle with France a national one by
+winning for it the sympathy of the people at
+large; and with this view he not only published
+in the County Courts the efforts he had made for
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-231"></a>2-231]</span>
+
+peace, but appealed again and again for the sanction
+and advice of Parliament in his enterprise.
+In 1331 he asked the Estates whether they would
+prefer negotiation or war: in 1338 he declared
+that his expedition to Flanders was made by the
+assent of the Lords and at the prayer of the
+Commons. The part of the last in public affairs
+grew greater in spite of their own efforts to
+remain obscure. From the opening of the reign a
+crowd of enactments for the regulation of trade,
+whether wise or unwise, shows the influence of
+the burgesses. But the final division of Parliament
+into two Houses, a change which was completed
+by 1341, necessarily increased the weight
+of the Commons. The humble trader who shrank
+from counselling the Crown in great matters of
+policy gathered courage as he found himself
+sitting side by side with the knights of the shire.
+It was at the moment when this great change was
+being brought about that the disasters of the war
+spurred the Parliament to greater activity. The
+enormous grants of 1340 were bought by the
+king's assent to statutes which provided remedies
+for grievances of which the Commons complained.
+The most important of these put an end to the
+attempts which Edward had made like his grandfather
+to deal with the merchant class apart from
+the Houses. No charge or aid was henceforth
+to be made save by the common assent of the
+Estates assembled in Parliament. The progress
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-232"></a>2-232]</span>
+
+of the next year was yet more important. The
+strife of the king with his ministers, the foremost
+of whom was Archbishop Stratford, ended in the
+Primate's refusal to make answer to the royal
+charges save in full Parliament, and in the assent
+of the king to a resolution of the Lords that none
+of their number, whether ministers of the Crown
+or no, should be brought to trial elsewhere than
+before his peers. The Commons demanded and
+obtained the appointment of commissioners elected
+in Parliament to audit the grants already made.
+Finally it was enacted that at each Parliament the
+ministers should hold themselves accountable for
+all grievances; that on any vacancy the king
+should take counsel with his lords as to the choice
+of the new minister; and that, when chosen, each
+minister should be sworn in Parliament.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Close of the
+truce</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the moment which we have reached therefore
+the position of the Parliament had become
+far more important than at Edward's accession.
+Its form was settled. The third estate had gained
+a fuller parliamentary power. The principle of
+ministerial responsibility to the Houses had been
+established by formal statute. But the jealousy
+of Edward was at last completely roused, and
+from this moment he looked on the new power as
+a rival to his own. The Parliament of 1341 had
+no sooner broken up than he revoked by Letters
+Patent the statutes it had passed as done in prejudice
+of his prerogative and only assented to for
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-233"></a>2-233]</span>
+
+the time to prevent worse confusion. The regular
+assembly of the estates was suddenly interrupted,
+and two years passed without a Parliament. It
+was only the continual presence of war which
+from this time drove Edward to summon the
+Houses at all. Though the truce still held good
+between England and France a quarrel of succession
+to the Duchy of Britanny which broke out in
+1341 and called Philip to the support of one
+claimant, his cousin Charles of Blois, and Edward
+to the support of a rival claimant, John of Montfort,
+dragged on year after year. In Flanders
+things went ill for the English cause. The dissensions
+between the great and the smaller towns,
+and in the greater towns themselves between the
+weavers and fullers, dissensions which had taxed
+the genius of Van Arteveldt through the nine
+years of his wonderful rule, broke out in 1345
+into a revolt at Ghent in which the great statesman
+was slain. With him fell a design for the
+deposition of the Count of Flanders and the reception
+of the Prince of Wales in his stead which he
+was ardently pressing, and whose political results
+might have been immense. Deputies were at
+once sent to England to excuse Van Arteveldt's
+murder and to promise loyalty to Edward; but
+the king's difficulties had now reached their
+height. His loans from the Florentine bankers
+amounted to half a million. His claim on the
+French crown found not a single adherent save
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-234"></a>2-234]</span>
+
+among the burghers of the Flemish towns. The
+overtures which he made for peace were contemptuously
+rejected, and the expiration of the
+truce in 1345 found him again face to face with
+France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward marches on Paris</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was perhaps this breakdown of all
+foreign hope that contributed to Edward's success
+in the fresh outbreak of war. The war opened in
+Guienne, and Henry of Lancaster, who was now
+known as the Earl of Derby, and who with the
+Hainaulter Sir Walter Maunay took the command
+in that quarter, at once showed the abilities of a
+great general. The course of the Garonne was
+cleared by his capture of La Réole and Aiguillon,
+that of the Dordogne by the reduction of Bergerac,
+and a way opened for the reconquest of Poitou by
+the capture of Angoulême. These unexpected
+successes roused Philip to strenuous efforts, and a
+hundred thousand men gathered under his son,
+John, Duke of Normandy, for the subjugation
+of the South. Angoulême was won back, and
+Aiguillon besieged when Edward sailed to the aid
+of his hard-pressed lieutenant. It was with an
+army of thirty thousand men, half English, half
+Irish and Welsh, that he commenced a march
+which was to change the whole face of the war.
+His aim was simple. Flanders was still true to
+Edward's cause, and while Derby was pressing on
+in the south a Flemish army besieged Bouvines
+and threatened France from the north. The king
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-235"></a>2-235]</span>
+
+had at first proposed to land in Guienne and
+relieve the forces in the south; but suddenly
+changing his design he disembarked at La Hogue
+and advanced through Normandy. By this skilful
+movement Edward not only relieved Derby
+but threatened Paris, and left himself able to
+co-operate with either his own army in the south
+or the Flemings in the north. Normandy was
+totally without defence, and after the sack of
+Caen, which was then one of the wealthiest towns
+in France, Edward marched upon the Seine. His
+march threatened Rouen and Paris, and its strategical
+value was seen by the sudden panic of the
+French king. Philip was wholly taken by surprise.
+He attempted to arrest Edward's march
+by an offer to restore the Duchy of Aquitaine as
+Edward the Second had held it, but the offer was
+fruitless. Philip was forced to call his son to the
+rescue. John at once raised the siege of Aiguillon,
+and the French army moved rapidly to the north,
+its withdrawal enabling Derby to capture Poitiers
+and make himself thorough master of the south.
+But John was too distant from Paris for his forces
+to avail Philip in his emergency, for Edward,
+finding the bridges on the Lower Seine broken,
+pushed straight on Paris, rebuilt the bridge of
+Poissy, and threatened the capital.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Crécy</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this crisis however France found an unexpected
+help in a body of German knights. The
+long strife between Lewis of Bavaria and the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-236"></a>2-236]</span>
+
+Papacy had ended at last in Clement's carrying
+out his sentence of deposition by the nomination
+and coronation as emperor of Charles of Luxemburg,
+a son of King John of Bohemia, the well-known
+Charles IV. of the Golden Bull. But against this
+Papal assumption of a right to bestow the German
+Crown Germany rose as one man. Not a town
+opened its gates to the Papal claimant, and driven
+to seek help and refuge from Philip of Valois he
+found himself at this moment on the eastern
+frontier of France with his father and 500 knights.
+Hurrying to Paris this German force formed the
+nucleus of an army which assembled at St. Denys;
+and which was soon reinforced by 15,000 Genoese
+cross-bowmen who had been hired from among the
+soldiers of the Lord of Monaco on the sunny Riviera
+and arrived at this hour of need. With this host
+rapidly gathering in his front Edward abandoned
+his march on Paris, which had already served its
+purpose in relieving Derby, and threw himself
+across the Seine to carry out the second part of his
+programme by a junction with the Flemings at
+Gravelines and a campaign in the north. But the
+rivers in his path were carefully guarded, and it
+was only by surprising the ford of Blanche-Taque
+on the Somme that the king escaped the necessity
+of surrendering to the vast host which was now
+hastening in pursuit. His communications however
+were no sooner secured than he halted on the
+twenty-sixth of August at the little village of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-237"></a>2-237]</span>
+
+Crécy in Ponthieu and resolved to give battle.
+Half of his army, which had been greatly reduced
+in strength by his rapid marches, consisted of light-armed
+footmen from Ireland and Wales; the bulk
+of the remainder was composed of English bowmen.
+The king ordered his men-at-arms to dismount,
+and drew up his forces on a low rise sloping gently
+to the south-east, with a deep ditch covering its
+front, and its flanks protected by woods and a little
+brook. From a windmill on the summit of this
+rise Edward could overlook the whole field of battle.
+Immediately beneath him lay his reserve, while at
+the base of the slope was placed the main body of
+the army in two divisions, that to the right commanded
+by the young Prince of Wales, Edward
+"the Black Prince," as he was called, that to the
+left by the Earl of Northampton. A small ditch
+protected the English front, and behind it the
+bowmen were drawn up "in the form of a harrow"
+with small bombards between them "which with
+fire threw little iron balls to frighten the horses,"
+the first instance known of the use of artillery in
+field-warfare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The halt of the English army took Philip by
+surprise, and he attempted for a time to check the
+advance of his army. But the attempt was fruitless
+and the disorderly host rolled on to the English
+front. The sight of his enemies indeed stirred
+Philip's own blood to fury, "for he hated them."
+The fight began at vespers. The Genoese cross-bowmen
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-238"></a>2-238]</span>
+
+were ordered to open the attack, but the
+men were weary with their march, a sudden storm
+wetted and rendered useless their bowstrings, and
+the loud shouts with which they leapt forward to
+the encounter were met with dogged silence in the
+English ranks. Their first arrow-flight however
+brought a terrible reply. So rapid was the English
+shot "that it seemed as if it snowed." "Kill me
+these scoundrels," shouted Philip, as the Genoese
+fell back; and his men-at-arms plunged butchering
+into their broken ranks while the Counts of Aleniçon
+and Flanders at the head of the French knighthood
+fell hotly on the Prince's line. For an instant his
+small force seemed lost, and he called his father to
+support him. But Edward refused to send him aid.
+"Is he dead, or unhorsed, or so wounded that he
+cannot help himself?" he asked the envoy. "No,
+sir," was the reply, "but he is in a hard passage of
+arms, and sorely needs your help." "Return to
+those that sent you," said the king, "and bid them
+not send to me again so long as my son lives! Let
+the boy win his spurs, for, if God so order it, I will
+that the day may be his and that the honour may
+be with him and them to whom I have given it in
+charge." Edward could see in fact from his higher
+ground that all went well. The English bowmen
+and men-at-arms held their ground stoutly while
+the Welshmen stabbed the French horses in the
+melly and brought knight after knight to the
+ground. Soon the French host was wavering in
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-239"></a>2-239]</span>
+
+a fatal confusion. "You are my vassals, my
+friends," cried the blind John of Bohemia to the
+German nobles around him, "I pray and beseech
+you to lead me so far into the fight that I may
+strike one good blow with this sword of mine!"
+Linking their bridles together, the little company
+plunged into the thick of the combat to fall as
+their fellows were falling. The battle went steadily
+against the French. At last Philip himself hurried
+from the field, and the defeat became a rout.
+Twelve hundred knights and thirty thousand foot-men--a
+number equal to the whole English force--lay
+dead upon the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Yeoman</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"God has punished us for our sins," cries the
+chronicler of St. Denys in a passion of bewildered
+grief as he tells the rout of the great host which he
+had seen mustering beneath his abbey walls. But
+the fall of France was hardly so sudden or so incomprehensible
+as the ruin at a single blow of a
+system of warfare, and with it of the political and
+social fabric which had risen out of that system.
+Feudalism rested on the superiority of the horseman
+to the footman, of the mounted noble to the
+unmounted churl. The real fighting power of a
+feudal army lay in its knighthood, in the baronage
+and landowners who took the field, each with his
+group of esquires and mounted men-at-arms. A host
+of footmen followed them, but they were ill armed,
+ill disciplined, and seldom called on to play any
+decisive part on the actual battle-field. In France,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-240"></a>2-240]</span>
+
+and especially at the moment we have reached,
+the contrast between the efficiency of these two
+elements of warfare was more striking than elsewhere.
+Nowhere was the chivalry so splendid,
+nowhere was the general misery and oppression of
+the poor more terribly expressed in the worthlessness
+of the mob of footmen who were driven by
+their lords to the camp. In England, on the other
+hand, the failure of feudalism to win a complete
+hold on the country was seen in the persistence of
+the older national institutions which based its
+defence on the general levy of its freemen. If the
+foreign kings added to this a system of warlike
+organization grounded on the service due from its
+military tenants to the Crown, they were far from
+regarding this as superseding the national "fyrd."
+The Assize of Arms, the Statute of Winchester,
+show with what care the fyrd was held in a state
+of efficiency. Its force indeed as an engine of war
+was fast rising between the age of Henry the Second
+and that of Edward the Third. The social changes
+on which we have already dwelt, the facilities given
+to alienation and the subdivision of lands, the
+transition of the serf into a copyholder and of the
+copyholder by redemption of his services into a
+freeholder, the rise of a new class of "farmers" as
+the lords ceased to till their demesne by means of
+bailiffs and adopted the practice of leasing it at a
+rent or "farm" to one of the customary tenants,
+the general increase of wealth which was telling
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-241"></a>2-241]</span>
+
+on the social position even of those who still remained
+in villenage, undid more and more the
+earlier process which had degraded the free ceorl
+of the English Conquest into the villein of the
+Norman Conquest, and covered the land with a
+population of yeomen, some freeholders, some with
+services that every day became less weighty and
+already left them virtually free.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Bow</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such men, proud of their right to justice and
+an equal law, called by attendance in the county
+court to a share in the judicial, the financial, and
+the political life of the realm, were of a temper
+to make soldiers of a different sort from the
+wretched serfs who followed the feudal lords of
+the Continent; and they were equipped with a
+weapon which as they wielded it was enough of
+itself to make a revolution in the art of war. The
+bow, identified as it became with English warfare,
+was the weapon not of Englishmen but of their
+Norman conquerors. It was the Norman arrow-flight
+that decided the day of Senlac. But in the
+organization of the national army it had been
+assigned as the weapon of the poorer freeholders
+who were liable to serve at the king's summons;
+and we see how closely it had become associated with
+them in the picture of Chaucer's yeoman. "In
+his hand he bore a mighty bow." Its might lay
+not only in the range of the heavy war-shaft, a
+range we are told of four hundred yards, but in
+its force. The English archer, taught from very
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-242"></a>2-242]</span>
+
+childhood "how to draw, how to lay his body to
+the bow," his skill quickened by incessant practice
+and constant rivalry with his fellows, raised the
+bow into a terrible engine of war. Thrown out
+along the front in a loose order that alone showed
+their vigour and self-dependence, the bowmen
+faced and riddled the splendid line of knighthood
+as it charged upon them. The galled horses
+"reeled right rudely." Their riders found even
+the steel of Milan a poor defence against the grey-goose
+shaft. Gradually the bow dictated the very
+tactics of an English battle. If the mass of cavalry
+still plunged forward, the screen of archers broke
+to right and left and the men-at-arms who lay in
+reserve behind them made short work of the
+broken and disordered horsemen, while the light
+troops from Wales and Ireland flinging themselves
+into the melly with their long knives and darts
+brought steed after steed to the ground. It was
+this new military engine that Edward the Third
+carried to the fields of France. His armies were
+practically bodies of hired soldiery, for the short
+period of feudal service was insufficient for foreign
+campaigns, and yeoman and baron were alike
+drawn by a high rate of pay. An archer's daily
+wages equalled some five shillings of our present
+money. Such payment when coupled with the
+hope of plunder was enough to draw yeomen from
+thorpe and farm; and though the royal treasury
+was drained as it had never been drained before
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-243"></a>2-243]</span>
+
+the English king saw himself after the day of
+Crécy the master of a force without rival in the
+stress of war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Siege of
+Calais</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To England her success was the beginning of a
+career of military glory, which fatal as it was
+destined to prove to the higher sentiments and
+interests of the nation gave it a warlike energy
+such as it had never known before. Victory followed
+victory. A few months after Crécy a Scotch
+army marched over the border and faced on the
+seventeenth of October an English force at Neville's
+Cross. But it was soon broken by the arrow-flight
+of the English archers, and the Scotch king David
+Bruce was taken prisoner. The withdrawal of the
+French from the Garonne enabled Henry of Derby
+to recover Poitou. Edward meanwhile with a
+decision which marks his military capacity marched
+from the field of Crécy to form the siege of Calais.
+No measure could have been more popular with
+the English merchant class, for Calais was a great
+pirate-haven and in a single year twenty-two
+privateers from its port had swept the Channel.
+But Edward was guided by weightier considerations
+than this. In spite of his victory at Sluys
+the superiority of France at sea had been a constant
+embarrassment. From this difficulty the
+capture of Calais would do much to deliver him,
+for Dover and Calais together bridled the Channel.
+Nor was this all. Not only would the possession
+of the town give Edward a base of operations
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-244"></a>2-244]</span>
+
+against France, but it afforded an easy means of
+communication with the only sure allies of England,
+the towns of Flanders. Flanders seemed at this
+moment to be wavering. Its Count had fallen at
+Crécy, but his son Lewis le Mâle, though his
+sympathies were as French as his father's, was
+received in November by his subjects with the
+invariable loyalty which they showed to their
+rulers; and his own efforts to detach them from
+England were seconded by the influence of the
+Duke of Brabant. But with Edward close at hand
+beneath the walls of Calais the Flemish towns
+stood true. They prayed the young Count to
+marry Edward's daughter, imprisoned him on his
+refusal, and on his escape to the French Court in
+the spring of 1347 they threw themselves heartily
+into the English cause. A hundred thousand
+Flemings advanced to Cassel and ravaged the
+French frontier.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The danger of Calais roused Philip from the
+panic which had followed his defeat, and with a
+vast army he advanced to the north. But Edward's
+lines were impregnable. The French king failed
+in another attempt to dislodge the Flemings, and
+was at last driven to retreat without a blow.
+Hopeless of further succour, the town after a year's
+siege was starved into surrender in August 1347.
+Mercy was granted to the garrison and the people
+on condition that six of the citizens gave themselves
+into the English king's hands. "On them," said
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-245"></a>2-245]</span>
+
+Edward with a burst of bitter hatred, "I will do
+my will." At the sound of the town bell, Jehan
+le Bel tells us, the folk of Calais gathered round
+the bearer of these terms, "desiring to hear their
+good news, for they were all mad with hunger.
+When the said knight told them his news, then
+began they to weep and cry so loudly that it was
+great pity. Then stood up the wealthiest burgess
+of the town, Master Eustache de St. Pierre by
+name, and spake thus before all: 'My masters,
+great grief and mishap it were for all to leave such
+a people as this is to die by famine or otherwise;
+and great charity and grace would he win from
+our Lord who could defend them from dying.
+For me, I have great hope in the Lord that if I
+can save this people by my death I shall have
+pardon for my faults, wherefore will I be the first
+of the six, and of my own will put myself barefoot
+in my shirt and with a halter round my neck
+in the mercy of King Edward.'" The list of devoted
+men was soon made up, and the victims were led
+before the king. "All the host assembled together;
+there was great press, and many bade
+hang them openly, and many wept for pity. The
+noble King came with his train of counts and
+barons to the place, and the Queen followed him,
+though great with child, to see what there would
+be. The six citizens knelt down at once before the
+King, and Master Eustache spake thus:--'Gentle
+King, here we be six who have been of the old
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-246"></a>2-246]</span>
+
+bourgeoisie of Calais and great merchants; we
+bring you the keys of the town and castle of
+Calais, and render them to you at your pleasure.
+We set ourselves in such wise as you see purely at
+your will, to save the remnant of the people that
+has suffered much pain. So may you have pity
+and mercy on us for your high nobleness' sake.'
+Certes there was then in that place neither lord
+nor knight that wept not for pity, nor who could
+speak for pity; but the King had his heart so
+hardened by wrath that for a long while he could
+not reply; than he commanded to cut off their
+heads. All the knights and lords prayed him with
+tears, as much as they could, to have pity on them,
+but he would not hear. Then spoke the gentle
+knight, Master Walter de Maunay, and said, 'Ha,
+gentle sire! bridle your wrath; you have the
+renown and good fame of all gentleness; do not a
+thing whereby men can speak any villany of you!
+If you have no pity, all men will say that you have
+a heart full of all cruelty to put these good citizens
+to death that of their own will are come to render
+themselves to you to save the remnant of the
+people.' At this point the King changed countenance
+with wrath, and said 'Hold your peace,
+Master Walter! it shall be none otherwise. Call
+the headsman. They of Calais have made so many of
+my men die, that they must die themselves!' Then
+did the noble Queen of England a deed of noble
+lowliness, seeing she was great with child, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-247"></a>2-247]</span>
+
+wept so tenderly for pity that she could no longer
+stand upright; therefore she cast herself on her
+knees before her lord the King and spake on this
+wise: 'Ah, gentle sire, from the day that I passed
+over sea in great peril, as you know, I have asked
+for nothing: now pray I and beseech you, with
+folded hands, for the love of our Lady's Son to
+have mercy upon them.' The gentle King waited a
+while before speaking, and looked on the Queen
+as she knelt before him bitterly weeping. Then
+began his heart to soften a little, and he said,
+'Lady, I would rather you had been otherwhere;
+you pray so tenderly that I dare not refuse you;
+and though I do it against my will, nevertheless
+take them, I give them to you.' Then took he
+the six citizens by the halters and delivered them
+to the Queen, and released from death all those of
+Calais for the love of her; and the good lady bade
+them clothe the six burgesses and make them good
+cheer."
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-248"></a>2-248]</span>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk4-Ch3"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4547268"></a>CHAPTER III</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4547274"></a>THE PEASANT REVOLT</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4547280"></a>1347-1381</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward the
+Third</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still in the vigour of manhood, for he was but
+thirty-five, Edward the Third stood at the height
+of his renown. He had won the greatest victory
+of his age. France, till now the first of European
+states, was broken and dashed from her pride of
+place at a single blow. The kingdom seemed to
+lie at Edward's mercy, for Guienne was recovered,
+Flanders was wholly on his side, and Britanny,
+where the capture of Charles of Blois secured the
+success of his rival and the English party which
+supported him, opened the road to Paris. At
+home his government was popular, and Scotland,
+the one enemy he had to dread, was bridled by
+the capture of her king. How great his renown
+was in Europe was seen in 1347, when on the
+death of Lewis of Bavaria the electors offered him
+the Imperial Crown. Edward was in truth a
+general of a high order, and he had shown himself
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-249"></a>2-249]</span>
+
+as consummate a strategist in the campaign as a
+tactician in the field. But to the world about him
+he was even more illustrious as the foremost
+representative of the showy chivalry of his day.
