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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Reformation and the Renaissance
-(1485-1547), by Frederick William Bewsher
-
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most
-other parts of the world 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
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have
-to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook.
-
-
-
-
-Title: The Reformation and the Renaissance (1485-1547)
- Second Edition
-
-
-Author: Frederick William Bewsher
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 16, 2016 [eBook #51229]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ISO-646-US (US-ASCII)
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE REFORMATION AND THE
-RENAISSANCE (1485-1547)***
-
-
-E-text prepared by Chris Pinfield and the Online Distributed Proofreading
-Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made available by
-Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/reformationthere00bewsuoft
-
-
-Transcriber's note:
-
- Text enclosed by underscores is in italics (_italics_).
-
- Text enclosed by plus signs is in bold face (+bold+).
-
- Small capitals have been replaced by full capitals.
-
- The signature of a 1534 letter from Henry VIII. to Anne
- Boleyn includes a monogram combining A and B. This has
- been transcribed as '(AB)'.
-
- The superscript 'li', meaning 'pound sterling', has been
- transcribed as '-li'. The superscript 'dd', meaning unclear,
- has been transcribed as '-dd'.
-
-
-
-
-
-BELL'S ENGLISH HISTORY SOURCE BOOKS
-
-General Editors: S. E. WINBOLT, M.A., and KENNETH BELL, M.A.
-
-
-THE REFORMATION AND THE RENAISSANCE (1485-1547)
-
-Compiled by
-
-FRED. W. BEWSHER, B.A.
-
-St. Paul's School
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration]
-
-
-SECOND EDITION
-
-
-London
-G. Bell and Sons, Ltd.
-1916
-
-
-
-
-INTRODUCTION
-
-
-This series of English History Source Books is intended for use with
-any ordinary textbook of English History. Experience has conclusively
-shown that such apparatus is a valuable--nay, an indispensable--adjunct
-to the history lesson. It is capable of two main uses: either by
-way of lively illustration at the close of a lesson, or by way of
-inference-drawing, before the textbook is read, at the beginning of
-the lesson. The kind of problems and exercises that may be based on
-the documents are legion, and are admirably illustrated in a _History
-of England for Schools_, Part I., by Keatinge and Frazer, pp. 377-381.
-However, we have no wish to prescribe for the teacher the manner in
-which he shall exercise his craft, but simply to provide him and his
-pupils with materials hitherto not readily accessible for school
-purposes. The very moderate price of the books in this series should
-bring them within the reach of every secondary school. Source books
-enable the pupil to take a more active part than hitherto in the
-history lesson. Here is the apparatus, the raw material: its use we
-leave to teacher and taught.
-
-Our belief is that the books may profitably be used by all grades of
-historical students between the standards of fourth-form boys in
-secondary schools and undergraduates at Universities. What
-differentiates students at one extreme from those at the other is not
-so much the kind of subject-matter dealt with, as the amount they can
-read into or extract from it.
-
-In regard to choice of subject-matter, while trying to satisfy the
-natural demand for certain "stock" documents of vital importance, we
-hope to introduce much fresh and novel matter. It is our intention
-that the majority of the extracts should be lively in style--that is,
-personal, or descriptive, or rhetorical, or even strongly
-partisan--and should not so much profess to give the truth as supply
-data for inference. We aim at the greatest possible variety, and lay
-under contribution letters, biographies, ballads and poems, diaries,
-debates, and newspaper accounts. Economics, London, municipal, and
-social life generally, and local history, are represented in these
-pages.
-
-The order of the extracts is strictly chronological, each being
-numbered, titled, and dated, and its authority given. The text is
-modernised, where necessary, to the extent of leaving no difficulties
-in reading.
-
-We shall be most grateful to teachers and students who may send us
-suggestions for improvement.
-
- S. E. WINBOLT.
- KENNETH BELL.
-
-
-NOTE TO THIS VOLUME.
-
-The purpose of this volume is to supply several of those documents
-which are of great historical importance, and which, at present, find
-no place in the series of documents published by the Oxford University
-Press. Further, while most of the more important historical events are
-dealt with, an attempt has been made to introduce the student to the
-Tudor Atmosphere, and to reproduce as much as possible, both the
-mental and bodily energy, the prosperity, and the general virility of
-the period.
-
- F. W. B.
-