+He loved the pomp of tournaments; he revived
+the Round Table of the fabled Arthur; he celebrated
+his victories by the creation of a new order
+of knighthood. He had varied the sterner operations
+of the siege of Calais by a hand-to-hand
+combat with one of the bravest of the French
+knights. A naval picture of Froissart sketches
+Edward for us as he sailed to meet a Spanish fleet
+which was sweeping the narrow seas. We see the
+king sitting on deck in his jacket of black velvet,
+his head covered by a black beaver hat "which
+became him well," and calling on Sir John Chandos
+to troll out the songs he had brought with him
+from Germany, till the Spanish ships heave in
+sight and a furious fight begins which ends in a
+victory that leaves Edward "King of the Seas."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But beneath all this glitter of chivalry lay the
+subtle, busy diplomatist. None of our kings was
+so restless a negotiator. From the first hour of
+Edward's rule the threads of his diplomacy ran
+over Europe in almost inextricable confusion. And
+to all who dealt with him he was equally false and
+tricky. Emperor was played off against Pope and
+Pope against Emperor, the friendship of the
+Flemish towns was adroitly used to put a pressure
+on their counts, the national wrath against the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-250"></a>2-250]</span>
+
+exactions of the Roman See was employed to bridle
+the French sympathies of the court of Avignon, and
+when the statutes which it produced had served their
+purpose they were set aside for a bargain in which
+King and Pope shared the plunder of the Church between
+them. His temper was as false in his dealings
+with his people as in his dealings with the European
+powers. Edward aired to country and parliament
+his English patriotism. "Above all other lands and
+realms," he made his chancellor say, "the King
+had most tenderly at heart his land of England, a
+land more full of delight and honour and profit to
+him than any other." His manners were popular;
+he donned on occasion the livery of a city gild; he
+dined with a London merchant. His perpetual
+parliaments, his appeals to them and to the country
+at large for counsel and aid, seemed to promise a
+ruler who was absolutely one at heart with the
+people he ruled. But when once Edward passed
+from sheer carelessness and gratification at the
+new source of wealth which the Parliament opened
+to a sense of what its power really was becoming,
+he showed himself as jealous of freedom as any
+king that had gone before him. He sold his assent
+to its demands for heavy subsidies, and when he
+had pocketed the money coolly declared the
+statutes he had sanctioned null and void. The
+constitutional progress which was made during his
+reign was due to his absorption in showy schemes
+of foreign ambition, to his preference for war and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-251"></a>2-251]</span>
+
+diplomatic intrigue over the sober business of civil
+administration. The same shallowness of temper,
+the same showiness and falsehood, ran through his
+personal character. The king who was a model
+of chivalry in his dealings with knight and noble
+showed himself a brutal savage to the burgesses of
+Calais. Even the courtesy to his Queen which
+throws its halo over the story of their deliverance
+went hand in hand with a constant disloyalty to
+her. When once Philippa was dead his profligacy
+threw all shame aside. He paraded a mistress as
+Queen of Beauty through the streets of London,
+and set her in pomp over tournaments as the
+Lady of the Sun. The nobles were quick to follow
+their lord's example. "In those days," writes a
+chronicler of the time, "arose a rumour and
+clamour among the people that wherever there
+was a tournament there came a great concourse of
+ladies, of the most costly and beautiful but not
+of the best in the kingdom, sometimes forty and
+fifty in number, as if they were a part of the
+tournament, ladies clad in diverse and wonderful
+male apparel, in parti-coloured tunics, with short caps
+and bands wound cord-wise round their heads, and
+girdles bound with gold and silver, and daggers in
+pouches across their body. And thus they rode
+on choice coursers to the place of tourney; and so
+spent and wasted their goods and vexed their bodies
+with scurrilous wantonness that the murmurs of
+the people sounded everywhere. But they neither
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-252"></a>2-252]</span>
+
+feared God nor blushed at the chaste voice of the
+people."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Black
+Death</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The "chaste voice of the people" was soon to
+grow into the stern moral protest of the Lollards,
+but for the moment all murmurs were hushed by
+the king's success. The truce which followed
+the capture of Calais seemed a mere rest in the
+career of victories which opened before Edward.
+England was drunk with her glory and with the
+hope of plunder. The cloths of Caen had been
+brought after the sack of that town to London.
+"There was no woman," says Walsingham, "who
+had not got garments, furs, feather-beds, and
+utensils from the spoils of Calais and other foreign
+cities." The court revelled in gorgeous tournaments
+and luxury of dress; and the establishment
+in 1346 of the Order of the Garter which found
+its home in the new castle that Edward was
+raising at Windsor marked the highest reach of
+the spurious "Chivalry" of the day. But it was
+at this moment of triumph that the whole colour
+of Edward's reign suddenly changed. The most
+terrible plague the world has ever witnessed
+advanced from the East, and after devastating
+Europe from the shores of the Mediterranean to
+the Baltic swooped at the close of 1348 upon
+Britain. The traditions of its destructiveness and
+the panic-struck words of the statutes passed after
+its visitation have been amply justified by modern
+research. Of the three or four millions who then
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-253"></a>2-253]</span>
+
+formed the population of England more than one-half
+were swept away in its repeated visitations.
+Its ravages were fiercest in the greater towns
+where filthy and undrained streets afforded a
+constant haunt to leprosy and fever. In the
+burial-ground which the piety of Sir Walter
+Maunay purchased for the citizens of London,
+a spot whose site was afterwards marked by the
+Charter House, more than fifty thousand corpses
+are said to have been interred. Thousands of
+people perished at Norwich, while in Bristol the
+living were hardly able to bury the dead. But
+the Black Death fell on the villages almost as
+fiercely as on the towns. More than one-half
+of the priests of Yorkshire are known to have
+perished; in the diocese of Norwich two-thirds
+of the parishes changed their incumbents. The
+whole organization of labour was thrown out of
+gear. The scarcity of hands produced by the
+terrible mortality made it difficult for villeins to
+perform the services due for their lands, and only
+a temporary abandonment of half the rent by the
+landowners induced the farmers of their demesnes
+to refrain from the abandonment of their farms.
+For a time cultivation became impossible. "The
+sheep and cattle strayed through the fields and
+corn," says a contemporary, "and there were none
+left who could drive them." Even when the first
+burst of panic was over, the sudden rise of wages
+consequent on the enormous diminution in the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-254"></a>2-254]</span>
+
+supply of labour, though accompanied by a corresponding
+rise in the price of food, rudely disturbed
+the course of industrial employments. Harvests
+rotted on the ground and fields were left untilled
+not merely from scarcity of hands but from the
+strife which now for the first time revealed itself
+between capital and labour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Its Social
+Results</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nowhere was the effect of the Black Death so
+keenly felt as in its bearing on the social revolution
+which had been steadily going on for a century
+past throughout the country. At the moment we
+have reached the lord of a manor had been reduced
+over a large part of England to the position of a
+modern landlord, receiving a rental in money
+from his tenants and supplying their place in the
+cultivation of his demesne lands by paid labourers.
+He was driven by the progress of enfranchisement
+to rely for the purposes of cultivation on the
+supply of hired labour, and hitherto this supply
+had been abundant and cheap. But with the
+ravages of the Black Death and the decrease of
+population labour at once became scarce and dear.
+There was a general rise of wages, and the farmers
+of the country as well as the wealthier craftsmen
+of the town saw themselves threatened with ruin
+by what seemed to their age the extravagant
+demands of the labour class. Meanwhile the
+country was torn with riot and disorder. An
+outbreak of lawless self-indulgence which followed
+everywhere in the wake of the plague told especially
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-255"></a>2-255]</span>
+
+upon the "landless men," workers wandering
+in search of work who found themselves for the
+first time masters of the labour market; and the
+wandering labourer or artizan turned easily into
+the "sturdy beggar," or the bandit of the woods.
+A summary redress for these evils was at once
+provided by the Crown in a royal proclamation.
+"Because a great part of the people," runs this
+ordinance, "and principally of labourers and
+servants, is dead of the plague, some, seeing the
+need of their lords and the scarcity of servants,
+are unwilling to serve unless they receive excessive
+wages, and others are rather begging in idleness
+than supporting themselves by labour, we have
+ordained that any able-bodied man or woman, of
+whatsoever condition, free or serf, under sixty
+years of age, not living of merchandise nor following
+a trade nor having of his own wherewithal to
+live, either his own land with the culture of which
+he could occupy himself, and not serving another,
+shall if so required serve another for such wages
+as was the custom in the twentieth year of our
+reign or five or six years before."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Statute of
+Labourers</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the failure of this ordinance to effect
+its ends which brought about at the close of 1349
+the passing of the Statute of Labourers. "Every
+man or woman," runs this famous provision, "of
+whatsoever condition, free or bond, able in body,
+and within the age of threescore years, ... and
+not having of his own whereof he may live, nor
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-256"></a>2-256]</span>
+
+land of his own about the tillage of which he
+may occupy himself, and not serving any other,
+shall be bound to serve the employer who shall
+require him to do so, and shall take only the
+wages which were accustomed to be taken in the
+neighbourhood where he is bound to serve" two
+years before the plague began. A refusal to obey
+was punished by imprisonment. But sterner
+measures were soon found to be necessary. Not
+only was the price of labour fixed by the Parliament
+of 1351 but the labour class was once more
+tied to the soil. The labourer was forbidden to
+quit the parish where he lived in search of better
+paid employment; if he disobeyed he became a
+"fugitive," and subject to imprisonment at the
+hands of justices of the peace. To enforce such
+a law literally must have been impossible, for corn
+rose to so high a price that a day's labour at the
+old wages would not have purchased wheat enough
+for a man's support. But the landowners did not
+flinch from the attempt. The repeated re-enactment
+of the law shows the difficulty of applying
+it and the stubbornness of the struggle which it
+brought about. The fines and forfeitures which
+were levied for infractions of its provisions formed
+a large source of royal revenue, but so ineffectual
+were the original penalties that the runaway
+labourer was at last ordered to be branded with
+a hot iron on the forehead, while the harbouring
+of serfs in towns was rigorously put down. Nor
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-257"></a>2-257]</span>
+
+was it merely the existing class of free labourers
+which was attacked by this reactionary movement.
+The increase of their numbers by a commutation
+of labour services for money payments was
+suddenly checked, and the ingenuity of the
+lawyers who were employed as stewards of each
+manor was exercised in striving to restore to the
+landowners that customary labour whose loss was
+now severely felt. Manumissions and exemptions
+which had passed without question were cancelled
+on grounds of informality, and labour services
+from which they held themselves freed by redemption
+were again demanded from the villeins.
+The attempt was the more galling that the cause
+had to be pleaded in the manor-court itself, and
+to be decided by the very officer whose interest
+it was to give judgement in favour of his lord.
+We can see the growth of a fierce spirit of resistance
+through the statutes which strove in vain
+to repress it. In the towns, where the system
+of forced labour was applied with even more
+rigour than in the country, strikes and combinations
+became frequent among the lower craftsmen.
+In the country the free labourers found allies in
+the villeins whose freedom from manorial service
+was questioned. These were often men of position
+and substance, and throughout the eastern counties
+the gatherings of "fugitive serfs" were supported by
+an organized resistance and by large contributions
+of money on the part of the wealthier tenantry.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-258"></a>2-258]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Renewal of
+the War</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With plague, famine, and social strife in the
+land, it was no time for reaping the fruits even
+of such a victory as Crécy. Luckily for England
+the pestilence had fallen as heavily on her foe as
+on herself. A common suffering and exhaustion
+forced both countries to a truce, and though
+desultory fighting went on along the Breton and
+Aquitanian borders, the peace which was thus
+secured lasted with brief intervals of fighting for
+seven years. It was not till 1355 that the
+failure of a last effort to turn the truce into a final
+peace again drove Edward into war. The campaign
+opened with a brilliant prospect of success.
+Charles the Bad, King of Navarre, held as a
+prince of descent from the house of Valois large
+fiefs in Normandy; and a quarrel springing suddenly
+up between him and John, who had now
+succeeded his father Philip on the throne of
+France, Charles offered to put his fortresses
+into Edward's hands. Master of Cherbourg,
+Avranches, Pontaudemer, Evreux and Meulan,
+Mantes, Mortain, Pontoise, Charles held in his
+hands the keys of France; and Edward grasped
+at the opportunity of delivering a crushing blow.
+Three armies were prepared to act in Normandy,
+Britanny, and Guienne. But the first two, with
+Edward and Henry of Derby, who had been raised
+to the dukedom of Lancaster, at their head, were
+detained by contrary winds, and Charles, despairing
+of their arrival, made peace with John.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-259"></a>2-259]</span>
+
+Edward made his way to Calais to meet the
+tidings of this desertion and to be called back
+to England by news of a recapture of Berwick
+by the Scots. But his hopes of Norman co-operation
+were revived in 1356. The treachery of
+John, his seizure of the King of Navarre, and
+his execution of the Count of Harcourt who was
+looked upon as the adviser of Charles in his policy
+of intrigue, stirred a general rising throughout
+Normandy. Edward at once despatched troops
+under the Duke of Lancaster to its support.
+But the insurgents were soon forced to fall back.
+Conscious of the danger to which an English
+occupation of Normandy would expose him,
+John hastened with a large army to the west,
+drove Lancaster to Cherbourg, took Evreux, and
+besieged Breteuil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Black
+Prince</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here however his progress was suddenly
+checked by news from the south. The Black
+Prince, as the hero of Crécy was called, had
+landed in Guienne during the preceding year and
+won a disgraceful success. Unable to pay his
+troops, he staved off their demands by a campaign
+of sheer pillage. While plague and war
+and the anarchy which sprang up under the weak
+government of John were bringing ruin on the
+northern and central provinces of France, the
+south remained prosperous and at peace. The
+young prince led his army of freebooters up the
+Garonne into "what was before one of the fat
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-260"></a>2-260]</span>
+
+countries of the world, the people good and
+simple, who did not know what war was; indeed
+no war had been waged against them till
+the Prince came. The English and Gascons
+found the country full and gay, the rooms
+adorned with carpets and draperies, the caskets
+and chests full of fair jewels. But nothing was
+safe from these robbers. They, and especially
+the Gascons, who are very greedy, carried off
+everything." Glutted by the sack of Carcassonne
+and Narbonne the plunderers fell back to Bordeaux,
+"their horses so laden with spoil that they could
+hardly move." Worthier work awaited the Black
+Prince in the following year. In the plan of
+campaign for 1356 it had been arranged that he
+should march upon the Loire, and there unite
+with a force under the Duke of Lancaster which
+was to land in Britanny and push rapidly into
+the heart of France. Delays however hindered
+the Prince from starting from Bordeaux till July,
+and when his march brought him to the Loire the
+plan of campaign had already broken down. The
+outbreak in Normandy had tempted the English
+Council to divert the force under Lancaster from
+Britanny to that province; and the Duke was
+now at Cherbourg, hard pressed by the French
+army under John. But if its original purpose
+was foiled, the march of the Black Prince on
+the Loire served still more effectively the English
+cause. His advance pointed straight upon Paris,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-261"></a>2-261]</span>
+
+and again as in the Crécy campaign John was
+forced to leave all for the protection of the capital.
+Hasty marches brought the king to the Loire
+while Prince Edward still lay at Vierzon on the
+Cher. Unconscious of John's designs, he wasted
+some days in the capture of Romorantin while
+the French troops were crossing the Loire along
+its course from Orleans to Tours and John with
+the advance was hurrying through Loches upon
+Poitiers in pursuit, as he supposed, of the retreating
+Englishmen. But the movement of the
+French army, near as it was, was unknown in the
+English camp; and when the news of it forced
+the Black Prince to order a retreat the enemy
+was already far ahead of him. Edward reached
+the fields north of Poitiers to find his line of
+retreat cut off and a French army of sixty
+thousand men interposed between his forces and
+Bordeaux.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If the Prince had shown little ability in his
+management of the campaign, he showed tactical
+skill in the fight which was now forced on him.
+On the nineteenth of September he took a strong
+position in the fields of Maupertuis, where his
+front was covered by thick hedges and approachable
+only by a deep and narrow lane which ran
+between vineyards. The vineyards and hedges
+he lined with bowmen, and drew up his small
+body of men-at-arms at the point where the lane
+opened upon the higher plain on which he was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-262"></a>2-262]</span>
+
+himself encamped. Edward's force numbered
+only eight thousand men, and the danger was
+great enough to force him to offer in exchange
+for a free retreat the surrender of his prisoners
+and of the places he had taken, with an oath not
+to fight against France for seven years to come.
+His offers however were rejected, and the battle
+opened with a charge of three hundred French
+knights up the narrow lane. But the lane was
+soon choked with men and horses, while the front
+ranks of the advancing army fell back before a
+galling fire of arrows from the hedgerows. In
+this moment of confusion a body of English horsemen,
+posted unseen by their opponents on a hill
+to the right, charged suddenly on the French
+flank, and the Prince watching the disorder which
+was caused by the repulse and surprise fell boldly
+on their front. The steady shot of the English
+archers completed the panic produced by this
+sudden attack. The first French line was driven
+in, and on its rout the second, a force of sixteen
+thousand men, at once broke in wild terror and
+fled from the field. John still held his ground
+with the knights of the reserve, whom he had
+unwisely ordered to dismount from their horses,
+till a charge of the Black Prince with two thousand
+lances threw this last body into confusion. The
+French king was taken, desperately fighting; and
+when his army poured back at noon in utter rout
+to the gates of Poitiers eight thousand of their
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-263"></a>2-263]</span>
+
+number had fallen on the field, three thousand in
+the flight, and two thousand men-at-arms, with a
+crowd of nobles, were taken prisoners. The royal
+captive entered London in triumph, mounted on a
+big white charger, while the Prince rode by his
+side on a little black hackney to the palace of the
+Savoy, which was chosen as John's dwelling, and
+a truce for two years seemed to give healing-time
+to France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward and
+the Scots</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the Scots Edward the Third had less
+good fortune. Recalled from Calais by their
+seizure of Berwick, the king induced Balliol to
+resign into his hands his shadowy sovereignty,
+and in the spring of 1356 marched upon Edinburgh
+with an overpowering army, harrying and
+burning as he marched. But the Scots refused
+an engagement, a fleet sent with provisions was
+beaten off by a storm, and the famine-stricken
+army was forced to fall rapidly back on the
+border in a disastrous retreat. The trial convinced
+Edward that the conquest of Scotland was
+impossible, and by a rapid change of policy which
+marks the man he resolved to seek the friendship
+of the country he had wasted so long. David
+Bruce was released on promise of ransom, a truce
+concluded for ten years, and the prohibition of
+trade between the two kingdoms put an end to.
+But the fulness of this reconciliation screened
+a dexterous intrigue. David was childless, and
+Edward availed himself of the difficulty which the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-264"></a>2-264]</span>
+
+young king experienced in finding means of providing
+the sum demanded for his ransom to bring
+him over to a proposal which would have united
+the two countries for ever. The scheme however
+was carefully concealed; and it was not till
+1363 that David proposed to his Parliament to
+set aside on his death the claims of the Steward
+of Scotland to his crown, and to choose Edward's
+third son, Lionel, Duke of Clarence, as his successor.
+Though the proposal was scornfully
+rejected, negotiations were still carried on between
+the two kings for the realization of this
+project, and were probably only put an end to by
+the calamities of Edward's later years.
+</p>
+
+<center><a href="images/v2-map-2.jpg"><img src="images/v2-map-2t.jpg" alt="France at the Treaty of Bretigny"></a></center>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Peace of
+Brétigny</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In France misery and misgovernment seemed
+to be doing Edward's work more effectively than
+arms. The miserable country found no rest in
+itself. Its routed soldiery turned into free companies
+of bandits, while the lords captured at
+Crécy or Poitiers procured the sums needed for
+their ransom by extortion from the peasantry.
+The reforms demanded by the States-General
+which met in this agony of France were frustrated
+by the treachery of the Regent, John's
+eldest son Charles, Duke of Normandy, till Paris,
+impatient of his weakness and misrule, rose in
+arms against the Crown. The peasants too,
+driven mad by oppression and famine, rose in
+wild insurrection, butchering their lords and firing
+their castles over the whole face of France.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-265"></a>2-265]</span>
+
+Paris and the Jacquerie, as this peasant rising
+was called, were at last crushed by treachery and
+the sword: and, exhausted as it was, France still
+backed the Regent in rejecting a treaty of peace
+by which John in 1359 proposed to buy his release.
+By this treaty Maine, Touraine, and Poitou
+in the south, Normandy, Guisnes, Ponthieu, and
+Calais in the west were ceded to the English king.
+On its rejection Edward in 1360 poured ravaging
+over the wasted land. Famine however proved
+its best defence. "I could not believe," said
+Petrarch of this time, "that this was the same
+France which I had seen so rich and flourishing.
+Nothing presented itself to my eyes but a
+fearful solitude, an utter poverty, land uncultivated,
+houses in ruins. Even the neighbourhood
+of Paris showed everywhere marks of desolation
+and conflagration. The streets are deserted, the
+roads overgrown with weeds, the whole is a vast
+solitude." The utter desolation forced Edward to
+carry with him an immense train of provisions,
+and thousands of baggage waggons with mills,
+ovens, forges, and fishing-boats, formed a long
+train which streamed for six miles behind his
+army. After a fruitless attempt upon Reims
+he forced the Duke of Burgundy to conclude a
+treaty with him by pushing forward to Tonnerre,
+and then descending the Seine appeared with his
+army before Paris. But the wasted country forbade
+a siege, and Edward after summoning the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-266"></a>2-266]</span>
+
+town in vain was forced to fall back for subsistence
+on the Loire. It was during this march that
+the Duke of Normandy's envoys overtook him
+with proposals of peace. The misery of the land
+had at last bent Charles to submission, and in May
+a treaty was concluded at Brétigny, a small place
+to the eastward of Chartres. By this treaty the
+English king waived his claims on the crown of
+France and on the Duchy of Normandy. On
+the other hand, his Duchy of Aquitaine, which
+included Gascony, Guienne, Poitou, and Saintonge,
+the Limousin and the Angoumois, Périgord and
+the counties of Bigorre and Rouergue, was not
+only restored but freed from its obligations as a
+French fief and granted in full sovereignty with
+Ponthieu, Edward's heritage from the second wife
+of Edward the First, as well as with Guisnes and
+his new conquest of Calais.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Misery of
+England</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Peace of Brétigny set its seal upon Edward's
+glory. But within England itself the misery of the
+people was deepening every hour. Men believed
+the world to be ending, and the judgement day to
+be near. A few months after the Peace came a
+fresh swoop of the Black Death, carrying off the
+Duke of Lancaster. The repressive measures of
+Parliament and the landowners only widened the
+social chasm which parted employer from employed.
+We can see the growth of a fierce spirit
+of resistance both to the reactionary efforts which
+were being made to bring back labour services
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-267"></a>2-267]</span>
+
+and to the enactments which again bound labour
+to the soil in statutes which strove in vain to
+repress the strikes and combinations which became
+frequent in the towns and the more formidable
+gatherings of villeins and "fugitive
+serfs" in the country at large. A statute of
+later date throws light on the nature of the resistance
+of the last. It tells us that "villeins
+and holders of land in villeinage withdrew their
+customs and services from their lords, having
+attached themselves to other persons who maintained
+and abetted them, and who under colour
+of exemplifications from Domesday of the manors
+and villages where they dwelt claimed to be quit
+of all manner of services either of their body or
+of their lands, and would suffer no distress or
+other course of justice to be taken against them;
+the villeins aiding their maintainers by threatening
+the officers of their lords with peril to life and
+limb as well by open assemblies as by confederacies
+to support each other." It would seem not only as
+if the villein was striving to resist the reactionary
+tendency of the lords of manors to regain his labour
+service but that in the general overturning of
+social institutions the copyholder was struggling
+to make himself a freeholder, and the farmer to
+be recognized as proprietor of the demesne he held
+on lease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">John Ball</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A more terrible outcome of the general suffering
+was seen in a new revolt against the whole
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-268"></a>2-268]</span>
+
+system of social inequality which had till then
+passed unquestioned as the divine order of the
+world. The Peace was hardly signed when the
+cry of the poor found a terrible utterance in the
+words of "a mad priest of Kent" as the courtly
+Froissart calls him, who for twenty years to come
+found audience for his sermons in spite of interdict
+and imprisonment in the stout yeomen who
+gathered round him in the churchyards of Kent.
+"Mad" as the landowners held him to be, it was
+in the preaching of John Ball that England first
+listened to a declaration of the natural equality
+and rights of man. "Good people," cried the
+preacher, "things will never be well in England
+so long as goods be not in common, and so long
+as there be villeins and gentlemen. By what
+right are they whom we call lords greater folk
+than we? On what grounds have they deserved
+it? Why do they hold us in serfage? If we all
+came of the same father and mother, of Adam
+and Eve, how can they say or prove that they are
+better than we, if it be not that they make us
+gain for them by our toil what they spend in
+their pride? They are clothed in velvet and
+warm in their furs and their ermines, while we
+are covered with rags. They have wine and
+spices and fair bread; and we oat-cake and straw,
+and water to drink. They have leisure and fine
+houses; we have pain and labour, the rain and
+the wind in the fields. And yet it is of us and of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-269"></a>2-269]</span>
+
+our toil that these men hold their state." It was
+the tyranny of property that then as ever roused
+the defiance of socialism. A spirit fatal to the
+whole system of the Middle Ages breathed in the
+popular rime which condensed the levelling doctrine
+of John Ball:
+</p>
+
+<table summary="poetry" class="lg">
+
+<tr><td align="left">"When Adam delved and Eve span,</td></tr>
+<tr><td align="left">Who was then the gentleman?"</td></tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">William
+Langland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More impressive, because of the very restraint
+and moderation of its tone, is the poem in which
+William Langland began at the same moment to
+embody with a terrible fidelity all the darker and
+sterner aspects of the time, its social revolt, its
+moral and religious awakening, the misery of the
+poor, the selfishness and corruption of the rich.
+Nothing brings more vividly home to us the social
+chasm which in the fourteenth century severed
+the rich from the poor than the contrast between
+his "Complaint of Piers the Ploughman" and the
+"Canterbury Tales." The world of wealth and
+ease and laughter through which the courtly
+Chaucer moves with, eyes downcast as in a pleasant
+dream is a far-off world of wrong and of
+ungodliness to the gaunt poet of the poor. Born
+probably in Shropshire, where he had been put to
+school and received minor orders as a clerk, "Long
+Will," as Langland was nicknamed from his tall
+stature, found his way at an early age to London,
+and earned a miserable livelihood there by singing
+"placebos" and "diriges" in the stately funerals
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-270"></a>2-270]</span>
+
+of his day. Men took the moody clerk for a
+madman; his bitter poverty quickened the defiant
+pride that made him loth, as he tells us, to bow
+to the gay lords and dames who rode decked in
+silver and minivere along the Cheap or to exchange
+a "God save you" with the law sergeants
+as he passed their new house in the Temple. His
+world is the world of the poor; he dwells on the
+poor man's life, on his hunger and toil, his rough
+revelry and his despair, with the narrow intensity
+of a man who has no outlook beyond it. The
+narrowness, the misery, the monotony of the life
+he paints reflect themselves in his verse. It is
+only here and there that a love of nature or a
+grim earnestness of wrath quickens his rime into
+poetry; there is not a gleam of the bright human
+sympathy of Chaucer, of his fresh delight in the
+gaiety, the tenderness, the daring of the world
+about him, of his picturesque sense of even its
+coarsest contrasts, of his delicate irony, of his
+courtly wit. The cumbrous allegory, the tedious
+platitudes, the rimed texts from Scripture which
+form the staple of Langland's work, are only
+broken here and there by phrases of a shrewd
+common sense, by bitter outbursts, by pictures of
+a broad Hogarthian humour. What chains one
+to the poem is its deep undertone of sadness: the
+world is out of joint, and the gaunt rimer who
+stalks silently along the Strand has no faith in his
+power to put it right.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-271"></a>2-271]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Piers
+Ploughman</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Londoner as he is, Will's fancy flies far from
+the sin and suffering of the great city to a May-morning
+in the Malvern Hills. "I was weary forwandered
+and went me to rest under a broad
+bank by a burn side, and as I lay and leaned and
+looked in the water I slumbered in a sleeping, it
+sweyved (sounded) so merry." Just as Chaucer
+gathers the typical figures of the world he saw
+into his pilgrim train, so the dreamer gathers
+into a wide field his army of traders and chafferers,
+of hermits and solitaries, of minstrels, "japers
+and jinglers," bidders and beggars, ploughmen
+that "in setting and in sowing swonken (toil)
+full hard," pilgrims "with their wenches after,"
+weavers and labourers, burgess and bondman,
+lawyer and scrivener, court-haunting bishops,
+friars, and pardoners "parting the silver" with
+the parish priest. Their pilgrimage is not to
+Canterbury but to Truth; their guide to Truth
+neither clerk nor priest but Peterkin the Ploughman,
+whom they find ploughing in his field. He
+it is who bids the knight no more wrest gifts from
+his tenant nor misdo with the poor. "Though he
+be thine underling here, well may hap in heaven
+that he be worthier set and with more bliss than
+thou.... For in charnel at church churles be
+evil to know, or a knight from a knave there."
+The gospel of equality is backed by the gospel of
+labour. The aim of the Ploughman is to work,
+and to make the world work with him. He
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-272"></a>2-272]</span>
+
+warns the labourer as he warns the knight.
+Hunger is God's instrument in bringing the idlest
+to toil, and Hunger waits to work her will on the
+idler and the waster. On the eve of the great
+struggle between wealth and labour, Langland
+stands alone in his fairness to both, in his shrewd
+political and religious common sense. In the
+face of the popular hatred which was to gather
+round John of Gaunt, he paints the Duke in a
+famous apologue as the cat who, greedy as she
+might be, at any rate keeps the noble rats from
+utterly devouring the mice of the people. Though
+the poet is loyal to the Church, he proclaims a
+righteous life to be better than a host of indulgences,
+and God sends His pardon to Piers when
+priests dispute it. But he sings as a man conscious
+of his loneliness and without hope. It is
+only in a dream that he sees Corruption, "Lady
+Mede," brought to trial, and the world repenting
+at the preaching of Reason. In the waking life
+reason finds no listeners. The poet himself is
+looked upon--he tells us bitterly--as a madman.
+There is a terrible despair in the close of his later
+poem, where the triumph of Christ is only
+followed by the reign of Antichrist; where Contrition
+slumbers amidst the revel of Death and
+Sin; and Conscience, hard beset by Pride and
+Sloth, rouses himself with a last effort, and seizing
+his pilgrim staff, wanders over the world to
+find Piers Ploughman.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-273"></a>2-273]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Præmunire</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The strife indeed which Langland would have
+averted raged only the fiercer as the dark years
+went by. If the Statutes of Labourers were
+powerless for their immediate ends, either in reducing
+the actual rate of wages or in restricting
+the mass of floating labour to definite areas of
+employment, they proved effective in sowing
+hatred between employer and employed, between
+rich and poor. But this social rift was not the
+only rift which was opening amidst the distress and
+misery of the time. The close of William Langland's
+poem is the prophecy of a religious revolution;
+and the way for such a revolution was
+being paved by the growing bitterness of strife
+between England and the Papacy. In spite of
+the sharp protests from king and parliament the
+need for money at Avignon was too great to
+allow any relaxation in the Papal claims. Almost
+on the eve of Crécy Edward took the decisive
+step of forbidding the entry into England of any
+Papal bulls or documents interfering with the
+rights of presentation belonging to private patrons.
+But the tenacity of Rome was far from loosening
+its grasp on this source of revenue for all Edward's
+protests. Crécy however gave a new boldness to
+the action of the State, and a Statute of Provisors
+was passed by the Parliament in 1351 which
+again asserted the rights of the English Church
+and enacted that all who infringed them by the
+introduction of Papal "provisors" should suffer
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-274"></a>2-274]</span>
+
+imprisonment. But resistance to provisors only brought
+fresh vexations. The patrons who withstood
+a Papal nominee in the name of the law
+were summoned to defend themselves in the
+Papal Court. From that moment the supremacy
+of the Papal law over the law of the land became
+a great question in which the lesser question of
+provisors merged. The pretension of the Court
+of Avignon was met in 1353 by a statute which
+forbade any questioning of judgements rendered
+in the King's Courts or any prosecution of a suit
+in foreign courts under pain of outlawry, perpetual
+imprisonment, or banishment from the land.
+It was this act of Præmunire--as it came in after
+renewals to be called--which furnished so terrible
+a weapon to the Tudors in their later strife with
+Rome. But the Papacy paid little heed to these
+warnings, and its obstinacy in still receiving suits
+and appeals in defiance of this statute roused the
+pride of a conquering people. England was still
+fresh from her glory at Brétigny when Edward
+appealed to the Parliament of 1365. Complaints,
+he said, were constantly being made by his
+subjects to the Pope as to matters which were
+cognizable in the King's Courts. The practice of
+provisors was thus maintained in the teeth of the
+laws, and "the laws, usages, ancient customs, and
+franchises of his kingdom were thereby much
+hindered, the King's crown degraded, and his
+person defamed." The king's appeal was hotly
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-275"></a>2-275]</span>
+
+met. "Biting words," which it was thought wise
+to suppress, were used in the debate which followed,
+and the statutes against provisors and appeals
+were solemnly confirmed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Wyclif</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What gave point to this challenge was the
+assent of the prelates to the proceedings of the
+Parliament; and the pride of Urban V. at once
+met it by a counter-defiance. He demanded with
+threats the payment of the annual sum of a
+thousand marks promised by King John in acknowledgement
+of the suzerainty of the See of
+Rome. The insult roused the temper of the
+realm. The king laid the demand before Parliament,
+and both houses replied that "neither King
+John nor any king could put himself, his kingdom,
+nor his people under subjection save with
+their accord or assent." John's submission had
+been made "without their assent and against his
+coronation oath" and they pledged themselves,
+should the Pope attempt to enforce his claim, to
+resist him with all their power. Even Urban
+shrank from imperilling the Papacy by any
+further demands, and the claim to a Papal lordship
+over England was never again heard of.
+But the struggle had brought to the front a man
+who was destined to give a far wider scope and
+significance to this resistance to Rome than any
+as yet dreamed of. Nothing is more remarkable
+than the contrast between the obscurity of John
+Wyclif's earlier life and the fulness and vividness
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-276"></a>2-276]</span>
+
+of our knowledge of him during the twenty years
+which preceded its close. Born in the earlier
+part of the fourteenth century, he had already
+passed middle age when he was appointed to the
+mastership of Balliol College in the University of
+Oxford and recognized as first among the schoolmen
+of his day. Of all the scholastic doctors
+those of England had been throughout the keenest
+and most daring in philosophical speculation. A
+reckless audacity and love of novelty was the
+common note of Bacon, Duns Scotus, and Ockham,
+as against the sober and more disciplined learning
+of the Parisian schoolmen, Albert and Thomas
+Aquinas. The decay of the University of Paris
+during the English wars was transferring her intellectual
+supremacy to Oxford, and in Oxford
+Wyclif stood without a rival. From his predecessor,
+Bradwardine, whose work as a scholastic
+teacher he carried on in the speculative treatises
+he published during this period, he inherited the
+tendency to a predestinarian Augustinianism
+which formed the groundwork of his later theological
+revolt. His debt to Ockham revealed itself
+in his earliest efforts at Church reform. Undismayed
+by the thunder and excommunications
+of the Church, Ockham had supported the Emperor
+Lewis of Bavaria in his recent struggle, and he
+had not shrunk in his enthusiasm for the Empire
+from attacking the foundations of the Papal
+supremacy or from asserting the rights of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-277"></a>2-277]</span>
+
+civil power. The spare, emaciated frame of
+Wyclif, weakened by study and asceticism, hardly
+promised a reformer who would carry on the
+stormy work of Ockham; but within this frail
+form lay a temper quick and restless, an immense
+energy, an immovable conviction, an unconquerable
+pride. The personal charm which ever
+accompanies real greatness only deepened the
+influence he derived from the spotless purity of
+his life. As yet indeed even Wyclif himself can
+hardly have suspected the immense range of his
+intellectual power. It was only the struggle that
+lay before him which revealed in the dry and
+subtle schoolman the founder of our later English
+prose, a master of popular invective, of irony, of
+persuasion, a dexterous politician, an audacious
+partizan, the organizer of a religious order, the
+unsparing assailant of abuses, the boldest and
+most indefatigable of controversialists, the first
+Reformer who dared, when deserted and alone,
+to question and deny the creed of the Christendom
+around him, to break through the tradition of the
+past, and with his last breath to assert the freedom
+of religious thought against the dogmas of the
+Papacy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">"De
+Dominio
+Divino."</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the moment of the quarrel with Pope
+Urban however Wyclif was far from having
+advanced to such a position as this. As the
+most prominent of English scholars it was natural
+that he should come forward in defence of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-278"></a>2-278]</span>
+
+independence and freedom of the English Church;
+and he published a formal refutation of the claims
+advanced by the Papacy to deal at its will with
+church property in the form of a report of the
+Parliamentary debates which we have described.
+As yet his quarrel was not with the doctrines of
+Rome but with its practices; and it was on the
+principles of Ockham that he defended the Parliament's
+refusal of the "tribute" which was claimed
+by Urban. But his treatise on "The Kingdom of
+God," "De Dominio Divino," which can hardly
+have been written later than 1368, shows the
+breadth of the ground he was even now prepared
+to take up. In this, the most famous of his
+works, Wyclif bases his argument on a distinct
+ideal of society. All authority, to use his own
+expression, is "founded in grace." Dominion in
+the highest sense is in God alone; it is God who
+as the suzerain of the universe deals out His rule
+in fief to rulers in their various stations on tenure
+of their obedience to Himself. It was easy to
+object that in such a case "dominion" could never
+exist, since mortal sin is a breach of such a tenure
+and all men sin. But, as Wyclif urged it, the
+theory is a purely ideal one. In actual practice
+he distinguishes between dominion and power,
+power which the wicked may have by God's permission,
+and to which the Christian must submit
+from motives of obedience to God. In his own
+scholastic phrase, so strangely perverted afterwards,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-279"></a>2-279]</span>
+
+here on earth "God must obey the devil."
+But whether in the ideal or practical view of the
+matter all power and dominion was of God. It
+was granted by Him not to one person, His Vicar
+on earth, as the Papacy alleged, but to all. The
+king was as truly God's Vicar as the Pope. The
+royal power was as sacred as the ecclesiastical, and
+as complete over temporal things, even over the
+temporalities of the Church, as that of the Church
+over spiritual things. So far as the question of
+Church and State therefore was concerned the
+distinction between the ideal and practical view of
+"dominion" was of little account. Wyclif's application
+of the theory to the individual conscience
+was of far higher and wider importance. Obedient
+as each Christian might be to king or priest, he
+himself as a possessor of "dominion" held immediately
+of God. The throne of God Himself
+was the tribunal of personal appeal. What the
+Reformers of the sixteenth century attempted to
+do by their theory of Justification by Faith Wyclif
+attempted to do by his theory of Dominion, a
+theory which in establishing a direct relation
+between man and God swept away the whole basis
+of a mediating priesthood, the very foundation on
+which the mediaeval church was built.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">England and
+Aquitaine</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As yet the full bearing of these doctrines was
+little seen. But the social and religious excitement
+which we have described was quickened by
+the renewal of the war, and the general suffering
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-280"></a>2-280]</span>
+
+and discontent gathered bitterness when the success
+which had flushed England with a new and
+warlike pride passed into a long series of disasters
+in which men forgot the glories of Crécy
+and Poitiers. Triumph as it seemed, the treaty of
+Brétigny was really fatal to Edward's cause in the
+south of France. By the cession of Aquitaine to
+him in full sovereignty the traditional claim on
+which his strength rested lost its force. The
+people of the south had clung to their Duke, even
+though their Duke was a foreign ruler. They had
+stubbornly resisted incorporation with Northern
+France. While preserving however their traditional
+fealty to the descendants of Eleanor they
+still clung to the equally traditional suzerainty of
+the kings of France. But the treaty of Brétigny
+not only severed them from the realm of France,
+it subjected them to the realm of England.
+Edward ceased to be their hereditary Duke, he
+became simply an English king ruling Aquitaine
+as an English dominion. If the Southerners loved
+the North-French little, they loved the English
+less, and the treaty which thus changed their
+whole position was followed by a quick revulsion
+of feeling from the Garonne to the Pyrenees. The
+Gascon nobles declared that John had no right to
+transfer their fealty to another and to sever them
+from the realm of France. The city of Rochelle
+prayed the French king not to release it from its
+fealty to him. "We will obey the English with
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-281"></a>2-281]</span>
+
+our lips," said its citizens, "but our hearts shall
+never be moved towards them." Edward strove
+to meet this passion for local independence, this
+hatred of being ruled from London, by sending
+the Black Prince to Bordeaux and investing him
+in 1362 with the Duchy of Aquitaine. But the
+new Duke held his Duchy as a fief from the
+English king, and the grievance of the Southerners
+was left untouched. Charles V. who succeeded
+his father John in 1364 silently prepared to reap
+this harvest of discontent. Patient, wary, unscrupulous,
+he was hardly crowned before he put
+an end to the war which had gone on without a
+pause in Britanny by accepting homage from the
+claimant whom France had hitherto opposed.
+Through Bertrand du Guesclin, a fine soldier whom
+his sagacity had discovered, he forced the king of
+Navarre to a peace which closed the fighting in
+Normandy. A more formidable difficulty in the
+way of pacification and order lay in the Free
+Companies, a union of marauders whom the disbanding
+of both armies after the peace had set
+free to harry the wasted land and whom the
+king's military resources were insufficient to cope
+with. It was the stroke by which Charles cleared
+his realm of these scourges which forced on a new
+struggle with the English in the south.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Pedro the
+Cruel</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the judgement of the English court the
+friendship of Castille was of the first importance
+for the security of Aquitaine. Spain was the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-282"></a>2-282]</span>
+
+strongest naval power of the western world, and
+not only would the ports of Guienne be closed
+but its communication with England would be at
+once cut off by the appearance of a joint French
+and Spanish fleet in the Channel. It was with
+satisfaction therefore that Edward saw the growth
+of a bitter hostility between Charles and the
+Castilian king, Pedro the Cruel, through the
+murder of his wife, Blanche of Bourbon, the
+French king's sister-in-law. Henry of Trastamara,
+a bastard son of Pedro's father Alfonso the
+Eleventh, had long been a refugee at the French
+court, and soon after the treaty of Brétigny
+Charles in his desire to revenge this murder on
+Pedro gave Henry aid in an attempt on the
+Castilian throne. It was impossible for England
+to look on with indifference while a dependant of
+the French king became master of Castille; and
+in 1362 a treaty offensive and defensive was concluded
+between Pedro and Edward the Third.
+The time was not come for open war; but the
+subtle policy of Charles saw in this strife across
+the Pyrenees an opportunity both of detaching
+Castille from the English cause and of ridding
+himself of the Free Companies. With characteristic
+caution he dexterously held himself in the
+background while he made use of the Pope, who
+had been threatened by the Free Companies in his
+palace at Avignon and was as anxious to get rid
+of them as himself. Pedro's cruelty, misgovernment,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-283"></a>2-283]</span>
+
+and alliance with the Moslem of Cordova
+served as grounds for a crusade which was proclaimed
+by Pope Urban; and Du Guesclin, who
+was placed at the head of the expedition, found
+in the Papal treasury and in the hope of booty
+from an unravaged land means of gathering the
+marauders round his standard. As soon as these
+Crusaders crossed the Ebro Pedro was deserted by
+his subjects, and in 1366 Henry of Trastamara
+saw himself crowned without a struggle at Burgos
+as king of Castille. Pedro with his two daughters
+fled for shelter to Bordeaux and claimed the aid
+promised in the treaty. The lords of Aquitaine
+shrank from fighting for such a cause, but in spite
+of their protests and the reluctance of the English
+council to embark in so distant a struggle Edward
+held that he had no choice save to replace his
+ally, for to leave Henry seated on the throne was
+to leave Aquitaine to be crushed between France
+and Castille.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Charles the
+Fifth</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The after course of the war proved that in his
+anticipations of the fatal result of a combination
+of the two powers Edward was right, but his
+policy jarred not only against the universal
+craving for rest, but against the moral sense of
+the world. The Black Prince however proceeded
+to carry out his father's design in the teeth of the
+general opposition. His call to arms robbed Henry
+of the aid of those English Companies who had
+marched till now with the rest of the crusaders,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-284"></a>2-284]</span>
+
+but who returned at once to the standard of the
+Prince; the passes of Navarre were opened with
+gold, and in the beginning of 1367 the English
+army crossed the Pyrenees. Advancing to the
+Ebro the Prince offered battle at Navarete with
+an army already reduced by famine and disease
+in its terrible winter march, and Henry with
+double his numbers at once attacked him. But in
+spite of the obstinate courage of the Castilian
+troops the discipline and skill of the English
+soldiers once more turned the wavering day into
+a victory. Du Guesclin was taken, Henry fled
+across the Pyrenees, and Pedro was again seated
+on his throne. The pay however which he had
+promised was delayed; and the Prince, whose
+army had been thinned by disease to a fifth of its
+numbers and whose strength never recovered from
+the hardships of this campaign, fell back sick and
+beggared to Aquitaine. He had hardly returned
+when his work was undone. In 1368 Henry reentered
+Castille; its towns threw open their gates;
+a general rising chased Pedro from the throne,
+and a final battle in the spring of 1369 saw his
+utter overthrow. His murder by Henry's hand
+left the bastard undisputed master of Castille.
+Meanwhile the Black Prince, sick and disheartened,
+was hampered at Bordeaux by the expenses
+of the campaign which Pedro had left unpaid.
+To defray his debt he was driven in 1368 to lay a
+hearth-tax on Aquitaine, and the tax served as a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-285"></a>2-285]</span>
+
+pretext for an outbreak of the long-hoarded discontent.
+Charles was now ready for open action.
+He had won over the most powerful among the
+Gascon nobles, and their influence secured the
+rejection of the tax in a Parliament of the province
+which met at Bordeaux. The Prince, pressed
+by debt, persisted against the counsel of his wisest
+advisers in exacting it; and the lords of Aquitaine
+at once appealed to the king of France. Such an
+appeal was a breach of the treaty of Brétigny in
+which the French king had renounced his sovereignty
+over the south; but Charles had craftily
+delayed year after year the formal execution of
+the renunciations stipulated in the treaty, and he
+was still able to treat it as not binding on him.
+The success of Henry of Trastamara decided him
+to take immediate action, and in 1369 he summoned
+the Black Prince as Duke of Aquitaine to
+meet the appeal of the Gascon lords in his court.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Renewal of
+the War</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Prince was maddened by the summons.
+"I will come," he replied, "but with helmet on
+head, and with sixty thousand men at my back."
+War however had hardly been declared when the
+ability with which Charles had laid his plans was
+seen in his seizure of Ponthieu and in a rising of
+the whole country south of the Garonne. Du
+Gueselin returned in 1370 from Spain to throw
+life into the French attack. Two armies entered
+Guienne from the east; and a hundred castles
+with La Réole and Limoges threw open their gates
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-286"></a>2-286]</span>
+
+to Du Guesclin. But the march of an English
+army from Calais upon Paris recalled him from
+the south to guard the capital at a moment when
+the English leader advanced to recover Limoges,
+and the Black Prince borne in a litter to its walls
+stormed the town and sullied by a merciless massacre
+of its inhabitants the fame of his earlier
+exploits. Sickness however recalled him home in
+the spring of 1371; and the war, protracted by
+the caution of Charles who forbade his armies to
+engage, did little but exhaust the energy and
+treasure of England. As yet indeed the French
+attack had made small impression on the south,
+where the English troops stoutly held their ground
+against Du Guesclin's inroads. But the protracted
+war drained Edward's resources, while the diplomacy
+of Charles was busy in rousing fresh dangers
+from Scotland and Castille. It was in vain that
+Edward looked for allies to the Flemish towns.
+The male line of the Counts of Flanders ended in
+Count Louis le Mâle; and the marriage of his
+daughter Margaret with Philip, Duke of Burgundy,
+a younger brother of the French king, secured
+Charles from attack along his northern border.
+In Scotland the death of David Bruce put an end
+to Edward's schemes for a reunion of the two
+kingdoms; and his successor, Robert the Steward,
+renewed in 1371 the alliance with France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Loss of
+Aquitaine</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Castille was a yet more serious danger; and an
+effort which Edward made to neutralize its attack
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-287"></a>2-287]</span>
+
+only forced Henry of Trastamara to fling his whole
+weight into the struggle. The two daughters of
+Pedro had remained since their father's flight at
+Bordeaux. The elder of these was now wedded
+to John of Gaunt, Edward's fourth son, whom he
+had created Duke of Lancaster on his previous
+marriage with Blanche, a daughter of Henry of
+Lancaster and the heiress of that house, while the
+younger was wedded to Edward's fifth son, the
+Earl of Cambridge. Edward's aim was that of
+raising again the party of King Pedro and giving
+Henry of Trastamara work to do at home which
+would hinder his interposition in the war of
+Guienne. It was with this view that John of
+Gaunt on his marriage took the title of king of
+Castille. But no adherent of Pedro's cause stirred in
+Spain, and Henry replied to the challenge by sending
+a Spanish fleet to the Channel. A decisive victory
+which this fleet won over an English convoy off
+Rochelle proved a fatal blow to the English cause.
+It wrested from Edward the mastery of the seas,
+and cut off all communication between England
+and Guienne. Charles was at once roused to new
+exertions. Poitou, Saintonge, and the Angoumois
+yielded to his general Du Guesclin; and Rochelle
+was surrendered by its citizens in 1372. The next
+year saw a desperate attempt to restore the fortune
+of the English arms. A great army under John
+of Gaunt penetrated into the heart of France.
+But it found no foe to engage. Charles had forbidden
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-288"></a>2-288]</span>
+
+any fighting. "If a storm rages over the
+land," said the king coolly, "it disperses of itself;
+and so will it be with the English." Winter in fact
+overtook the Duke of Lancaster in the mountains
+of Auvergne, and a mere fragment of his host
+reached Bordeaux. The failure of this attack was
+the signal for a general defection, and ere the
+summer of 1374 had closed the two towns of
+Bordeaux and Bayonne were all that remained of
+the English possessions in Southern France. Even
+these were only saved by the exhaustion of the
+conquerors. The treasury of Charles was as
+utterly drained as the treasury of Edward; and
+the kings were forced to a truce.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Social
+Strife</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Only fourteen years had gone by since the
+Treaty of Brétigny raised England to a height of
+glory such as it had never known before. But
+the years had been years of a shame and suffering
+which stung the people to madness. Never had
+England fallen so low. Her conquests were lost,
+her shores insulted, her commerce swept from the
+seas. Within she was drained by the taxation
+and bloodshed of the war. Its popularity had
+wholly died away. When the Commons were
+asked in 1354 whether they would assent to a
+treaty of perpetual peace if they might have it,
+"the said Commons responded all, and all together,
+'Yes, yes!'" The population was thinned by the
+ravages of pestilence, for till 1369, which saw its
+last visitation, the Black Death returned again and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-289"></a>2-289]</span>
+
+again. The social strife too gathered bitterness
+with every effort at repression. It was in vain
+that Parliament after Parliament increased the
+severity of its laws. The demands of the Parliament
+of 1376 show how inoperative the previous
+Statutes of Labourers had proved. They prayed
+that constables be directed to arrest all who infringed
+the Statute, that no labourer should be
+allowed to take refuge in a town and become an
+artizan if there were need of his service in the
+county from which he came, and that the king
+would protect lords and employers against the
+threats of death uttered by serfs who refused to
+serve. The reply of the Royal Council shows that
+statesmen at any rate were beginning to feel that
+repression might be pushed too far. The king
+refused to interfere by any further and harsher
+provisions between employers and employed, and
+left cases of breach of law to be dealt with in his
+ordinary courts of justice. On the one side he
+forbade the threatening gatherings which were
+already common in the country, but on the other
+he forbade the illegal exactions of the employers.
+With such a reply however the proprietary
+class were hardly likely to be content.
+Two years later the Parliament of Gloucester called
+for a Fugitive-slave Law, which would have enabled
+lords to seize their serfs in whatever county
+or town they found refuge, and in 1379 they
+prayed that judges might be sent five times a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-290"></a>2-290]</span>
+
+year into every shire to enforce the Statute of
+Labourers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Edward
+and the
+Parliament</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the strife between employers and employed
+was not the only rift which was opening in the
+social structure. Suffering and defeat had stripped
+off the veil which hid from the nation the shallow
+and selfish temper of Edward the Third. His
+profligacy was now bringing him to a premature
+old age. He was sinking into the tool of his
+ministers and his mistresses. The glitter and profusion
+of his court, his splendid tournaments, his
+feasts, his Table Round, his new order of chivalry,
+the exquisite chapel of St. Stephen whose
+frescoed walls were the glory of his palace at
+Westminster, the vast keep which crowned the
+hill of Windsor, had ceased to throw their glamour
+round a king who tricked his Parliament and
+swindled his creditors. Edward paid no debts.
+He had ruined the wealthiest bankers of Florence
+by a cool act of bankruptcy. The sturdier Flemish
+burghers only wrested payment from him by holding
+his royal person as their security. His own
+subjects fared no better than foreigners. The
+prerogative of "purveyance" by which the king
+in his progresses through the country had the
+right of first purchase of all that he needed at fair
+market price became a galling oppression in the
+hands of a bankrupt king who was always moving
+from place to place. "When men hear of
+your coming," Archbishop Islip wrote to Edward,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-291"></a>2-291]</span>
+
+"everybody at once for sheer fear sets about hiding
+or eating or getting rid of their geese and
+chickens or other possessions that they may not
+utterly lose them through your arrival. The
+purveyors and servants of your court seize on men
+and horses in the midst of their field work. They
+seize on the very bullocks that are at plough or at
+sowing, and force them to work for two or three
+days at a time without a penny of payment. It
+is no wonder that men make dole and murmur at
+your approach, for, as the truth is in God, I myself,
+whenever I hear a rumour of it, be I at home
+or in chapter or in church or at study, nay if I
+am saying mass, even I in my own person tremble
+in every limb." But these irregular exactions
+were little beside the steady pressure of taxation.
+Even in the years of peace fifteenths and tenths,
+subsidies on wool and subsidies on leather, were
+demanded and obtained from Parliament; and
+with the outbreak of war the royal demands became
+heavier and more frequent. As failure
+followed failure the expenses of each campaign increased
+an ineffectual attempt to relieve Rochelle
+cost nearly a million; the march of John of Gaunt
+through France utterly drained the royal treasury.
+Nor were these legal supplies all that the king drew
+from the nation. He had repudiated his pledge
+to abstain from arbitrary taxation of imports and
+exports. He sold monopolies to the merchants in
+exchange for increased customs. He wrested
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-292"></a>2-292]</span>
+
+supplies from the clergy by arrangements with
+the bishops or the Pope. There were signs that
+Edward was longing to rid himself of the control
+of Parliament altogether. The power of the
+Houses seemed indeed as high as ever; great
+statutes were passed. Those of Provisors and
+Præmunire settled the relations of England to the
+Roman Court. That of Treason in 1352 defined
+that crime and its penalties. That of the Staples
+in 1353 regulated the conditions of foreign trade
+and the privileges of the merchant gilds which
+conducted it. But side by side with these exertions
+of influence we note a series of steady encroachments
+by the Crown on the power of the
+Houses. If their petitions were granted, they
+were often altered in the royal ordinance which
+professed to embody them. A plan of demanding
+supplies for three years at once rendered the
+annual assembly of Parliament less necessary. Its
+very existence was threatened by the convocation
+in 1352 and 1353 of occasional councils with but
+a single knight from every shire and a single
+burgess from a small number of the greater towns,
+which acted as Parliament and granted subsidies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The
+Baronage
+and the
+Church</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What aided Edward above all in eluding or
+defying the constitutional restrictions on arbitrary
+taxation, as well as in these more insidious attempts
+to displace the Parliament, was the lessening of
+the check which the Baronage and the Church had
+till now supplied. The same causes which had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-293"></a>2-293]</span>
+
+long been reducing the number of the greater
+lords who formed the upper house went steadily
+on. Under Edward the Second little more than
+seventy were commonly summoned to Parliament;
+little more than forty were summoned under
+Edward the Third, and of these the bulk were
+now bound to the Crown, partly by their employment
+on its service, partly by their interest in the
+continuance of the war. The heads of the Baronage
+too were members of the royal family. Edward
+had carried out on a far wider scale than before
+the policy which had been more or less adhered to
+from the days of Henry the Third, that of gathering
+up in the hands of the royal house all the
+greater heritages of the land. The Black Prince
+was married to Joan of Kent, the heiress of Edward
+the First's younger son, Earl Edmund of Woodstock.
+His marriage with the heiress of the Earl
+of Ulster brought to the king's second son, Lionel,
+Duke of Clarence, a great part of the possessions
+of the de Burghs. Later on the possessions of the
+house of Bohun passed by like matches to his youngest
+son, Thomas of Woodstock, and to his grandson,
+Henry of Lancaster. But the greatest English
+heritage fell to Edward's third living son, John of
+Gaunt as he was called from his birth at Ghent
+during his father's Flemish campaign. Originally
+created Earl of Richmond, the death of his father-in-law,
+Henry of Lancaster, and of Henry's eldest
+daughter, raised John in his wife's right to the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-294"></a>2-294]</span>
+
+Dukedom of Lancaster and the Earldoms of Derby,
+Leicester, and Lincoln. But while the baronage
+were thus bound to the Crown, they drifted more
+and more into an hostility with the Church which
+in time disabled the clergy from acting as a check
+on it. What rent the ruling classes in twain was
+the growing pressure of the war. The nobles and
+knighthood of the country, already half ruined by
+the rise in the labour market and the attitude of
+the peasantry, were pressed harder than ever by
+the repeated subsidies which were called for by
+the continuance of the struggle. In the hour of
+their distress they cast their eyes greedily--as in
+the Norman and Angevin days--on the riches of
+the Church. Never had her wealth been greater.
+Out of a population of some three millions the
+ecclesiastics numbered between twenty and thirty
+thousand. Wild tales of their riches floated about
+the country. They were said to own in landed
+property alone more than a third of the soil,
+while their "spiritualities" in dues and offerings
+amounted to twice the king's revenue. Exaggerated
+as such statements were, the wealth of the
+Church was really great; but even more galling
+to the nobles was its influence in the royal councils.
+The feudal baronage, flushed with a new pride by
+its victories at Crécy and Poitiers, looked with
+envy and wrath at the throng of bishops around
+the council-board, and attributed to their love of
+peace the errors and sluggishness which had
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-295"></a>2-295]</span>
+
+caused, as they held, the disasters of the war.
+To rob the Church of wealth and of power became
+the aim of a great baronial party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Weakness of
+the Church</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The efforts of the baronage indeed would have
+been fruitless had the spiritual power of the
+Church remained as of old. But the clergy were
+rent by their own dissensions. The higher prelates
+were busy with the cares of political office,
+and severed from the lower priesthood by the
+scandalous inequality between the revenues of the
+wealthier ecclesiastics and the "poor parson" of
+the country. A bitter hatred divided the secular
+clergy from the regular; and this strife went
+fiercely on in the Universities. Fitz-Ralf, the
+Chancellor of Oxford, attributed to the friars the
+decline which was already being felt in the number
+of academical students, and the University checked
+by statute their practice of admitting mere children
+into their order. The clergy too at large
+shared in the discredit and unpopularity of the
+Papacy. Though they suffered more than any
+other class from the exactions of Avignon, they
+were bound more and more to the Papal cause.
+The very statutes which would have protected
+them were practically set aside by the treacherous
+diplomacy of the Crown. At home and abroad
+the Roman See was too useful for the king to
+come to any actual breach with it. However
+much Edward might echo the bold words of his
+Parliament, he shrank from an open contest which
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-296"></a>2-296]</span>
+
+would have added the Papacy to his many foes,
+and which would at the same time have robbed
+him of his most effective means of wresting aids
+from the English clergy by private arrangement
+with the Roman court. Rome indeed was brought
+to waive its alleged right of appointing foreigners
+to English livings. But a compromise was arranged
+between the Pope and the Crown in which
+both united in the spoliation and enslavement of
+the Church. The voice of chapters, of monks, of
+ecclesiastical patrons, went henceforth for nothing
+in the election of bishops or abbots or the nomination
+to livings in the gift of churchmen. The
+Crown recommended those whom it chose to the
+Pope, and the Pope nominated them to see or cure
+of souls. The treasuries of both King and Pope
+profited by the arrangement; but we can hardly
+wonder that after a betrayal such as this the
+clergy placed little trust in statutes or royal protection,
+and bowed humbly before the claims of
+Rome.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Its Worldliness</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what weakened the clergy most was their
+severance from the general sympathies of the
+nation, their selfishness, and the worldliness of
+their temper. Immense as their wealth was, they
+bore as little as they could of the common burthens
+of the realm. They were still resolute to assert
+their exemption from the common justice of the
+land, though the mild punishments of the bishops'
+courts carried as little dismay as ever into the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-297"></a>2-297]</span>
+
+mass of disorderly clerks. But privileged as they
+thus held themselves against all interference from
+the lay world without them, they carried on a
+ceaseless interference with the affairs of this lay
+world through their control over wills, contracts
+and divorces. No figure was better known or
+more hated than the summoner who enforced the
+jurisdiction and levied the dues of their courts.
+By their directly religious offices they penetrated
+into the very heart of the social life about them.
+But powerful as they were, their moral authority
+was fast passing away. The wealthier churchmen
+with their curled hair and hanging sleeves aped
+the costume of the knightly society from which
+they were drawn and to which they still really
+belonged. We see the general impression of their
+worldliness in Chaucer's pictures of the hunting
+monk and the courtly prioress with her love-motto
+on her brooch. The older religious orders in fact
+had sunk into mere landowners, while the enthusiasm
+of the friars had in great part died away
+and left a crowd of impudent mendicants behind
+it. Wyclif could soon with general applause
+denounce them as sturdy beggars, and declare
+that "the man who gives alms to a begging friar
+is <i>ipso facto</i> excommunicate."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Advance
+of the
+Commons</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was this weakness of the Baronage and the
+Church, and the consequent withdrawal of both as
+represented in the temporal and spiritual Estates
+of the Upper House from the active part which
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-298"></a>2-298]</span>
+
+they had taken till now in checking the Crown
+that brought the Lower House to the front. The
+Knight of the Shire was now finally joined with
+the Burgess of the Town to form the Third Estate
+of the realm: and this union of the trader and the
+country gentleman gave a vigour and weight to
+the action of the Commons which their House
+could never have acquired had it remained as elsewhere
+a mere gathering of burgesses. But it was
+only slowly and under the pressure of one necessity
+after another that the Commons took a growing
+part in public affairs. Their primary business was
+with taxation, and here they stood firm against
+the evasions by which the king still managed to
+baffle their exclusive right of granting supplies by
+voluntary agreements with the merchants of the
+Staple. Their steady pressure at last obtained in
+1362 an enactment that no subsidy should henceforth
+be set upon wool without assent of Parliament,
+while Purveyance was restricted by a provision
+that payments should be made for all things
+taken for the king's use in ready money. A
+hardly less important advance was made by the
+change of Ordinances into Statutes. Till this
+time, even when a petition of the Houses was
+granted, the royal Council had reserved to itself
+the right of modifying its form in the Ordinance
+which professed to embody it. It was under
+colour of this right that so many of the provisions
+made in Parliament had hitherto been evaded or
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-299"></a>2-299]</span>
+
+set aside. But the Commons now met this abuse
+by a demand that on the royal assent being
+given their petitions should be turned without
+change into Statutes of the Realm and derive force
+of law from their entry on the Rolls of Parliament.
+The same practical sense was seen in their dealings
+with Edward's attempt to introduce occasional
+smaller councils with parliamentary powers. Such
+an assembly in 1353 granted a subsidy on wool.
+The Parliament which met in the following year
+might have challenged its proceedings as null and
+void, but the Commons more wisely contented
+themselves with a demand that the ordinances
+passed in the preceding assembly should receive
+the sanction of the Three Estates. A precedent
+for evil was thus turned into a precedent for
+good, and though irregular gatherings of a like
+sort were for a while occasionally held they were
+soon seen to be fruitless and discontinued. But
+the Commons long shrank from meddling with
+purely administrative matters. When Edward in
+his anxiety to shift from himself the responsibility
+of the war referred to them in 1354 for advice on
+one of the numerous propositions of peace, they
+referred him to the lords of his Council. "Most
+dreaded lord," they replied, "as to this war and
+the equipment needful for it we are so ignorant
+and simple that we know not how nor have the
+power to devise. Wherefore we pray your Grace
+to excuse us in this matter, and that it please you
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-300"></a>2-300]</span>
+
+with the advice of the great and wise persons of
+your Council to ordain what seems best for you
+for the honour and profit of yourself and of your
+kingdom. And whatsoever shall be thus ordained
+by assent and agreement on the part of you and
+your Lords we readily assent to and will hold it
+firmly established."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Baronage
+attacks the
+Church</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But humble as was their tone the growing
+power of the Commons showed itself in significant
+changes. In 1363 the Chancellor opened Parliament
+with a speech in English, no doubt as a
+tongue intelligible to the members of the Lower
+House. From a petition in 1376 that knights of
+the shire may be chosen by common election of
+the better folk of the shire and not merely nominated
+by the sheriff without due election, as well
+as from an earlier demand that the sheriffs themselves
+should be disqualified from serving in Parliament
+during their term of office, we see that the
+Crown had already begun not only to feel the
+pressure of the Commons but to meet it by foisting
+royal nominees on the constituencies. Such
+an attempt at packing the House would hardly
+have been resorted to had it not already proved
+too strong for direct control. A further proof of
+its influence was seen in a prayer of the Parliament
+that lawyers practising in the King's Courts might
+no longer be eligible as knights of the shire. The
+petition marks the rise of a consciousness that the
+House was now no mere gathering of local representatives,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-301"></a>2-301]</span>
+
+but a national assembly, and that a seat
+in it could no longer be confined to dwellers within
+the bounds of this county or that. But it
+showed also a pressure for seats, a passing away
+of the old dread of being returned as a representative
+and a new ambition to gain a place among
+the members of the Commons. Whether they
+would or no indeed the Commons were driven
+forward to a more direct interference with public
+affairs. From the memorable statute of 1322
+their right to take equal part in all matters
+brought before Parliament had been incontestable,
+and their waiver of much of this right faded away
+before the stress of time. Their assent was needed
+to the great ecclesiastical statutes which regulated
+the relation of the See of Rome to the realm.
+They naturally took a chief part in the enactment
+and re-enactment of the Statute of Labourers.
+The Statute of the Staple, with a host of smaller
+commercial and economical measures, was of their
+origination. But it was not till an open breach
+took place between the baronage and the prelates
+that their full weight was felt. In the Parliament
+of 1371, on the resumption of the war, a noble
+taunted the Church as an owl protected by the
+feathers which other birds had contributed, and
+which they had a right to resume when a hawk's
+approach threatened them. The worldly goods of
+the Church, the metaphor hinted, had been bestowed
+on it for the common weal, and could be
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-302"></a>2-302]</span>
+
+taken from it on the coming of a common danger.
+The threat was followed by a prayer that the
+chief offices of state, which had till now been held
+by the leading bishops, might be placed in lay
+hands. The prayer was at once granted: William
+of Wykeham, Bishop of Winchester, resigned the
+Chancellorship, another prelate the Treasury, to
+lay dependants of the great nobles; and the panic
+of the clergy was seen in large grants which were
+voted by both Convocations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">John of
+Gaunt</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the moment of their triumph the assailants
+of the Church found a leader in John of Gaunt.
+The Duke of Lancaster now wielded the actual
+power of the Crown. Edward himself was sinking
+into dotage. Of his sons the Black Prince, who
+had never rallied from the hardships of his Spanish
+campaign, was fast drawing to the grave; he had
+lost a second son by death in childhood; the third,
+Lionel of Clarence, had died in 1368. It was his
+fourth son therefore, John of Gaunt, to whom the
+royal power mainly fell. By his marriage with
+the heiress of the house of Lancaster the Duke had
+acquired lands and wealth, but he had no taste for
+the policy of the Lancastrian house or for acting
+as leader of the barons in any constitutional resistance
+to the Crown. His pride, already quickened
+by the second match with Constance to which he
+owed his shadowy kingship of Castille, drew him
+to the throne; and the fortune which placed the
+royal power practically in his hands bound him
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-303"></a>2-303]</span>
+
+only the more firmly to its cause. Men held that
+his ambition looked to the Crown itself, for the
+approaching death of Edward and the Prince of
+Wales left but a boy, Richard, the son of the Black
+Prince, a child of but a few years old, and a girl,
+the daughter of the Duke of Clarence, between
+John and the throne. But the Duke's success fell
+short of his pride. In the campaign of 1373 he
+traversed France without finding a foe and brought
+back nothing save a ruined army to English shores.
+The peremptory tone in which money was demanded
+for the cost of this fruitless march while
+the petitions of the Parliament were set aside till
+it was granted roused the temper of the Commons.
+They requested--it is the first instance of such a
+practice--a conference with the lords, and while
+granting fresh subsidies prayed that the grant
+should be spent only on the war. The resentment
+of the government at this advance towards a control
+over the actual management of public affairs was
+seen in the calling of no Parliament through the
+next two years. But the years were disastrous
+both at home and abroad. The war went steadily
+against the English arms. The long negotiations
+with the Pope which went on at Bruges through
+1375, and in which Wyclif took part as one of the
+royal commissioners, ended in a compromise by
+which Rome yielded nothing. The strife over the
+Statute of Labourers grew fiercer and fiercer, and
+a return of the plague heightened the public distress.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-304"></a>2-304]</span>
+
+Edward was now wholly swayed by Alice
+Perrers, and the Duke shared his power with the
+royal mistress. But if we gather its tenor from
+the complaints of the succeeding Parliament his
+administration was as weak as it was corrupt.
+The new lay ministers lent themselves to gigantic
+frauds. The chamberlain, Lord Latimer, bought
+up the royal debts and embezzled the public
+revenue. With Richard Lyons, a merchant through
+whom the king negotiated with the gild of the
+Staple, he reaped enormous profits by raising the
+price of imports and by lending to the Crown at
+usurious rates of interest. When the empty
+treasury forced them to call a Parliament the
+ministers tampered with the elections through the
+sheriffs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Good
+Parliament</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the temper of the Parliament which met in
+1376, and which gained from after times the name
+of the Good Parliament, shows that these precautions
+had utterly failed. Even their promise
+to pillage the Church had failed to win for the
+Duke and his party the good will of the lesser
+gentry or the wealthier burgesses who together
+formed the Commons. Projects of wide constitutional
+and social change, of the humiliation and
+impoverishment of an estate of the realm, were
+profoundly distasteful to men already struggling
+with a social revolution on their own estates and
+in their own workshops. But it was not merely
+its opposition to the projects of Lancaster and his
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-305"></a>2-305]</span>
+
+party among the baronage which won for this
+assembly the name of the Good Parliament. Its
+action marked a new period in our Parliamentary
+history, as it marked a new stage in the character
+of the national opposition to the misrule of the
+Crown. Hitherto the task of resistance had
+devolved on the baronage, and had been carried
+out through risings of its feudal tenantry. But
+the misgovernment was now that of the baronage
+or of a main part of the baronage itself in actual
+conjunction with the Crown. Only in the power
+of the Commons lay any adequate means of peaceful
+redress. The old reluctance of the Lower
+House to meddle with matters of State was roughly
+swept away therefore by the pressure of the time.
+The Black Prince, anxious to secure his child's
+succession by the removal of John of Gaunt, the
+prelates with William of Wykeham at their head,
+resolute again to take their place in the royal
+councils and to check the projects of ecclesiastical
+spoliation put forward by their opponents, alike
+found in it a body to oppose to the Duke's administration.
+Backed by powers such as these,
+the action of the Commons showed none of their
+old timidity or self-distrust. The presentation of
+a hundred and forty petitions of grievances preluded
+a bold attack on the royal Council. "Trusting in
+God, and standing with his followers before the
+nobles, whereof the chief was John Duke of
+Lancaster, whose doings were ever contrary," their
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-306"></a>2-306]</span>
+
+speaker, Sir Peter de la Mare, denounced the mis-management
+of the war, the oppressive taxation,
+and demanded an account of the expenditure.
+"What do these base and ignoble knights attempt?"
+cried John of Gaunt. "Do they think they be
+kings or princes of the land?" But the movement
+was too strong to be stayed. Even the Duke was
+silenced by the charges brought against the
+ministers. After a strict enquiry Latimer and
+Lyons were alike thrown into prison, Alice Perrers
+was banished, and several of the royal servants
+were driven from the Court. At this moment the
+death of the Black Prince shook the power of the
+Parliament. But it only heightened its resolve
+to secure the succession. His son, Richard of
+Bordeaux, as he was called from the place of his
+birth, was now a child of but ten years old; and
+it was known that doubts were whispered on the
+legitimacy of his birth and claim. An early
+marriage of his mother Joan of Kent, a granddaughter
+of Edward the First, with the Earl of
+Salisbury had been annulled; but the Lancastrian
+party used this first match to throw doubts on the
+validity of her subsequent union with the Black
+Prince and on the right of Richard to the
+throne. The dread of Lancaster's ambition is the
+first indication of the approach of what was from
+this time to grow into the great difficulty of the
+realm, the question of the succession to the Crown.
+From the death of Edward the Third to the death
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-307"></a>2-307]</span>
+
+of Charles the First no English sovereign felt himself
+secure from rival claimants of his throne. As
+yet however the dread was a baseless one; the
+people were heartily with the Prince and his child.
+The Duke's proposal that the succession should be
+settled in case of Richard's death was rejected;
+and the boy himself was brought into Parliament
+and acknowledged as heir of the Crown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Wyclif
+and John
+of Gaunt</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To secure their work the Commons ended by
+obtaining the addition of nine lords with William
+of Wykeham and two other prelates among them
+to the royal Council. But the Parliament was no
+sooner dismissed than the Duke at once resumed
+his power. His anger at the blow which had been
+dealt at his projects was no doubt quickened by
+resentment at the sudden advance of the Lower
+House. From the Commons who shrank even
+from giving counsel on matters of state to the
+Commons who dealt with such matters as their
+special business, who investigated royal accounts,
+who impeached royal ministers, who dictated
+changes in the royal advisers, was an immense
+step. But it was a step which the Duke believed
+could be retraced. His haughty will flung aside
+all restraints of law. He dismissed the new lords
+and prelates from the Council. He called back
+Alice Perrers and the disgraced ministers. He
+declared the Good Parliament no parliament, and
+did not suffer its petitions to be enrolled as statutes.
+He imprisoned Peter de la Mare, and confiscated
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-308"></a>2-308]</span>
+
+the possessions of William of Wykeham. His
+attack on this prelate was an attack on the clergy
+at large, and the attack became significant when
+the Duke gave his open patronage to the denunciations
+of Church property which formed the
+favourite theme of John Wyclif. To Wyclif such
+a prelate as Wykeham symbolized the evil which
+held down the Church. His administrative ability,
+his political energy, his wealth and the colleges at
+Winchester and at Oxford which it enabled him
+to raise before his death, were all equally hateful.
+It was this wealth, this intermeddling with worldly
+business, which the ascetic reformer looked upon
+as the curse that robbed prelates and churchmen
+of that spiritual authority which could alone meet
+the vice and suffering of the time. Whatever baser
+motives might spur Lancaster and his party, their
+projects of spoliation must have seemed to Wyclif
+projects of enfranchisement for the Church. Poor
+and powerless in worldly matters, he held that she
+would have the wealth and might of heaven at her
+command. Wyclif's theory of Church and State
+had led him long since to contend that the property
+of the clergy might be seized and employed like
+other property for national purposes. Such a
+theory might have been left, as other daring
+theories of the schoolmen had been left, to the
+disputation of the schools. But the clergy were
+bitterly galled when the first among English
+teachers threw himself hotly on the side of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-309"></a>2-309]</span>
+
+party which threatened them with spoliation, and
+argued in favour of their voluntary abandonment
+of all Church property and of a return to their
+original poverty. They were roused to action
+when Wyclif came forward as the theological bulwark
+of the Lancastrian party at a moment when
+the clergy were freshly outraged by the overthrow
+of the bishops and the plunder of Wykeham.
+They forced the king to cancel the sentence of
+banishment from the precincts of the Court which
+had been directed against the Bishop of Winchester
+by refusing any grant of supply in Convocation
+till William of Wykeham took his seat in it. But
+in the prosecution of Wyclif they resolved to return
+blow for blow. In February 1377 he was
+summoned before Bishop Courtenay of London to
+answer for his heretical propositions concerning
+the wealth of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Duke of Lancaster accepted the challenge
+as really given to himself, and stood by Wyclif's
+side in the Consistory Court at St. Paul's. But
+no trial took place. Fierce words passed between
+the nobles and the prelate: the Duke himself was
+said to have threatened to drag Courtenay out of
+the church by the hair of his head; at last the
+London populace, to whom John of Gaunt was
+hateful, burst in to their Bishop's rescue, and
+Wyclif's life was saved with difficulty by the aid
+of the soldiery. But his boldness only grew with
+the danger. A Papal bull which was procured by
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-310"></a>2-310]</span>
+
+the bishops, directing the University to condemn
+and arrest him, extorted from him a bold defiance.
+In a defence circulated widely through the kingdom
+and laid before Parliament, Wyclif broadly asserted
+that no man could be excommunicated by the Pope
+"unless he were first excommunicated by himself."
+He denied the right of the Church to exact or
+defend temporal privileges by spiritual censures,
+declared that a Church might justly be deprived
+by the king or lay lords of its property for defect
+of duty, and defended the subjection of ecclesiastics
+to civil tribunals. It marks the temper of the time
+and the growing severance between the Church
+and the nation that, bold as the defiance was, it
+won the support of the people as of the Crown.
+When Wyclif appeared at the close of the year in
+Lambeth Chapel to answer the Archbishop's summons
+a message from the Court forbade the primate
+to proceed and the Londoners broke in and
+dissolved the session.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Death of
+Edward the
+Third</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile the Duke's unscrupulous tampering
+with elections had packed the Parliament of 1377
+with his adherents. The work of the Good Parliament
+was undone, and the Commons petitioned for
+the restoration of all who had been impeached by
+their predecessors. The needs of the treasury
+were met by a novel form of taxation. To the
+earlier land-tax, to the tax on personality which
+dated from the Saladin Tithe, to the customs duties
+which had grown into importance in the last two
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-311"></a>2-311]</span>
+
+reigns, was now added a tax which reached every
+person in the realm, a poll-tax of a groat a head.
+In this tax were sown the seeds of future trouble,
+but when the Parliament broke up in March the
+Duke's power seemed completely secured. Hardly
+three months later it was wholly undone. In June
+Edward the Third died in a dishonoured old age,
+robbed on his death-bed even of his rings by the
+mistress to whom he clung, and the accession of
+his grandson, Richard the Second, changed the
+whole face of affairs. The Duke withdrew from
+Court, and sought a reconciliation with the party
+opposed to him. The men of the Good Parliament
+surrounded the new king, and a Parliament which
+assembled in October took vigorously up its work.
+Peter de la Mare was released from prison and
+replaced in the chair of the House of Commons.
+The action of the Lower House indeed was as
+trenchant and comprehensive as that of the Good
+Parliament itself. In petition after petition the
+Commons demanded the confirmation of older
+rights and the removal of modern abuses. They
+complained of administrative wrongs such as the
+practice of purveyance, of abuses of justice, of the
+oppressions of officers of the exchequer and of the
+forest, of the ill state of prisons, of the customs of
+"maintenance" and "livery" by which lords extended
+their protection to shoals of disorderly
+persons and overawed the courts by means of them.
+Amid ecclesiastical abuses they noted the state of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-312"></a>2-312]</span>
+
+the Church courts, and the neglect of the laws
+of Provisors. They demanded that the annual
+assembly of Parliament, which had now become
+customary, should be defined by law, and that
+bills once sanctioned by the Crown should be
+forthwith turned into statutes without further
+amendment or change on the part of the royal
+Council. With even greater boldness they laid
+hands on the administration itself. They not
+only demanded that the evil counsellors of the
+last reign should be removed, and that the treasurer
+of the subsidy on wool should account for
+its expenditure to the lords, but that the royal
+Council should be named in Parliament, and chosen
+from members of either estate of the realm. Though
+a similar request for the nomination of the officers
+of the royal household was refused, their main
+demand was granted. It was agreed that the great
+officers of state, the chancellor, treasurer, and barons
+of exchequer should be named by the lords in
+Parliament, and removed from their offices during
+the king's "tender years" only on the advice of
+the lords. The pressure of the war, which rendered
+the existing taxes insufficient, gave the House a
+fresh hold on the Crown. While granting a new
+subsidy in the form of a land and property tax, the
+Commons restricted its proceeds to the war, and
+assigned two of their members, William Walworth
+and John Philpot, as a standing committee to
+regulate its expenditure. The successor of this
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-313"></a>2-313]</span>
+
+Parliament in the following year demanded and
+obtained an account of the way in which the subsidy
+had been spent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Discontent
+of the
+people</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The minority of the king, who was but eleven
+years old at his accession, the weakness of the royal
+council amidst the strife of the baronial factions,
+above all the disasters of the war without and the
+growing anarchy within the realm itself, alone made
+possible this startling assumption of the executive
+power by the Houses. The shame of defeat abroad
+was being added to the misery and discomfort at
+home. The French war ran its disastrous course.
+One English fleet was beaten by the Spaniards, a
+second sunk by a storm; and a campaign in the heart
+of France ended, like its predecessors, in disappointment
+and ruin. Meanwhile the strife between
+employers and employed was kindling into civil
+war. The Parliament, drawn as it was wholly
+from the proprietary classes, struggled as fiercely
+for the mastery of the labourers as it struggled for
+the mastery of the Crown. The Good Parliament
+had been as strenuous in demanding the enforcement
+of the Statute of Labourers as any of its
+predecessors. In spite of statutes, however, the
+market remained in the labourers' hands. The
+comfort of the worker rose with his wages. Men
+who had "no land to live on but their hands disdained
+to live on penny ale or bacon, and called
+for fresh flesh or fish, fried or bake, and that hot
+and hotter for chilling of their maw." But there
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-314"></a>2-314]</span>
+
+were dark shades in this general prosperity of the
+labour class. There were seasons of the year
+during which employment for the floating mass of
+labour was hard to find. In the long interval
+between harvest-tide and harvest-tide work and
+food were alike scarce in every homestead of the
+time. Some lines of William Langland give us
+the picture of a farm of the day. "I have no
+penny pullets for to buy, nor neither geese nor
+pigs, but two green cheeses, a few curds and cream,
+and an oaten cake, and two loaves of beans and
+bran baken for my children. I have no salt bacon
+nor no cooked meat collops for to make, but I have
+parsley and leeks and many cabbage plants, and
+eke a cow and a calf, and a cart-mare to draw
+afield my dung while the drought lasteth, and by
+this livelihood we must all live till Lammas-tide
+[August], and by that I hope to have harvest in
+my croft." But it was not till Lammas-tide that
+high wages and the new corn bade "Hunger go to
+sleep," and during the long spring and summer the
+free labourer and the "waster that will not work
+but wander about, that will eat no bread but the
+finest wheat, nor drink but of the best and brownest
+ale," was a source of social and political danger.
+"He grieveth him against God and grudgeth
+against Reason, and then curseth he the King and
+all his council after such law to allow labourers to
+grieve." Such a smouldering mass of discontent
+as this needed but a spark to burst into flame; and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-315"></a>2-315]</span>
+
+the spark was found in the imposition of fresh
+taxation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The
+Poll-Tax</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If John of Gaunt was fallen from his old power
+he was still the leading noble in the realm, and it
+is possible that dread of the encroachments of the
+last Parliament on the executive power drew after
+a time even the new advisers of the Crown closer to
+him. Whatever was the cause, he again came to
+the front. But the supplies voted in the past
+year were wasted in his hands. A fresh expedition
+against France under the Duke himself ended in
+failure before the walls of St. Malo, while at home
+his brutal household was outraging public order
+by the murder of a knight who had incurred John's
+anger in the precincts of Westminster. So great
+was the resentment of the Londoners at this act
+that it became needful to summon Parliament elsewhere
+than to the capital; and in 1378 the Houses
+met at Gloucester. The Duke succeeded in bringing
+the Lords to refuse those conferences with the
+Commons which had given unity to the action of
+the late Parliament, but he was foiled in an attack
+on the clerical privilege of sanctuary and in the
+threats which his party still directed against
+Church property, while the Commons forced the
+royal Council to lay before them the accounts of
+the last subsidy and to appoint a commission to
+examine into the revenue of the Crown. Unhappily
+the financial policy of the preceding year was persisted
+in. The check before St. Malo had been
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-316"></a>2-316]</span>
+
+somewhat redeemed by treaties with Charles of
+Evreux and the Duke of Britanny which secured
+to England the right of holding Cherbourg and
+Brest; but the cost of these treaties only swelled
+the expenses of the war. The fresh supplies voted
+at Gloucester proved insufficient for their purpose,
+and a Parliament in the spring of 1379 renewed
+the Poll-tax in a graduated form. But the proceeds
+of the tax proved miserably inadequate, and
+when fresh debts beset the Crown in 1380 a return
+was again made to the old system of subsidies.
+But these failed in their turn; and at the close of
+the year the Parliament again fell back on a severer
+Poll-tax. One of the attractions of the new mode
+of taxation seems to have been that the clergy,
+who adopted it for themselves, paid in this way a
+larger share of the burthens of the state; but the
+chief ground for its adoption lay, no doubt, in its
+bringing within the net of the tax-gatherer a class
+which had hitherto escaped him, men such as the
+free labourer, the village smith, the village tiler.
+But few courses could have been more dangerous.
+The Poll-tax not only brought the pressure of the
+war home to every household; it goaded into action
+precisely the class which was already seething with
+discontent. The strife between labour and capital
+was going on as fiercely as ever in country and in
+town. The landlords were claiming new services,
+or forcing men who looked on themselves as free
+to prove they were no villeins by law. The free
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-317"></a>2-317]</span>
+
+labourer was struggling against the attempt to
+exact work from him at low wages. The wandering
+workman was being seized and branded as a
+vagrant. The abbey towns were struggling for
+freedom against the abbeys. The craftsmen within
+boroughs were carrying on the same strife against
+employer and craft-gild. And all this mass of
+discontent was being heightened and organized by
+agencies with which the Government could not
+cope. The poorer villeins and the free labourers
+had long since banded together in secret conspiracies
+which the wealthier villeins supported
+with money. The return of soldiers from the war
+threw over the land a host of broken men, skilled
+in arms, and ready to take part in any rising.
+The begging friars, wandering and gossiping from
+village to village and street to street, shared the
+passions of the class from which they sprang.
+Priests like Ball openly preached the doctrines of
+communism. And to these had been recently
+added a fresh agency, which could hardly fail to
+stir a new excitement. With the practical ability
+which marked his character, Wyclif set on foot
+about this time a body of poor preachers to supply,
+as he held, the place of those wealthier clergy who
+had lost their hold on the land. The coarse
+sermons, bare feet, and russet dress of these
+"Simple Priests" moved the laughter of rector and
+canon, but they proved a rapid and effective means
+of diffusing Wyclif's protests against the wealth
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-318"></a>2-318]</span>
+
+and sluggishness of the clergy, and we can hardly
+doubt that in the general turmoil their denunciation
+of ecclesiastical wealth passed often into more
+general denunciations of the proprietary classes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">John Ball</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the spring went by quaint rimes passed
+through the country, and served as a summons to
+revolt. "John Ball," ran one, "greeteth you all,
+and doth for to understand he hath rung your
+bell. Now right and might, will and skill, God
+speed every dele." "Help truth," ran another,
+"and truth shall help you! Now reigneth pride
+in price, and covetise is counted wise, and lechery
+withouten shame, and gluttony withouten blame.
+Envy reigneth with treason, and sloth is take in
+great season. God do bote, for now is tyme!"
+We recognize Ball's hand in the yet more stirring
+missives of "Jack the Miller" and "Jack the
+Carter." "Jack Miller asketh help to turn his
+mill aright. He hath grounden small, small: the
+King's Son of Heaven he shall pay for all. Look
+thy mill go aright with the four sailes, and the
+post stand with steadfastness. With right and
+with might, with skill and with will; let might
+help right, and skill go before will, and right
+before might, so goeth our mill aright." "Jack
+Carter," ran the companion missive, "prays you
+all that ye make a good end of that ye have
+begun, and do well, and aye better and better:
+for at the even men heareth the day." "Falseness
+and guile," sang Jack Trewman, "have reigned
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-319"></a>2-319]</span>
+
+too long, and truth hath been set under a lock,
+and falseness and guile reigneth in every stock.
+No man may come truth to, but if he sing 'si
+dedero.' True love is away that was so good,
+and clerks for wealth work them woe. God do
+bote, for now is time." In the rude jingle of these
+lines began for England the literature of political
+controversy: they are the first predecessors of
+the pamphlets of Milton and of Burke. Rough as
+they are, they express clearly enough the mingled
+passions which met in the revolt of the peasants:
+their longing for a right rule, for plain and simple
+justice; their scorn of the immorality of the nobles
+and the infamy of the court; their resentment at the
+perversion of the law to the cause of oppression.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Peasant
+Rising</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the eastern and midland counties the
+restlessness spread to all England south of the
+Thames. But the grounds of discontent varied
+with every district. The actual outbreak began
+on the 5th of June at Dartford, where a tiler
+killed one of the collectors of the poll-tax in
+vengeance for a brutal outrage on his daughter.
+The county at once rose in arms. Canterbury,
+where "the whole town was of their mind," threw
+open its gates to the insurgents who plundered
+the Archbishop's palace and dragged John Ball
+from his prison. A hundred thousand Kentishmen
+gathered round Walter Tyler of Essex and
+John Hales of Malling to march upon London.
+Their grievance was mainly a political one.
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-320"></a>2-320]</span>
+
+Villeinage was unknown in Kent. As the
+peasants poured towards Blackheath indeed every
+lawyer who fell into their hands was put to death;
+"not till all these were killed would the land
+enjoy its old freedom again," the Kentishmen
+shouted as they fired the houses of the stewards
+and flung the rolls of the manor-courts into the
+flames. But this action can hardly have been due
+to anything more than sympathy with the rest of
+the realm, the sympathy which induced the same
+men when pilgrims from the north brought news
+that John of Gaunt was setting free his bondmen
+to send to the Duke an offer to make him Lord
+and King of England. Nor was their grievance a
+religious one. Lollardry can have made little way
+among men whose grudge against the Archbishop
+of Canterbury sprang from his discouragement of
+pilgrimages. Their discontent was simply political;
+they demanded the suppression of the poll-tax
+and better government; their aim was to slay
+the nobles and wealthier clergy, to take the king
+into their own hands, and pass laws which should
+seem good to the Commons of the realm. The
+whole population joined the Kentishmen as they
+marched along, while the nobles were paralyzed
+with fear. The young king--he was but a boy of
+sixteen--addressed them from a boat on the river;
+but the refusal of his Council under the guidance of
+Archbishop Sudbury to allow him to land kindled
+the peasants to fury, and with cries of "Treason" the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-321"></a>2-321]</span>
+
+great mass rushed on London. On the
+13th of June its gates were flung open by the
+poorer artizans within the city, and the stately
+palace of John of Gaunt at the Savoy, the new
+inn of the lawyers at the Temple, the houses of
+the foreign merchants, were soon in a blaze. But
+the insurgents, as they proudly boasted, were
+"seekers of truth and justice, not thieves or
+robbers," and a plunderer found carrying off a
+silver vessel from the sack of the Savoy was flung
+with his spoil into the flames. Another body of
+insurgents encamped at the same time to the east
+of the city. In Essex and the eastern counties
+the popular discontent was more social than
+political. The demands of the peasants were that
+bondage should be abolished, that tolls and imposts
+on trade should be done away with, that "no acre
+of land which is held in bondage or villeinage be
+held at higher rate than fourpence a year," in
+other words for a money commutation of all
+villein services. Their rising had been even
+earlier than that of the Kentishmen. Before
+Whitsuntide an attempt to levy the poll-tax
+gathered crowds of peasants together, armed with
+clubs, rusty swords, and bows. The royal commissioners
+who were sent to repress the tumult
+were driven from the field, and the Essex men
+marched upon London on one side of the river as
+the Kentishmen marched on the other. The
+evening of the thirteenth, the day on which Tyler
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-322"></a>2-322]</span>
+
+entered the city, saw them encamped without its
+walls at Mile-end. At the same moment Highbury
+and the northern heights were occupied by the
+men of Hertfordshire and the villeins of St.
+Albans, where a strife between abbot and town
+had been going on since the days of Edward the
+Second.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Richard the
+Second</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The royal Council with the young king had
+taken refuge in the Tower, and their aim seems to
+have been to divide the forces of the insurgents.
+On the morning of the fourteenth therefore Richard
+rode from the Tower to Mile-end to meet the Essex
+men. "I am your King and Lord, good people,"
+the boy began with a fearlessness which marked
+his bearing throughout the crisis, "what will
+you?" "We will that you free us for ever,"
+shouted the peasants, "us and our lands; and
+that we be never named nor held for serfs!" "I
+grant it," replied Richard; and he bade them go
+home, pledging himself at once to issue charters of
+freedom and amnesty. A shout of joy welcomed
+the promise. Throughout the day more than
+thirty clerks were busied writing letters of pardon
+and emancipation, and with these the mass of the
+Essex men and the men of Hertfordshire withdrew
+quietly to their homes. But while the king was
+successful at Mile-end a terrible doom had fallen
+on the councillors he left behind him. Richard
+had hardly quitted the Tower when the Kentishmen
+who had spent the night within the city
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-323"></a>2-323]</span>
+
+appeared at its gates. The general terror was
+shown ludicrously enough when they burst in and
+taking the panic-stricken knights of the royal
+household in rough horse-play by the beard
+promised to be their equals and good comrades in
+the days to come. But the horse-play changed
+into dreadful earnest when they found that
+Richard had escaped their grasp, and the discovery
+of Archbishop Sudbury and other ministers in the
+chapel changed their fury into a cry for blood.
+The Primate was dragged from his sanctuary and
+beheaded. The same vengeance was wreaked on
+the Treasurer and the Chief Commissioner for the
+levy of the hated poll-tax, the merchant Richard
+Lyons who had been impeached by the Good
+Parliament. Richard meanwhile had ridden
+round the northern wall of the city to the Wardrobe
+near Blackfriars, and from this new refuge he
+opened his negotiations with the Kentish insurgents.
+Many of these dispersed at the news of
+the king's pledge to the men of Essex, but a body
+of thirty thousand still surrounded Wat Tyler
+when Richard on the morning of the fifteenth
+encountered that leader by a mere chance at
+Smithfield. Hot words passed between his train
+and the peasant chieftain who advanced to confer
+with the king, and a threat from Tyler brought
+on a brief struggle in which the Mayor of London,
+William Walworth, struck him with his dagger to
+the ground. "Kill! kill!" shouted the crowd:
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-324"></a>2-324]</span>
+
+"they have slain our captain!" But Richard
+faced the Kentishmen with the same cool courage
+with which he faced the men of Essex. "What
+need ye, my masters?" cried the boy-king as he
+rode boldly up to the front of the bowmen. "I
+am your Captain and your King; follow me!"
+The hopes of the peasants centred in the young
+sovereign; one aim of their rising had been to
+free him from the evil counsellors who, as they
+believed, abused his youth; and at his word they
+followed him with a touching loyalty and trust
+till he entered the Tower. His mother welcomed
+him within its walls with tears of joy. "Rejoice
+and praise God," Richard answered, "for I have
+recovered to-day my heritage which was lost and
+the realm of England!" But he was compelled
+to give the same pledge of freedom to the
+Kentishmen as at Mile-end, and it was only after
+receiving his letters of pardon and emancipation
+that the yeomen dispersed to their homes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The general
+revolt</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The revolt indeed was far from being at an end.
+As the news of the rising ran through the country
+the discontent almost everywhere broke into flame.
+There were outbreaks in every shire south of the
+Thames as far westward as Devonshire. In the
+north tumults broke out at Beverley and
+Scarborough, and Yorkshire and Lancashire made
+ready to rise. The eastern counties were in one
+wild turmoil of revolt. At Cambridge the townsmen
+burned the charters of the University and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-325"></a>2-325]</span>
+
+attacked the colleges. A body of peasants occupied
+St. Albans. In Norfolk a Norwich artizan, called
+John the Litster or Dyer, took the title of King
+of the Commons, and marching through the
+country at the head of a mass of peasants compelled
+the nobles whom he captured to act as his
+meat-tasters and to serve him on their knees
+during his repast. The story of St. Edmundsbury
+shows us what was going on in Suffolk. Ever
+since the accession of Edward the Third the
+townsmen and the villeins of their lands around
+had been at war with the abbot and his monks.
+The old and more oppressive servitude had long
+passed away, but the later abbots had set
+themselves against the policy of concession and
+conciliation which had brought about this advance
+towards freedom. The gates of the town were
+still in the abbot's hands. He had succeeded in
+enforcing his claim to the wardship of all orphans
+born within his domain. From claims such as
+these the town could never feel itself safe so long
+as mysterious charters from Pope or King, interpreted
+cunningly by the wit of the new lawyer
+class, lay stored in the abbey archives. But the
+archives contained other and hardly less formidable
+documents than these. Untroubled by the waste
+of war, the religious houses profited more than any
+other landowners by the general growth of wealth.
+They had become great proprietors, money-lenders
+to their tenants, extortionate as the Jew whom
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-326"></a>2-326]</span>
+
+they had banished from their land. There were few
+townsmen of St. Edmund's who had not some bonds
+laid up in the abbey registry. In 1327 one band
+of debtors had a covenant lying there for the payment
+of five hundred marks and fifty casks of wine.
+Another company of the wealthier burgesses were
+joint debtors on a bond for ten thousand pounds.
+The new spirit of commercial activity joined with
+the troubles of the time to throw the whole community
+into the abbot's hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Saint
+Edmundsbury</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We can hardly wonder that riots, lawsuits, and
+royal commissions marked the relation of the town
+and abbey under the first two Edwards. Under
+the third came an open conflict. In 1327 the
+townsmen burst into the great house, drove the
+monks into the choir, and dragged them thence to
+the town prison. The abbey itself was sacked;
+chalices, missals, chasubles, tunicles, altar frontals,
+the books of the library, the very vats and dishes
+of the kitchen, all disappeared. The monks
+estimated their losses at ten thousand pounds.
+But the townsmen aimed at higher booty than
+this. The monks were brought back from prison
+to their own chapter-house, and the spoil of their
+registry, papal bulls and royal charters, deeds and
+bonds and mortgages, were laid before them.
+Amidst the wild threats of the mob they were
+forced to execute a grant of perfect freedom and of
+a gild to the town as well as of free release to their
+debtors. Then they were left masters of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-327"></a>2-327]</span>
+
+ruined house. But all control over town or land
+was gone. Through spring and summer no rent
+or fine was paid. The bailiffs and other officers of
+the abbey did not dare to show their faces in the
+streets. News came at last that the abbot was in
+London, appealing for redress to the court, and the
+whole county was at once on fire. A crowd of
+rustics, maddened at the thought of revived claims
+of serfage, of interminable suits of law, poured into
+the streets of the town. From thirty-two of the
+neighbouring villages the priests marched at the
+head of their flocks as on a new crusade. The
+wild mass of men, women, and children, twenty
+thousand in all, as men guessed, rushed again on
+the abbey, and for four November days the work
+of destruction went on unhindered. When gate,
+stables, granaries, kitchen, infirmary, hostelry had
+gone up in flames, the multitude swept away to
+the granges and barns of the abbey farms. Their
+plunder shows what vast agricultural proprietors
+the monks had become. A thousand horses, a
+hundred and twenty plough-oxen, two hundred
+cows, three hundred bullocks, three hundred hogs,
+ten thousand sheep were driven off, and granges
+and barns burned to the ground. It was judged
+afterwards that sixty thousand pounds would
+hardly cover the loss.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Weak as was the government of Mortimer and
+Isabella, the appeal of the abbot against this outrage
+was promptly heeded. A royal force quelled
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-328"></a>2-328]</span>
+
+the riot, thirty carts full of prisoners were
+despatched to Norwich; twenty-four of the chief
+townsmen with thirty-two of the village priests
+were convicted as aiders and abettors of the attack
+on the abbey, and twenty were summarily hanged.
+Nearly two hundred persons remained under
+sentence of outlawry, and for five weary years
+their case dragged on in the King's Courts. At
+last matters ended in a ludicrous outrage.
+Irritated by repeated breaches of promise on the
+abbot's part, the outlawed burgesses seized him as
+he lay in his manor of Chevington, robbed and
+bound him, and carried him off to London. There
+he was hurried from street to street lest his hiding-place
+should be detected till opportunity offered
+for shipping him off to Brabant. The Primate and
+the Pope levelled their excommunications against
+the abbot's captors in vain, and though he was at
+last discovered and brought home it was probably
+with some pledge of the arrangement which
+followed in 1332. The enormous damages
+assessed by the royal justices were remitted, the
+outlawry of the townsmen was reversed, the
+prisoners were released. On the other hand the
+deeds which had been stolen were again replaced
+in the archives of the abbey, and the charters
+which had been extorted from the monks were
+formally cancelled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">St. Edmundsbury
+in 1381</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The spirit of townsmen and villeins remained
+crushed by their failure, and throughout the reign
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-329"></a>2-329]</span>
+
+of Edward the Third the oppression against which
+they had risen went on without a check. It was
+no longer the rough blow of sheer force; it was
+the more delicate but more pitiless tyranny of the
+law. At Richard's accession Prior John of Cambridge
+in the vacancy of the abbot was in charge
+of the house. The prior was a man skilled in all
+the arts of his day. In sweetness of voice, in
+knowledge of sacred song, his eulogists pronounced
+him superior to Orpheus, to Nero, and to one yet
+more illustrious in the Bury cloister though obscure
+to us, the Breton Belgabred. John was "industrious
+and subtle," and subtlety and industry found
+their scope in suit after suit with the burgesses
+and farmers around him. "Faithfully he strove,"
+says the monastic chronicler, "with the villeins of
+Bury for the rights of his house." The townsmen
+he owned specially as his "adversaries," but it was
+the rustics who were to show what a hate he had
+won. On the fifteenth of June, the day of Wat
+Tyler's fall, the howl of a great multitude round
+his manor-house at Mildenhall broke roughly on
+the chauntings of Prior John. He strove to fly,
+but he was betrayed by his own servants, judged
+in rude mockery of the law by villein and
+bondsman, condemned and killed. The corpse lay
+naked in the open field while the mob poured
+unresisted into Bury. Bearing the prior's head
+on a lance before them through the streets, the
+frenzied throng at last reached the gallows where
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-330"></a>2-330]</span>
+
+the head of one of the royal judges, Sir John
+Cavendish, was already impaled; and pressing the
+cold lips together in mockery of their friendship
+set them side by side. Another head soon joined
+them. The abbey gates were burst open, and the
+cloister filled with a maddened crowd, howling for
+a new victim, John Lackenheath, the warder of
+the barony. Few knew him as he stood among the
+group of trembling monks, but he courted death
+with a contemptuous courage. "I am the man
+you seek," he said, stepping forward; and in a
+minute, with a mighty roar of "Devil's son! Monk!
+Traitor!" he was swept to the gallows, and his
+head hacked from his shoulders. Then the crowd
+rolled back again to the abbey gate, and
+summoned the monks before them. They told
+them that now for a long time they had oppressed
+their fellows, the burgesses of Bury; wherefore
+they willed that in the sight of the Commons they
+should forthwith surrender their bonds and
+charters. The monks brought the parchments to
+the market-place; many which were demanded
+they swore they could not find. A compromise
+was at last patched up; and it was agreed that
+the charters should be surrendered till the future
+abbot should confirm the liberties of the town.
+Then, unable to do more, the crowd ebbed away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Close of the
+rising</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A scene less violent, but even more picturesque,
+went on the same day at St. Albans. William
+Grindecobbe, the leader of its townsmen, returned
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-331"></a>2-331]</span>
+
+with one of the charters of emancipation which
+Richard had granted after his interview at Mile-end
+to the men of Essex and Hertfordshire, and
+breaking into the abbey precincts at the head of
+the burghers, forced the abbot to deliver up the
+charters which bound the town in bondage to his
+house. But a more striking proof of servitude
+than any charters could give remained in the millstones
+which after a long suit at law had been adjudged
+to the abbey and placed within its cloister
+as a triumphant witness that no townsman might
+grind corn within the domain of the abbey save at
+the abbot's mill. Bursting into the cloister, the
+burghers now tore the mill-stones from the floor,
+and broke them into small pieces, "like blessed
+bread in church," which each might carry off to
+show something of the day when their freedom
+was won again. But it was hardly won when it
+was lost anew. The quiet withdrawal and dispersion
+of the peasant armies with their charters of
+emancipation gave courage to the nobles. Their
+panic passed away. The warlike Bishop of Norwich
+fell lance in hand on Litster's camp, and
+scattered the peasants of Norfolk at the first shock.
+Richard with an army of forty thousand men
+marched in triumph through Kent and Essex, and
+spread terror by the ruthlessness of his executions.
+At Waltham he was met by the display of his own
+recent charters and a protest from the Essex men
+that "they were so far as freedom went the peers
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-332"></a>2-332]</span>
+
+of their lords." But they were to learn the worth
+of a king's word. "Villeins you were," answered
+Richard, "and villeins you are. In bondage you
+shall abide, and that not your old bondage, but a
+worse!" The stubborn resistance which he met
+showed that the temper of the people was not
+easily broken. The villagers of Billericay threw
+themselves into the woods and fought two hard
+fights before they were reduced to submission. It
+was only by threats of death that verdicts of guilty
+could be wrung from Essex jurors when the leaders
+of the revolt were brought before them. Grindecobbe
+was offered his life if he would persuade his
+followers at St. Albans to restore the charters they
+had wrung from the monks. He turned bravely
+to his fellow-townsmen and bade them take no
+thought for his trouble. "If I die," he said, "I
+shall die for the cause of the freedom we have won,
+counting myself happy to end my life by such a
+martyrdom. Do then to-day as you would have
+done had I been killed yesterday." But repression
+went pitilessly on, and through the summer and
+the autumn seven thousand men are said to have
+perished on the gallows or the field.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-333"></a>2-333]</span>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="Bk4-Ch4"></a><ul>
+
+<li>
+<a name="id4552756"></a>CHAPTER IV</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4552762"></a>RICHARD THE SECOND</li>
+<li>
+<a name="id4552768"></a>1381-1400</li>
+
+</ul>
+</div>
+
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Results of
+the Peasant
+Revolt</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Terrible as were the measures of repression which
+followed the Peasant Revolt, and violent as was
+the passion of reaction which raged among the
+proprietary classes at its close, the end of the rising
+was in fact secured. The words of Grindecobbe
+ere his death were a prophecy which time fulfilled.
+Cancel charters of manumission as the council
+might, serfage was henceforth a doomed and perishing
+thing. The dread of another outbreak hung
+round the employer. The attempts to bring back
+obsolete services quietly died away. The old process
+of enfranchisement went quietly on. During
+the century and a half which followed the Peasant
+Revolt villeinage died out so rapidly that it became
+a rare and antiquated thing. The class of small
+freeholders sprang fast out of the wreck of it into
+numbers and importance. In twenty years more
+they were in fact recognized as the basis of our
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-334"></a>2-334]</span>
+
+electoral system in every English county. The
+Labour Statutes proved as ineffective as of old in
+enchaining labour or reducing its price. A hundred
+years after the Black Death the wages of an English
+labourer was sufficient to purchase twice the amount
+of the necessaries of life which could have been
+obtained for the wages paid under Edward the
+Third. The incidental descriptions of the life of
+the working classes which we find in Piers Ploughman
+show that this increase of social comfort had
+been going on even during the troubled period
+which preceded the outbreak of the peasants, and
+it went on faster after the revolt was over. But
+inevitable as such a progress was, every step of it
+was taken in the teeth of the wealthier classes.
+Their temper indeed at the close of the rising was
+that of men frenzied by panic and the taste of
+blood. They scouted all notion of concession.
+The stubborn will of the conquered was met by as
+stubborn a will in their conquerors. The royal
+Council showed its sense of the danger of a mere
+policy of resistance by submitting the question of
+enfranchisement to the Parliament which assembled
+in November 1381 with words which suggested a
+compromise. "If you desire to enfranchise and set
+at liberty the said serfs," ran the royal message,
+"by your common assent, as the King has been
+informed that some of you desire, he will consent
+to your prayer." But no thoughts of compromise
+influenced the landowners in their reply. The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-335"></a>2-335]</span>
+
+king's grant and letters, the Parliament answered
+with perfect truth, were legally null and void:
+their serfs were their goods, and the king could
+not take their goods from them but by their own
+consent. "And this consent," they ended, "we
+have never given and never will give, were we all
+to die in one day." Their temper indeed expressed
+itself in legislation which was a fit sequel to the
+Statutes of Labourers. They forbade the child of
+any tiller of the soil to be apprenticed in a town.
+They prayed the king to ordain "that no bondman
+nor bondwoman shall place their children at school,
+as has been done, so as to advance their children
+in the world by their going into the church." The
+new colleges which were being founded at the
+Universities at this moment closed their gates upon
+villeins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Religious
+reaction</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The panic which produced this frenzied reaction
+against all projects of social reform produced inevitably
+as frenzied a panic of reaction against all
+plans for religious reform. Wyclif had been supported
+by the Lancastrian party till the very eve
+of the Peasant Revolt. But with the rising his
+whole work seemed suddenly undone. The quarrel
+between the baronage and the Church on which
+his political action had as yet been grounded was
+hushed in the presence of a common danger. His
+"poor preachers" were looked upon as missionaries
+of socialism. The friars charged Wyclif with being
+a "sower of strife, who by his serpentlike instigation
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-336"></a>2-336]</span>
+
+had set the serf against his lord," and though
+he tossed back the charge with disdain he had to
+bear a suspicion which was justified by the conduct
+of some of his followers. John Ball, who had
+figured in the front rank of the revolt, was falsely-named
+as one of his adherents, and was alleged to
+have denounced in his last hour the conspiracy of
+the "Wyclifites." Wyclif's most prominent scholar,
+Nicholas Herford, was said to have openly approved
+the brutal murder of Archbishop Sudbury. Whatever
+belief such charges might gain, it is certain
+that from this moment all plans for the reorganization
+of the Church were confounded in the general
+odium which attached to the projects of the peasant
+leaders, and that any hope of ecclesiastical reform
+at the hands of the baronage and the Parliament
+was at an end. But even if the Peasant Revolt
+had not deprived Wyclif of the support of the
+aristocratic party with whom he had hitherto cooperated,
+their alliance must have been dissolved
+by the new theological position which he had already
+taken up. Some months before the outbreak
+of the insurrection he had by one memorable step
+passed from the position of a reformer of the discipline
+and political relations of the Church to that
+of a protester against its cardinal beliefs. If there
+was one doctrine upon which the supremacy of the
+Mediæval Church rested, it was the doctrine of
+Transubstantiation. It was by his exclusive right
+to the performance of the miracle which was
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-337"></a>2-337]</span>
+
+wrought in the mass that the lowliest priest was
+raised high above princes. With the formal denial
+of the doctrine of Transubstantiation which Wyclif
+issued in the spring of 1381 began that great movement
+of religious revolt which ended more than
+a century after in the establishment of religious
+freedom by severing the mass of the Teutonic
+peoples from the general body of the Catholic
+Church. The act was the bolder that he stood
+utterly alone. The University of Oxford, in which
+his influence had been hitherto all-powerful, at
+once condemned him. John of Gaunt enjoined
+him to be silent. Wyclif was presiding as Doctor
+of Divinity over some disputations in the schools
+of the Augustinian Canons when his academical
+condemnation was publicly read, but though
+startled for the moment he at once challenged
+Chancellor or doctor to disprove the conclusions
+at which he had arrived. The prohibition of the
+Duke of Lancaster he met by an open avowal of
+his teaching, a confession which closes proudly
+with the quiet words, "I believe that in the end
+the truth will conquer."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Rise of
+Lollardry</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the moment his courage dispelled the panic
+around him. The University responded to his
+appeal, and by displacing his opponents from office
+tacitly adopted his cause. But Wyclif no longer
+looked for support to the learned or wealthier
+classes on whom he had hitherto relied. He
+appealed, and the appeal is memorable as the first
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-338"></a>2-338]</span>
+
+of such a kind in our history, to England at large.
+With an amazing industry he issued tract after
+tract in the tongue of the people itself. The dry,
+syllogistic Latin, the abstruse and involved argument
+which the great doctor had addressed to his
+academic hearers, were suddenly flung aside, and
+by a transition which marks the wonderful genius
+of the man the schoolman was transformed into
+the pamphleteer. If Chaucer is the father of our
+later English poetry, Wyclif is the father of our
+later English prose. The rough, clear, homely
+English of his tracts, the speech of the ploughman
+and the trader of the day though coloured with
+the picturesque phraseology of the Bible, is in its
+literary use as distinctly a creation of his own as
+the style in which he embodied it, the terse
+vehement sentences, the stinging sarcasms, the
+hard antitheses which roused the dullest mind like
+a whip. Once fairly freed from the trammels of
+unquestioning belief, Wyclif's mind worked fast in
+its career of scepticism. Pardons, indulgences,
+absolutions, pilgrimages to the shrines of the saints,
+worship of their images, worship of the saints
+themselves, were successively denied. A formal
+appeal to the Bible as the one ground of faith,
+coupled with an assertion of the right of every
+instructed man to examine the Bible for himself,
+threatened the very groundwork of the older
+dogmatism with ruin. Nor were these daring
+denials confined to the small circle of scholars who
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-339"></a>2-339]</span>
+
+still clung to him. The "Simple Priests" were
+active in the diffusion of their master's doctrines,
+and how rapid their progress must have been we
+may see from the panic-struck exaggerations of
+their opponents. A few years later they complained
+that the followers of Wyclif abounded
+everywhere and in all classes, among the baronage,
+in the cities, among the peasantry of the countryside,
+even in the monastic cell itself. "Every
+second man one meets is a Lollard."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Lollardry at
+Oxford</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+"Lollard," a word which probably means "idle
+babbler," was the nickname of scorn with which
+the orthodox Churchmen chose to insult their
+assailants. But this rapid increase changed their
+scorn into vigorous action. In 1382 Courtenay,
+who had now become Archbishop, summoned a
+council at Blackfriars and formally submitted
+twenty-four propositions drawn from Wyclif's
+works. An earthquake in the midst of the proceedings
+terrified every prelate but the resolute
+Primate; the expulsion of ill humours from the
+earth, he said, was of good omen for the expulsion
+of ill humours from the Church; and the condemnation
+was pronounced. Then the Archbishop
+turned fiercely upon Oxford as the fount and centre
+of the new heresies. In an English sermon at St.
+Frideswide's Nicholas Herford had asserted the
+truth of Wyclif's doctrines, and Courtenay ordered
+the Chancellor to silence him and his adherents on
+pain of being himself treated as a heretic. The
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-340"></a>2-340]</span>
+
+Chancellor fell back on the liberties of the
+University, and appointed as preacher another
+Wyclifite, Repyngdon, who did not hesitate to
+style the Lollards "holy priests," and to affirm that
+they were protected by John of Gaunt. Party
+spirit meanwhile ran high among the students.
+The bulk of them sided with the Lollard leaders,
+and a Carmelite, Peter Stokes, who had procured
+the Archbishop's letters, cowered panic stricken in
+his chamber while the Chancellor, protected by an
+escort of a hundred townsmen, listened approvingly
+to Repyngdon's defiance. "I dare go no further,"
+wrote the poor Friar to the Archbishop, "for fear
+of death"; but he mustered courage at last to
+descend into the schools where Repyngdon was
+now maintaining that the clerical order was
+"better when it was but nine years old than now
+that it has grown to a thousand years and more."
+The appearance however of scholars in arms again
+drove Stokes to fly in despair to Lambeth, while a
+new heretic in open Congregation maintained
+Wyclif's denial of Transubstantiation. "There is
+no idolatry," cried William James, "save in the
+Sacrament of the Altar." "You speak like a wise
+man," replied the Chancellor, Robert Rygge.
+Courtenay however was not the man to bear
+defiance tamely, and his summons to Lambeth
+wrested a submission from Rygge which was only
+accepted on his pledge to suppress the Lollardism
+of the University. "I dare not publish them, on
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-341"></a>2-341]</span>
+
+fear of death," exclaimed the Chancellor when
+Courtenay handed him his letters of condemnation.
+"Then is your University an open <i>fautor</i> of
+heretics," retorted the Primate, "if it suffers not
+the Catholic truth to be proclaimed within its
+bounds." The royal Council supported the Archbishop's
+injunction, but the publication of the
+decrees at once set Oxford on fire. The scholars
+threatened death against the friars, "crying that
+they wished to destroy the University." The
+masters suspended Henry Crump from teaching as
+a troubler of the public peace for calling the
+Lollards "heretics." The Crown however at last
+stepped in to Courtenay's aid, and a royal writ
+ordered the instant banishment of all favourers of
+Wyclif with the seizure and destruction of all
+Lollard books on pain of forfeiture of the University's
+privileges. The threat produced its effect.
+Herford and Repyngdon appealed in vain to John
+of Gaunt for protection; the Duke himself
+denounced them as heretics against the Sacrament
+of the Altar, and after much evasion they were
+forced to make a formal submission. Within
+Oxford itself the suppression of Lollardism was
+complete, but with the death of religious freedom
+all trace of intellectual life suddenly disappears.
+The century which followed the triumph of
+Courtenay is the most barren in its annals, nor
+was the sleep of the University broken till the
+advent of the New Learning restored to it some of
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-342"></a>2-342]</span>
+
+the life and liberty which the Primate had so
+roughly trodden out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Wyclif's
+Bible</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing marks more strongly the grandeur of
+Wyclif's position as the last of the great schoolmen
+than the reluctance of so bold a man as Courtenay
+even after his triumph over Oxford to take extreme
+measures against the head of Lollardry. Wyclif,
+though summoned, had made no appearance before
+the "Council of the Earthquake." "Pontius
+Pilate and Herod are made friends to-day," was
+his bitter comment on the new union which proved
+to have sprung up between the prelates and the
+monastic orders who had so long been at variance
+with each other; "since they have made a heretic
+of Christ, it is an easy inference for them to count
+simple Christians heretics." He seems indeed to
+have been sick at the moment, but the announcement
+of the final sentence roused him to life again.
+He petitioned the king and Parliament that he
+might be allowed freely to prove the doctrines he
+had put forth, and turning with characteristic
+energy to the attack of his assailants, he asked
+that all religious vows might be suppressed, that
+tithes might be diverted to the maintenance of the
+poor and the clergy maintained by the free alms
+of their flocks, that the Statutes of Provisors and
+Præmunire might be enforced against the Papacy,
+that Churchmen might be declared incapable of
+secular offices, and imprisonment for excommunication
+cease. Finally in the teeth of the council's
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-343"></a>2-343]</span>
+
+condemnation he demanded that the doctrine of
+the Eucharist which he advocated might be freely
+taught. If he appeared in the following year
+before the convocation at Oxford it was to perplex
+his opponents by a display of scholastic logic
+which permitted him to retire without any retractation
+of his sacramental heresy. For the time
+his opponents seemed satisfied with his expulsion
+from the University, but in his retirement at
+Lutterworth he was forging during these troubled
+years the great weapon which, wielded by other
+hands than his own, was to produce so terrible an
+effect on the triumphant hierarchy. An earlier
+translation of the Scriptures, in part of which he
+was aided by his scholar Herford, was being
+revised and brought to the second form which is
+better known as "Wyclif's Bible" when death
+drew near. The appeal of the prelates to Rome
+was answered at last by a Brief ordering him to
+appear at the Papal Court. His failing strength
+exhausted itself in a sarcastic reply which explained
+that his refusal to comply with the summons
+simply sprang from broken health. "I am always
+glad," ran the ironical answer, "to explain my
+faith to any one, and above all to the Bishop of
+Rome; for I take it for granted that if it be
+orthodox he will confirm it, if it be erroneous he
+will correct it. I assume too that as chief Vicar
+of Christ upon earth the Bishop of Rome is of all
+mortal men most bound to the law of Christ's
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-344"></a>2-344]</span>
+
+Gospel, for among the disciples of Christ a majority
+is not reckoned by simply counting heads in the
+fashion of this world, but according to the imitation
+of Christ on either side. Now Christ during His
+life upon earth was of all men the poorest, casting
+from Him all worldly authority. I deduce from
+these premisses as a simple counsel of my own that
+the Pope should surrender all temporal authority
+to the civil power and advise his clergy to do the
+same." The boldness of his words sprang perhaps
+from a knowledge that his end was near. The
+terrible strain on energies enfeebled by age and
+study had at last brought its inevitable result, and
+a stroke of paralysis while Wyclif was hearing
+mass in his parish church of Lutterworth was
+followed on the next day by his death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Lollard
+movement</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The persecution of Courtenay deprived the
+religious reform of its more learned adherents and
+of the support of the Universities. Wyclif's death
+robbed it of its head at a moment when little had
+been done save a work of destruction. From that
+moment Lollardism ceased to be in any sense an
+organized movement and crumbled into a general
+spirit of revolt. All the religious and social discontent
+of the times floated instinctively to this
+new centre. The socialist dreams of the peasantry,
+the new and keener spirit of personal morality, the
+hatred of the friars, the jealousy of the great lords
+towards the prelacy, the fanaticism of the reforming
+zealot were blended together in a common
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-345"></a>2-345]</span>
+
+hostility to the Church and a common resolve to
+substitute personal religion for its dogmatic and
+ecclesiastical system. But it was this want of
+organization, this looseness and fluidity of the new
+movement, that made it penetrate through every
+class of society. Women as well as men became
+the preachers of the new sect. Lollardry had its
+own schools, its own books; its pamphlets were
+passed everywhere from hand to hand; scurrilous
+ballads which revived the old attacks of "Golias"
+in the Angevin times upon the wealth and luxury
+of the clergy were sung at every corner. Nobles
+like the Earl of Salisbury and at a later time Sir
+John Oldcastle placed themselves openly at the
+head of the cause and threw open their gates as a
+refuge for its missionaries. London in its hatred
+of the clergy became fiercely Lollard, and defended
+a Lollard preacher who ventured to advocate the
+new doctrines from the pulpit of St. Paul's. One
+of its mayors, John of Northampton, showed the
+influence of the new morality by the Puritan spirit
+in which he dealt with the morals of the city.
+Compelled to act, as he said, by the remissness of
+the clergy who connived for money at every kind
+of debauchery, he arrested the loose women, cut
+off their hair, and carted them through the streets
+as objects of public scorn. But the moral spirit
+of the new movement, though infinitely its grander
+side, was less dangerous to the Church than its
+open repudiation of the older doctrines and systems
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-346"></a>2-346]</span>
+
+of Christendom. Out of the floating mass of
+opinion which bore the name of Lollardry one faith
+gradually evolved itself, a faith in the sole authority
+of the Bible as a source of religious truth. The
+translation of Wyclif did its work. Scripture,
+complains a canon of Leicester, "became a vulgar
+thing, and more open to lay folk and women that
+knew how to read than it is wont to be to clerks
+themselves." Consequences which Wyclif had
+perhaps shrunk from drawing were boldly drawn
+by his disciples. The Church was declared to
+have become apostate, its priesthood was denounced
+as no priesthood, its sacraments as idolatry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Lollardry
+and the
+Church</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was in vain that the clergy attempted to
+stifle the new movement by their old weapon of
+persecution. The jealousy entertained by the
+baronage and gentry of every pretension of the
+Church to secular power foiled its efforts to make
+persecution effective. At the moment of the
+Peasant Revolt Courtenay procured the enactment
+of a statute which commissioned the sheriffs to
+seize all persons convicted before the bishops of
+preaching heresy. But the statute was repealed
+in the next session, and the Commons added to
+the bitterness of the blow by their protest that
+they considered it "in nowise their interest to be
+more under the jurisdiction of the prelates or
+more bound by them than their ancestors had
+been in times past." Heresy indeed was still a
+felony by the common law, and if as yet we meet
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-347"></a>2-347]</span>
+
+with no instances of the punishment of heretics by
+the fire it was because the threat of such a death
+was commonly followed by the recantation of the
+Lollard. But the restriction of each bishop's
+jurisdiction within the limits of his own diocese
+made it impossible to arrest the wandering
+preachers of the new doctrine, and the civil
+punishment--even if it had been sanctioned by
+public opinion--seems to have long fallen into
+desuetude. Experience proved to the prelates
+that few sheriffs would arrest on the mere warrant
+of an ecclesiastical officer, and that no royal court
+would issue the writ "for the burning of a heretic"
+on a bishop's requisition. But powerless as the
+efforts of the Church were for purposes of repression,
+they were effective in rousing the temper of
+the Lollards into a bitter fanaticism. The heretics
+delighted in outraging the religious sense of their
+day. One Lollard gentleman took home the
+sacramental wafer and lunched on it with wine
+and oysters. Another flung some images of the
+saints into his cellar. The Lollard preachers
+stirred up riots by the virulence of their preaching
+against the friars. But they directed even fiercer
+invectives against the wealth and secularity of the
+great Churchmen. In a formal petition which was
+laid before Parliament in 1395 they mingled
+denunciations of the riches of the clergy with an
+open profession of disbelief in transubstantiation,
+priesthood, pilgrimages, and image-worship, and a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-348"></a>2-348]</span>
+
+demand, which illustrates the strange medley of
+opinions which jostled together in the new movement,
+that war might be declared unchristian and
+that trades such as those of the goldsmith or the
+armourer, which were contrary to apostolical
+poverty, might be banished from the realm. They
+contended (and it is remarkable that a Parliament
+of the next reign adopted the statement) that from
+the superfluous revenues of the Church, if once
+they were applied to purposes of general utility,
+the king might maintain fifteen earls, fifteen
+hundred knights, and six thousand squires, besides
+endowing a hundred hospitals for the relief of the
+poor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Disasters of
+the War</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The distress of the landowners, the general
+disorganization of the country, in every part of
+which bands of marauders were openly defying
+the law, the panic of the Church and of society
+at large as the projects of the Lollards shaped
+themselves into more daring and revolutionary
+forms, added a fresh keenness to the national
+discontent at the languid and inefficient prosecution
+of the war. The junction of the French and
+Spanish fleets had made them masters of the seas,
+and what fragments were left of Guienne lay at
+their mercy. The royal Council strove to detach
+the House of Luxemburg from, the French alliance
+by winning for Richard the hand of Anne, a
+daughter of the late Emperor Charles the Fourth
+who had fled at Crécy, and sister of King Wenzel
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-349"></a>2-349]</span>
+
+of Bohemia who was now king of the Romans.
+But the marriage remained without political
+result, save that the Lollard books which were
+sent into their native country by the Bohemian
+servants of the new queen stirred the preaching of
+John Huss and the Hussite wars. Nor was
+English policy more successful in Flanders.
+Under Philip van Arteveldt, the son of the leader
+of 1345, the Flemish towns again sought the
+friendship of England against France, but at the
+close of 1382 the towns were defeated and their
+leader slain in the great French victory of Rosbecque.
+An expedition to Flanders in the
+following year under the warlike Bishop of
+Norwich turned out a mere plunder-raid and ended
+in utter failure. A short truce only gave France
+the leisure to prepare a counter-blow by the
+despatch of a small but well-equipped force under
+John de Vienne to Scotland in 1385. Thirty
+thousand Scots joined in the advance of this force
+over the border: and though northern England
+rose with a desperate effort and an English army
+penetrated as far as Edinburgh in the hope of
+bringing the foe to battle, it was forced to fall
+back without an encounter. Meanwhile France
+dealt a more terrible blow in the reduction of
+Ghent. The one remaining market for English
+commerce was thus closed up, while the forces
+which should have been employed in saving Ghent
+and in the protection of the English shores against
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-350"></a>2-350]</span>
+
+the threat of invasion were squandered by John
+of Gaunt in a war which he was carrying on alone
+the Spanish frontier in pursuit of the visionary
+crown which he claimed in his wife's right. The
+enterprise showed that the Duke had now
+abandoned the hope of directing affairs at home
+and was seeking a new sphere of activity abroad.
+To drive him from the realm had been from the
+close of the Peasant Revolt the steady purpose of
+the councillors who now surrounded the young
+king, of his favourite Robert de Vere and his
+Chancellor Michael de la Pole, who was raised in
+1385 to the Earldom of Suffolk. The Duke's
+friends were expelled from office; John of
+Northampton, the head of his adherents among the
+Commons, was thrown into prison; the Duke
+himself was charged with treason and threatened
+with arrest. In 1386 John of Gaunt abandoned
+the struggle and sailed for Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Temper of
+the Court</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Richard himself took part in these measures
+against the Duke. He was now twenty, handsome
+and golden-haired, with a temper capable of great
+actions and sudden bursts of energy but indolent
+and unequal. The conception of kingship in
+which he had been reared made him regard the
+constitutional advance which had gone on during
+the war as an invasion of the rights of his Crown.
+He looked on the nomination of the royal Council
+and the great officers of state by the two Houses
+or the supervision of the royal expenditure by the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-351"></a>2-351]</span>
+
+Commons as Infringements on the prerogative
+which only the pressure of the war and the weakness
+of a minority had forced the Crown to bow
+to. The judgement of his councillors was one
+with that of the king. Vere was no mere royal
+favourite; he was a great noble and of ancient
+lineage. Michael de la Pole was a man of large
+fortune and an old servant of the Crown; he had
+taken part in the war for thirty years, and had
+been admiral and captain of Calais. But neither
+were men to counsel the young king wisely in his
+effort to obtain independence at once of Parliament
+and of the great nobles. His first aim had been
+to break the pressure of the royal house itself, and
+in his encounter with John of Gaunt he had
+proved successful. But the departure of the Duke
+of Lancaster only called to the front his brother
+and his son. Thomas of Woodstock, the Duke of
+Gloucester, had inherited much of the lands and
+the influence of the old house of Bohun. Round
+Henry, Earl of Derby, the son of John of Gaunt
+by Blanche of Lancaster, the old Lancastrian party
+of constitutional opposition was once more forming
+itself. The favour shown to the followers of
+Wyclif at the Court threw on the side of this new
+opposition the bulk of the bishops and Churchmen.
+Richard himself showed no sympathy with the
+Lollards, but the action of her Bohemian servants
+shows the tendencies of his queen. Three
+members of the royal Council were patrons of the
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-352"></a>2-352]</span>
+
+Lollards, and the Earl of Salisbury, a favourite
+with the king, was their avowed head. The
+Commons displayed no hostility to the Lollards
+nor any zeal for the Church; but the lukewarm
+prosecution of the war, the profuse expenditure of
+the Court, and above all the manifest will of the
+king to free himself from Parliamentary control,
+estranged the Lower House. Richard's haughty
+words told their own tale. When the Parliament
+of 1385 called for an enquiry every year into the
+royal household, the king replied he would enquire
+when he pleased. When it prayed to know the
+names of the officers of state, he answered that he
+would change them at his will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Lords
+Appellant</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The burthen of such answers and of the policy
+they revealed fell on the royal councillors, and the
+departure of John of Gaunt forced the new
+opposition into vigorous action. The Parliament
+of 1386 called for the removal of Suffolk. Richard
+replied that he would not for such a prayer
+dismiss a turnspit of his kitchen. The Duke of
+Gloucester and Bishop Arundel of Ely were sent
+by the Houses as their envoys, and warned the
+king that should a ruler refuse to govern with the
+advice of his lords and by mad counsels work out
+his private purposes it was lawful to depose him.
+The threat secured Suffolk's removal; he was
+impeached for corruption and maladministration,
+and condemned to forfeiture and imprisonment.
+It was only by submitting to the nomination of a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-353"></a>2-353]</span>
+
+Continual Council, with the Duke of Gloucester at
+its head, that Richard could obtain a grant of
+subsidies. But the Houses were no sooner broken
+up than Suffolk was released, and in 1387 the
+young king rode through the country calling on
+the sheriffs to raise men against the barons, and
+bidding them suffer no knight of the shire to be
+returned for the next Parliament "save one whom
+the King and his Council chose." The general ill-will
+foiled both his efforts: and he was forced to
+take refuge in an opinion of five of the judges
+that the Continual Council was unlawful, the
+sentence on Suffolk erroneous, and that the Lords
+and Commons had no power to remove a king's
+servant. Gloucester answered the challenge by
+taking up arms, and a general refusal to fight for
+the king forced Richard once more to yield. A
+terrible vengeance was taken on his supporters in
+the recent schemes. In the Parliament of 1388
+Gloucester, with the four Earls of Derby, Arundel,
+Warwick, and Nottingham, appealed on a charge
+of high treason Suffolk and De Vere, the Archbishop
+of York, the Chief Justice Tresilian, and
+Sir Nicholas Bramber. The first two fled, Suffolk
+to France, De Vere after a skirmish at Radcot
+Bridge to Ireland; but the Archbishop was
+deprived of his see, Bramber beheaded, and
+Tresilian hanged. The five judges were banished,
+and Sir Simon Burley with three other members
+of the royal household sent to the block.
+</p>
+
+
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-354"></a>2-354]</span>
+
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Richard's
+Rule</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the prayer of the "Wonderful Parliament,"
+as some called this assembly, or as others with
+more justice "The Merciless Parliament," it was
+provided that all officers of state should henceforth
+be named in Parliament or by the Continual
+Council. Gloucester remained at the head of the
+latter body, but his power lasted hardly a year.
+In May 1389 Richard found himself strong enough
+to break down the government by a word. Entering
+the Council he suddenly asked his uncle how old
+he was. "Your highness," answered Gloucester,
+"is in your twenty-fourth year!" "Then I am
+old enough to manage my own affairs," said
+Richard coolly; "I have been longer under
+guardianship than any ward in my realm. I
+thank you for your past services, my lords, but I
+need them no more." The resolution was welcomed
+by the whole country; and Richard justified
+the country's hopes by wielding his new power
+with singular wisdom and success. He refused to
+recall De Vere or the five judges. The intercession
+of John of Gaunt on his return from Spain brought
+about a full reconciliation with the Lords Appellant.
+A truce was concluded with France, and its renewal
+year after year enabled the king to lighten the
+burthen of taxation. Richard announced his
+purpose to govern by advice of Parliament; he
+soon restored the Lords Appellant to his Council,
+and committed the chief offices of state to great
+Churchmen like Wykeham and Arundel. A series
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-355"></a>2-355]</span>
+
+of statutes showed the activity of the Houses. A
+Statute of Provisors which re-enacted those of
+Edward the Third was passed in 1390; the Statute
+of Præmunire, which punished the obtaining of
+bulls or other instruments from Rome with forfeiture,
+in 1393. The lords were bridled anew by a
+Statute of Maintenance, which forbade their
+violently supporting other men's causes in courts
+of justice, and giving "livery" to a host of retainers.
+The Statute of Uses in 1391, which rendered
+illegal the devices which had been invented to
+frustrate that of Mortmain, showed the same
+resolve to deal firmly with the Church. A reform
+of the staple and other mercantile enactments
+proved the king's care for trade. Throughout
+the legislation of these eight years we see the same
+tone of coolness and moderation. Eager as he was
+to win the good-will of the Parliament and the
+Church, Richard refused to bow to the panic of
+the landowners or to second the persecution of the
+priesthood. The demands of the Parliament that
+education should be denied to the sons of villeins
+was refused. Lollardry as a social danger was
+held firmly at bay, and in 1387 the king ordered
+Lollard books to be seized and brought before the
+Council. But the royal officers showed little zeal
+in aiding the bishops to seize or punish the heretical
+teachers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">French and
+English</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was in the period of peace which was won
+for the country by the wisdom and decision of its
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-356"></a>2-356]</span>
+
+young king that England listened to the voice of
+her first great singer. The work of Chaucer
+marks the final settlement of the English tongue.
+The close of the great movement towards national
+unity which had been going on ever since the
+Conquest was shown in the middle of the fourteenth
+century by the disuse, even amongst the nobler
+classes, of the French tongue. In spite of the
+efforts of the grammar schools and of the strength
+of fashion English won its way throughout the
+reign of Edward the Third to its final triumph in
+that of his grandson. It was ordered to be used
+in courts of law in 1362 "because the French
+tongue is much unknown," and in the following
+year it was employed by the Chancellor in opening
+Parliament. Bishops began to preach in English,
+and the English tracts of Wyclif made it once
+more a literary tongue. We see the general
+advance in two passages from writers of Edward's
+and Richard's reigns. "Children in school," says
+Higden, a writer of the first period, "against the
+usage and manner of all other nations be compelled
+for to leave their own language and for to construe
+their lessons and their things in French, and so
+they have since the Normans first came into
+England. Also gentlemen's children be taught for
+to speak French from the time that they be rocked
+in their cradle, and know how to speak and play
+with a child's toy; and uplandish (or country)
+men will liken themselves to gentlemen, and strive
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-357"></a>2-357]</span>
+
+with, great busyness to speak French for to be more
+told of." "This manner," adds John of Trevisa,
+Higden's translator in Richard's time, "was much
+used before the first murrain (the Black Death of
+1349), and is since somewhat changed. For John
+Cornwal, a master of grammar, changed the lore
+in grammar school and construing of French into
+English; and Richard Pencrych learned this
+manner of teaching of him, as other men did of
+Pencrych. So that now, the year of our Lord
+1385 and of the second King Richard after the
+Conquest nine, in all the grammar schools of
+England children leaveth French, and construeth
+and learneth in English. Also gentlemen have
+now much left for to teach their children French."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Chaucer</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This drift towards a general use of the national
+tongue told powerfully on literature. The influence
+of the French romances everywhere tended to
+make French the one literary language at the
+opening of the fourteenth century, and in England
+this influence had been backed by the French tone
+of the court of Henry the Third and the three
+Edwards. But at the close of the reign of Edward
+the Third the long French romances needed to be
+translated even for knightly hearers. "Let clerks
+indite in Latin," says the author of the "Testament
+of Love," "and let Frenchmen in their French
+also indite their quaint terms, for it is kindly to
+their mouths; and let us show our fantasies in
+such wordes as we learned of our mother's tongue."
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-358"></a>2-358]</span>
+
+But the new national life afforded nobler materials
+than "fantasies" now for English literature. With
+the completion of the work of national unity had
+come the completion of the work of national
+freedom. The vigour of English life showed itself
+in the wide extension of commerce, in the progress
+of the towns, and the upgrowth of a free yeomanry.
+It gave even nobler signs of its activity in the
+spirit of national independence and moral earnestness
+which awoke at the call of Wyclif. New
+forces of thought and feeling which were destined
+to tell on every age of our later history broke
+their way through the crust of feudalism in the
+socialist revolt of the Lollards, and a sudden burst
+of military glory threw its glamour over the age
+of Crécy and Poitiers. It is this new gladness of
+a great people which utters itself in the verse of
+Geoffrey Chaucer. Chaucer was born about 1340,
+the son of a London vintner who lived in Thames
+Street; and it was in London that the bulk of his
+life was spent. His family, though not noble,
+seems to have been of some importance, for from
+the opening of his career we find Chaucer in close
+connexion with the Court. At sixteen he was
+made page to the wife of Lionel of Clarence; at
+nineteen he first bore arms in the campaign of
+1359. But he was luckless enough to be made
+prisoner; and from the time of his release after
+the treaty of Brétigny he took no further share in
+the military enterprises of his time. He seems
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-359"></a>2-359]</span>
+
+again to have returned to service about the Court,
+and it was now that his first poems made their
+appearance, the "Compleynte to Pity" in 1368,
+and in 1369 the "Death of Blanch the Duchesse,"
+the wife of John of Gaunt who from this time at
+least may be looked upon as his patron. It may
+have been to John's influence that he owed his
+employment in seven diplomatic missions which
+were probably connected with the financial straits
+of the Crown. Three of these, in 1372, 1374, and
+1378, carried him to Italy. He visited Genoa and
+the brilliant court of the Visconti at Milan; at
+Florence, where the memory of Dante, the "great
+master" whom he commemorates so reverently in
+his verse, was still living, he may have met
+Boccaccio; at Padua, like his own clerk of Oxenford,
+he possibly caught the story of Griseldis from
+the lips of Petrarca.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">His Early
+Poems</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was these visits to Italy which gave us the
+Chaucer whom we know. From that hour his
+work stands out in vivid contrast with the poetic
+literature from the heart of which it sprang. The
+long French romances were the product of an age
+of wealth and ease, of indolent curiosity, of a
+fanciful and self-indulgent sentiment. Of the
+great passions which gave life to the Middle Ages,
+that of religious enthusiasm had degenerated into
+the conceits of Mariolatry, that of war into the
+extravagances of Chivalry. Love indeed remained;
+it was the one theme of troubadour and trouveur;
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-360"></a>2-360]</span>
+
+but it was a love of refinement, of romantic follies,
+of scholastic discussions, of sensuous enjoyment--a
+plaything rather than a passion. Nature had to
+reflect the pleasant indolence of man; the song of
+the minstrel moved through a perpetual May-time;
+the grass was ever green; the music of the lark
+and the nightingale rang out from field and thicket.
+There was a gay avoidance of all that is serious,
+moral, or reflective in man's life: life was too
+amusing to be serious, too piquant, too sentimental,
+too full of interest and gaiety and chat. It was an
+age of talk: "mirth is none," says Chaucer's host,
+"to ride on by the way dumb as a stone "; and
+the Trouveur aimed simply at being the most
+agreeable talker of his day. His romances, his
+rimes of Sir Tristram, his Romance of the Rose,
+are full of colour and fantasy, endless in detail,
+but with a sort of gorgeous idleness about their
+very length, the minuteness of their description of
+outer things, the vagueness of their touch when it
+passes to the subtler inner world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was with this literature that Chaucer had till
+now been familiar, and it was this which he
+followed in his earlier work. But from the time
+of his visits to Milan and Genoa his sympathies
+drew him not to the dying verse of France but
+to the new and mighty upgrowth of poetry in
+Italy. Dante's eagle looks at him from the sun.
+"Fraunces Petrark, the laureat poete," is to him
+one "whose rethorique sweete enlumyned al Itail
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-361"></a>2-361]</span>
+
+of poetrie." The "Troilus" which he produced
+about 1382 is an enlarged English version of
+Boccaccio's "Filostrato"; the Knight's Tale, whose
+first draft is of the same period, bears slight traces
+of his Teseide. It was indeed the "Decameron"
+which suggested the very form of the "Canterbury
+Tales," the earliest of which, such as those of the
+Doctor, the Man of Law, the Clerk, the Prioress,
+the Franklin, and the Squire, may probably be
+referred like the Parliament of Foules and the
+House of Fame to this time of Chaucer's life. But
+even while changing, as it were, the front of
+English poetry Chaucer preserves his own distinct
+personality. If he quizzes in the rime of Sir
+Thopaz the wearisome idleness of the French
+romance he retains all that was worth retaining of
+the French temper, its rapidity and agility of
+movement, its lightness and brilliancy of touch,
+its airy mockery, its gaiety and good humour, its
+critical coolness and self-control. The French wit
+quickens in him more than in any English writer
+the sturdy sense and shrewdness of our national
+disposition, corrects its extravagance, and relieves
+its somewhat ponderous morality. If on the other
+hand he echoes the joyous carelessness of the
+Italian tale, he tempers it with the English
+seriousness. As he follows Boccaccio all his
+changes are on the side of purity; and when the
+Troilus of the Florentine ends with the old sneer
+at the changeableness of woman Chaucer bids us
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-362"></a>2-362]</span>
+
+"look Godward," and dwells on the unchangeableness
+of Heaven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The Canterbury
+Tales</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The genius of Chaucer however was neither
+French nor Italian, whatever element it might
+borrow from either literature, but English to the
+core; and from the year 1384 all trace of foreign
+influence dies away. Chaucer had now reached
+the climax of his poetic power. He was a busy,
+practical worker, Comptroller of the Customs in
+1374, of the Petty Customs in 1382, a member of
+the Commons in the Parliament of 1386. The
+fall of the Duke of Lancaster from power may
+have deprived him of employment for a time, but
+from 1389 to 1391 he was Clerk of the Royal
+Works, busy with repairs and building at Westminster,
+Windsor, and the Tower. His air indeed
+was that of a student rather than of a man of the
+world. A single portrait has preserved for us his
+forked beard, his dark-coloured dress, the knife
+and pen-case at his girdle, and we may supplement
+this portrait by a few vivid touches of his own.
+The sly, elvish face, the quick walk, the plump
+figure and portly waist were those of a genial and
+humorous man; but men jested at his silence, his
+abstraction, his love of study. "Thou lookest as
+thou wouldest find an hare," laughs the host, "and
+ever on the ground I see thee stare." He heard
+little of his neighbours' talk when office work in
+Thames Street was over. "Thou goest home to
+thy own house anon, and also dumb as any stone
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-363"></a>2-363]</span>
+
+thou sittest at another book till fully dazed is thy
+look, and livest thus as an heremite, although,"
+he adds slyly, "thy abstinence is lite," or little.
+But of this seeming abstraction from the world
+about him there is not a trace in Chaucer's verse.
+We see there how keen his observation was, how
+vivid and intense his sympathy with nature and
+the men among whom he moved. "Farewell, my
+book," he cried as spring came after winter and
+the lark's song roused him at dawn to spend hours
+gazing alone on the daisy whose beauty he sang.
+But field and stream and flower and bird, much as
+he loved them, were less to him than man. No
+poetry was over more human than Chaucer's, none
+ever came more frankly and genially home to men
+than his "Canterbury Tales."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the continuation and revision of this
+work which mainly occupied him during the years
+from 1384 to 1391. Its best stories, those of the
+Miller, the Reeve, the Cook, the Wife of Bath, the
+Merchant, the Friar, the Nun, the Priest, and the
+Pardoner, are ascribed to this period, as well as
+the Prologue. The framework which Chaucer
+chose--that of a pilgrimage from London to Canterbury--not
+only enabled him to string these tales
+together, but lent itself admirably to the peculiar
+characteristics of his poetic temper, his dramatic
+versatility and the universality of his sympathy.
+His tales cover the whole field of mediæval poetry;
+the legend of the priest, the knightly romance,
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-364"></a>2-364]</span>
+
+the wonder-tale of the traveller, the broad humour
+of the fabliau, allegory and apologue, all are there.
+He finds a yet wider scope for his genius in the
+persons who tell these stories, the thirty pilgrims
+who start in the May morning from the Tabard in
+Southwark--thirty distinct figures, representatives
+of every class of English society from the noble to
+the ploughman. We see the "verray perfight
+gentil knight" in cassock and coat of mail, with
+his curly-headed squire beside him, fresh as the
+May morning, and behind them the brown-faced
+yeoman in his coat and hood of green with a
+mighty bow in his hand. A group of ecclesiastics
+light up for us the mediaeval church--the brawny
+hunt-loving monk, whose bridle jingles as loud and
+clear as the chapel-bell--the wanton friar, first
+among the beggars and harpers of the country-side--the
+poor parson, threadbare, learned, and devout,
+("Christ's lore and his apostles twelve he taught,
+and first he followed it himself")--the summoner
+with his fiery face--the pardoner with his wallet
+"bretfull of pardons, come from Rome all hot"--the
+lively prioress with her courtly French lisp,
+her soft little red mouth, and "Amor vincit omnia"
+graven on her brooch. Learning is there in the
+portly person of the doctor of physic, rich with
+the profits of the pestilence--the busy serjeant-of-law,
+"that ever seemed busier than he was"--the
+hollow-cheeked clerk of Oxford with his love of
+books and short sharp sentences that disguise a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-365"></a>2-365]</span>
+
+latent tenderness which breaks out at last in the
+story of Griseldis. Around them crowd types of
+English industry: the merchant; the franklin in
+whose house "it snowed of meat and drink"; the
+sailor fresh from frays in the Channel; the buxom
+wife of Bath; the broad-shouldered miller; the
+haberdasher, carpenter, weaver, dyer, tapestry-maker,
+each in the livery of his craft; and last the
+honest ploughman who would dyke and delve for
+the poor without hire. It is the first time in
+English poetry that we are brought face to face
+not with characters or allegories or reminiscences
+of the past, but with living and breathing men,
+men distinct in temper and sentiment as in face or
+costume or mode of speech; and with this distinctness
+of each maintained throughout the story
+by a thousand shades of expression and action. It
+is the first time, too, that we meet with the dramatic
+power which not only creates each character
+but combines it with its fellows, which not only
+adjusts each tale or jest to the temper of the
+person who utters it but fuses all into a poetic
+unity. It is life in its largeness, its variety, its
+complexity, which surrounds us in the "Canterbury
+Tales." In some of the stories indeed, which were
+composed no doubt at an earlier time, there is the
+tedium of the old romance or the pedantry of the
+schoolman; but taken as a whole the poem is the
+work not of a man of letters but of a man of
+action. Chaucer has received his training from
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-366"></a>2-366]</span>
+
+war, courts, business, travel--a training not of
+books but of life. And it is life that he loves--the
+delicacy of its sentiment, the breadth of its
+farce, its laughter and its tears, the tenderness of
+its Griseldis or the Smollett-like adventures of the
+miller and the clerks. It is this largeness of heart,
+this wide tolerance, which enables him to reflect man
+for us as none but Shakspere has ever reflected
+him, and to do this with a pathos, a shrewd sense
+and kindly humour, a freshness and joyousness
+of feeling, that even Shakspere has not surpassed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">The French
+Marriage</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last ten years of Chaucer's life saw a few
+more tales added to the Pilgrimage and a few
+poems to his work; but his power was lessening,
+and in 1400 he rested from his labours in his last
+home, a house in the garden of St. Mary's Chapel
+at Westminster. His body rests within the Abbey
+church. It was strange that such a voice should
+have awakened no echo in the singers that follow,
+but the first burst of English song died as suddenly
+in Chaucer as the hope and glory of his age. He
+died indeed at the moment of a revolution which
+was the prelude to years of national discord and
+national suffering. Whatever may have been the
+grounds of his action, the rule of Richard the
+Second after his assumption of power had shown
+his capacity for self-restraint. Parted by his own
+will from the counsellors of his youth, calling to
+his service the Lords Appellant, reconciled alike
+with the baronage and the Parliament, the young
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-367"></a>2-367]</span>
+
+king promised to be among the noblest and wisest
+rulers that England had seen. But the violent
+and haughty temper which underlay this self-command
+showed itself from time to time. The
+Earl of Arundel and his brother the bishop stood
+in the front rank of the party which had coerced
+Richard in his early days; their influence was
+great in the new government. But a strife between
+the Earl and John of Gaunt revived the
+king's resentment at the past action of this house;
+and at the funeral of Anne of Bohemia in 1394 a
+fancied slight roused Richard to a burst of passion.
+He struck the Earl so violently that the blow drew
+blood. But the quarrel was patched up, and the
+reconciliation was followed by the elevation of
+Bishop Arundel to the vacant Primacy in 1396.
+In the preceding year Richard had crossed to
+Ireland and in a short autumn campaign reduced
+its native chiefs again to submission. Fears of
+Lollard disturbances soon recalled him, but these
+died at the king's presence, and Richard was able
+to devote himself to the negotiation of a marriage
+which was to be the turning-point of his reign.
+His policy throughout the recent years had been a
+policy of peace. It was war which rendered the
+Crown helpless before the Parliament, and peace
+was needful if the work of constant progress was
+not to be undone. But the short truces, renewed
+from time to time, which he had as yet secured
+were insufficient for this purpose, for so long as
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-368"></a>2-368]</span>
+
+war might break out in the coming year the king
+hands were tied. The impossibility of renouncing
+the claim to the French crown indeed made a
+formal peace impossible, but its ends might be
+secured by a lengthened truce, and it was with a
+view to this that Richard in 1396 wedded Isabella,
+the daughter of Charles the Sixth of France. The
+bride was a mere child, but she brought with her
+a renewal of the truce for five-and-twenty years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Change of
+Richard's
+temper</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The match was hardly concluded when the veil
+under which Richard had shrouded his real temper
+began to be dropped. His craving for absolute
+power, such as he witnessed in the Court of France,
+was probably intensified from this moment by a
+mental disturbance which gathered strength as the
+months went on. As if to preclude any revival of
+the war Richard had surrendered Cherbourg to
+the king of Navarre and now gave back Brest to
+the Duke of Britanny. He was said to have
+pledged himself at his wedding to restore Calais
+to the king of France. But once freed from all
+danger of such a struggle the whole character of
+his rule seemed to change. His court became as
+crowded and profuse as his grandfather's. Money
+was recklessly borrowed and as recklessly
+squandered. The king's pride became insane,
+and it was fed with dreams of winning the
+Imperial crown through the deposition of Wenzel
+of Bohemia. The councillors with whom he had
+acted since his resumption of authority saw themselves
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-369"></a>2-369]</span>
+
+powerless. John of Gaunt indeed still
+retained influence over the king. It was the
+support of the Duke of Lancaster after his return
+from his Spanish campaign which had enabled
+Richard to hold in check the Duke of Gloucester
+and the party that he led; and the anxiety of the
+young king to retain this support was seen in his
+grant of Aquitaine to his uncle, and in the legitimation
+of the Beauforts, John's children by a mistress,
+Catherine Swinford, whom he married after the
+death of his second wife. The friendship of the
+Duke brought with it the adhesion of one even
+more important, his son Henry, the Earl of Derby.
+As heir through his mother, Blanche of Lancaster,
+to the estates and influence of the Lancastrian
+house, Henry was the natural head of a constitutional
+opposition, and his weight was increased by
+a marriage with the heiress of the house of Bohun.
+He had taken a prominent part in the overthrow
+of Suffolk and De Vere, and on the king's resumption
+of power he had prudently withdrawn from
+the realm on a vow of Crusade, had touched at
+Barbary, visited the Holy Sepulchre, and in 1390
+sailed for Dantzig and taken part in a campaign
+against the heathen Prussians with the Teutonic
+Knights. Since his return he had silently followed
+in his father's track. But the counsels of John of
+Gaunt were hardly wiser than of old; Arundel
+had already denounced his influence as a hurtful
+one; and in the events which were now to hurry
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-370"></a>2-370]</span>
+
+quickly on he seems to have gone hand in hand
+with the king.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Richard's
+Tyranny</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A new uneasiness was seen in the Parliament
+of 1397, and the Commons prayed for a redress
+of the profusion of the Court. Richard at once
+seized on the opportunity for a struggle. He
+declared himself grieved that his subjects should
+"take on themselves any ordinance or governance
+of the person of the King or his hostel or of any
+persons of estate whom he might be pleased to
+have in his company." The Commons were at
+once overawed; they owned that the cognizance
+of such matters belonged wholly to the king, and
+gave up to the Duke of Lancaster the name of the
+member, Sir Thomas Haxey, who had brought
+forward this article of their prayer. The lords
+pronounced him a traitor, and his life was only
+saved by the fact that he was a clergyman and by
+the interposition of Archbishop Arundel. The
+Earl of Arundel and the Duke of Gloucester at
+once withdrew from Court. They stood almost
+alone, for of the royal house the Dukes of Lancaster
+and York with their sons the Earls of Derby and
+Rutland were now with the king, and the old
+coadjutor of Gloucester, the Earl of Nottingham,
+was in high favour with him. The Earl of
+Warwick alone joined them, and he was included
+in a charge of conspiracy which was followed by
+the arrest of the three. A fresh Parliament in
+September was packed with royal partizans, and
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-371"></a>2-371]</span>
+
+Richard moved boldly to his end. The pardons
+of the Lords Appellant were revoked. Archbishop
+Arundel was impeached and banished from the
+realm, he was transferred by the Pope to the See
+of St. Andrews, and the Primacy given to Roger
+Walden. The Earl of Arundel, accused before
+the Peers under John of Gaunt as High Steward,
+was condemned and executed in a single day.
+Warwick, who owned the truth of the charge, was
+condemned to perpetual imprisonment. The Duke
+of Gloucester was saved from a trial by a sudden
+death in his prison at Calais. A new Parliament
+at Shrewsbury in the opening of 1398 completed
+the king's work. In three days it declared null
+the proceedings of the Parliament of 1388, granted
+to the king a subsidy on wool and leather for his
+life, and delegated its authority to a standing
+committee of eighteen members from both Houses
+with power to continue their sittings even after the
+dissolution of the Parliament and to "examine and
+determine all matters and subjects which had been
+moved in the presence of the king with all the
+dependencies thereof."
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Henry of
+Lancaster</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a single year the whole colour of Richard's
+government had changed. He had revenged himself
+on the men who had once held him down, and
+his revenge was hardly taken before he disclosed
+a plan of absolute government. He had used the
+Parliament to strike down the Primate as well as
+the greatest nobles of the realm and to give him
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-372"></a>2-372]</span>
+
+a revenue for life which enabled him to get rid
+of Parliament itself, for the Permanent Committee
+which it named were men devoted, as Richard
+held, to his cause. John of Gaunt was at its
+head, and the rest of its lords were those who
+had backed the king in his blow at Gloucester
+and the Arundels. Two however were excluded.
+In the general distribution of rewards which followed
+Gloucester's overthrow the Earl of Derby
+had been made Duke of Hereford, the Earl of
+Nottingham Duke of Norfolk. But at the close
+of 1397 the two Dukes charged each other with
+treasonable talk as they rode between Brentford
+and London, and the Permanent Committee
+ordered the matter to be settled by a single combat.
+In September 1398 the Dukes entered the
+lists; but Richard forbade the duel, sentenced
+the Duke of Norfolk to banishment for life, and
+Henry of Lancaster to exile for ten years. As
+Henry left London the streets were crowded with
+people weeping for his fate; some followed him
+even to the coast. But his withdrawal removed
+the last check on Richard's despotism. He forced
+from every tenant of the Crown an oath to recognize
+the acts of his Committee as valid, and to
+oppose any attempts to alter or revoke them.
+Forced loans, the sale of charters of pardon to
+Gloucester's adherents, the outlawry of seven
+counties at once on the plea that they had supported
+his enemies and must purchase pardon, a
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-373"></a>2-373]</span>
+
+reckless interference with the course of justice,
+roused into new life the old discontent. Even
+this might have been defied had not Richard set
+an able and unscrupulous leader at its head.
+Leave had been given to Henry of Lancaster to
+receive his father's inheritance on the death of
+John of Gaunt, in February 1399. But an ordinance
+of the Continual Committee annulled this
+permission and Richard seized the Lancastrian
+estates. Archbishop Arundel at once saw the
+chance of dealing blow for blow. He hastened
+to Paris and pressed the Duke to return to England,
+telling him how all men there looked for it,
+"especially the Londoners, who loved him a
+hundred times more than they did the king."
+For a while Henry remained buried in thought,
+"leaning on a window overlooking a garden";
+but Arundel's pressure at last prevailed, he made
+his way secretly to Britanny, and with fifteen
+knights set sail from Vannes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Ireland and
+the Pale</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What had really decided him was the opportunity
+offered by Richard's absence from the
+realm. From the opening of his reign the king's
+attention had been constantly drawn to his dependent
+lordship of Ireland. More than two
+hundred years had passed away since the troubles
+which followed the murder of Archbishop Thomas
+forced Henry the Second to leave his work of
+conquest unfinished, and the opportunity for a
+complete reduction of the island which had been
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-374"></a>2-374]</span>
+
+lost then had never returned. When Henry
+quitted Ireland indeed Leinster was wholly in
+English hands, Connaught bowed to a nominal
+acknowledgement of the English overlordship, and
+for a while the work of conquest seemed to go
+steadily on. John de Courcy penetrated into
+Ulster and established himself at Downpatrick;
+and Henry planned the establishment of his
+youngest son, John, as Lord of Ireland. But
+the levity of the young prince, who mocked
+the rude dresses of the native chieftains and
+plucked them in insult by the beard, soon forced
+his father to recall him; and in the continental
+struggle which soon opened on the Angevin kings,
+as in the constitutional struggle within England
+itself which followed it, all serious purpose of
+completing the conquest of Ireland was forgotten.
+Nothing indeed but the feuds and weakness of
+the Irish tribes enabled the adventurers to hold
+the districts of Drogheda, Dublin, Wexford,
+Waterford, and Cork, which formed what was
+thenceforth known as "the English Pale." In
+all the history of Ireland no event has proved
+more disastrous than this half-finished conquest.
+Had the Irish driven their invaders into the sea,
+or the English succeeded in the complete reduction
+of the island, the misery of its after ages
+might have been avoided. A struggle such as that
+in which Scotland drove out its conquerors might
+have produced a spirit of patriotism and national
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-375"></a>2-375]</span>
+
+union which would have formed a people out of
+the mass of warring clans. A conquest such as
+that in which the Normans made England their
+own would have spread at any rate the law, the
+order, the civilization of the conquering country
+over the length and breadth of the conquered.
+Unhappily Ireland, while powerless to effect its
+entire deliverance, was strong enough to hold its
+assailants partially at bay. The country was
+broken into two halves whose conflict has never
+ceased. So far from either giving elements of
+civilization or good government to the other,
+conqueror and conquered reaped only degradation
+from the ceaseless conflict. The native tribes lost
+whatever tendency to union or social progress had
+survived the invasion of the Danes. Their barbarism
+was intensified by their hatred of the
+more civilized intruders. But these intruders
+themselves, penned within the narrow limits of
+the Pale, brutalized by a merciless conflict, cut
+off from contact with the refining influences of a
+larger world, sank rapidly to the level of the barbarism
+about them: and the lawlessness, the
+ferocity, the narrowness of feudalism broke out
+unchecked in this horde of adventurers who held
+the land by their sword.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">English and
+Irish</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the first the story of the English Pale
+was a story of degradation and anarchy. It
+needed the stern vengeance of John, whose army
+stormed its strongholds and drove its leading
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-376"></a>2-376]</span>
+
+barons into exile, to preserve even their fealty to
+the English Crown. John divided the Pale into
+counties and ordered the observance of the English
+law; but the departure of his army was the
+signal for a return of the disorder he had trampled
+under foot. Between Englishmen and Irishmen
+went on a ceaseless and pitiless war. Every Irishman
+without the Pale was counted by the English
+settlers an enemy and a robber whose murder
+found no cognizance or punishment at the hands
+of the law. Half the subsistence of the English
+barons was drawn from forays across the border,
+and these forays were avenged by incursions of
+native marauders which carried havoc at times
+to the very walls of Dublin. Within the Pale
+itself the misery was hardly less. The English
+settlers were harried and oppressed by their own
+baronage as much as by the Irish marauders,
+while the feuds of the English lords wasted their
+strength and prevented any effective combination
+either for common conquest or common defence.
+So utter seemed their weakness that Robert Bruce
+saw in it an opportunity for a counter-blow at
+his English assailants, and his victory at Bannockburn
+was followed up by the despatch of a Scotch
+force to Ireland with his brother Edward at its
+head. A general rising of the Irish welcomed this
+deliverer; but the danger drove the barons of the
+Pale to a momentary union, and in 1316 their
+valour was proved on the bloody field of Athenree
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-377"></a>2-377]</span>
+
+by the slaughter of eleven thousand of their foes
+and the almost complete annihilation of the sept
+of the O'Connors. But with victory returned the
+old anarchy and degradation. The barons of the
+Pale sank more and more into Irish chieftains.
+The Fitz-Maurices, who became Earls of Desmond
+and whose vast territory in Minister was erected
+into a County Palatine, adopted the dress and
+manners of the natives around them. The rapid
+growth of this evil was seen in the ruthless provisions
+by which Edward the Third strove to
+check it in his Statute of Kilkenny. The Statute
+forbade the adoption of the Irish language or
+name or dress by any man of English blood: it
+enforced within the Pale the exclusive use of
+English law, and made the use of the native or
+Brehon law, which was gaining ground, an act
+of treason; it made treasonable any marriage of
+the Englishry with persons of Irish race, or
+any adoption of English children by Irish foster-fathers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Richard in
+Ireland</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But stern as they were these provisions proved
+fruitless to check the fusion of the two races,
+while the growing independence of the Lords of
+the Pale threw off all but the semblance of obedience
+to the English government. It was this
+which stirred Richard to a serious effort for the
+conquest and organization of the island. In 1386
+he granted the "entire dominion" of Ireland
+with the title of its Duke to Robert de Vere on
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-378"></a>2-378]</span>
+
+condition of his carrying out its utter reduction.
+But the troubles of the reign soon recalled De
+Vere, and it was not till the truce with France
+had freed his hands that the king again took up
+his projects of conquest. In 1394 he landed with
+an army at Waterford, and received the general
+submission of the native chieftains. But the
+Lords of the Pale held sullenly aloof; and Richard
+had no sooner quitted the island than the Irish in
+turn refused to carry out their promise of quitting
+Leinster, and engaged in a fresh contest with the
+Earl of March, whom the king had proclaimed as
+his heir and left behind him as his lieutenant in
+Ireland. In the summer of 1398 March was
+beaten and slain in battle: and Richard resolved
+to avenge his cousin's death and complete the
+work he had begun by a fresh invasion. He felt
+no apprehension of danger. At home his triumph
+seemed complete. The death of Norfolk, the
+exile of Henry of Lancaster, left the baronage
+without heads for any rising. He ensured, as
+he believed, the loyalty of the great houses by
+the hostages of their blood whom he carried with
+him, at whose head was Henry of Lancaster's son,
+the future Henry the Fifth. The refusal of the
+Percies, the Earl of Northumberland and his son
+Henry Percy or Hotspur, to obey his summons
+might have warned him that danger was brewing
+in the north. Richard however took little heed.
+He banished the Percies, who withdrew into
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-379"></a>2-379]</span>
+
+Scotland; and sailed for Ireland at the end of
+May, leaving his uncle the Duke of York regent
+in his stead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Landing of
+Henry</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The opening of his campaign was indecisive,
+and it was not till fresh reinforcements arrived
+at Dublin that the king could prepare for a march
+into the heart of the island. But while he planned
+the conquest of Ireland the news came that England
+was lost. Little more than a month had
+passed after his departure when Henry of Lancaster
+entered the Humber and landed at Ravenspur.
+He came, he said, to claim his heritage;
+and three of his Yorkshire castles at once threw
+open their gates. The two great houses of the
+north joined him at once. Ralph Neville, the Earl
+of Westmoreland, had married his half-sister; the
+Percies came from their exile over the Scottish
+border. As he pushed quickly to the south all
+resistance broke down. The army which the
+Regent gathered refused to do hurt to the Duke;
+London called him to her gates; and the royal
+Council could only march hastily on Bristol in
+the hope of securing that port for the King's
+return. But the town at once yielded to Henry's
+summons, the Regent submitted to him, and with
+an army which grew at every step the Duke
+marched upon Cheshire, where Richard's adherents
+were gathering in arms to meet the king.
+Contrary winds had for a while kept Richard
+ignorant of his cousin's progress, and even when
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-380"></a>2-380]</span>
+
+the news reached him he was in a web of
+treachery. The Duke of Albemarle, the son of
+the Regent Duke of York, was beside him, and
+at his persuasion the King abandoned his first
+purpose of returning at once, and sent the Earl
+of Salisbury to Conway while he himself waited
+to gather his army and fleet. The six days he
+proposed to gather them in became sixteen, and
+the delay proved fatal to his cause. As no news
+came of Richard the Welshmen who flocked to
+Salisbury's camp dispersed on Henry's advance
+to Chester. Henry was in fact master of the
+realm at the opening of August when Richard at
+last sailed from Waterford and landed at Milford
+Haven.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<span class="sidenote">Richard's
+capture</span>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every road was blocked, and the news that all
+was lost told on the thirty thousand men he
+brought with him. In a single day but six
+thousand remained, and even these dispersed
+when it was found that the King had ridden off
+disguised as a friar to join the force which he
+believed to be awaiting him in North Wales with
+Salisbury at its head. He reached Caernarvon
+only to find this force already disbanded, and
+throwing himself into the castle despatched his
+kinsmen, the Dukes of Exeter and Surrey, to
+Chester to negotiate with Henry of Lancaster.
+But they were detained there while the Earl of
+Northumberland pushed forward with a picked
+body of men, and securing the castles of the coast
+
+<span class="pagenum"><a name="Vol2-Page-2-381"></a>2-381]</span>
+
+at last sought an interview with Richard at Conway.
+The King's confidence was still unbroken.
+He threatened to raise a force of Welshmen and
+to put Lancaster to death. Deserted as he was
+indeed, a King was in himself a power, and only
+the treacherous pledges of the Earl induced him
+to set aside his plans for a reconciliation to be
+brought about in Parliament and to move from
+Conway on the promise of a conference with
+Henry at Flint. But he had no sooner reached
+the town than he found himself surrounded by Lancaster's
+forces. "I am betrayed," he cried, as the
+view of his enemies burst on him from the hill;
+"there are pennons and banners in the valley."
+But it was too late for retreat. Richard was
+seized and brought before his cousin. "I am
+come before my time," said Lancaster, "but I will
+show you the reason. Your people, my lord,
+complain that for the space of twenty years you
+have ruled them harshly: however, if it please
+God, I will help you to rule them better." "Fair
+cousin," replied the King, "since it pleases you,
+it pleases me well." Then, breaking in private
+into passionate regrets that he had ever spared
+his cousin's life, he suffered himself to be carried
+a prisoner along the road to London.
+</p>
+
+</div>
+</div>
+<div class="teidiv">
+<div class="head">
+<hr>
+<a name="index-div-id4555750"></a>
+END OF VOL. II.
+</div>
+
+</div>
+ </div>
+
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<br>
+<hr class="pg" noshade>
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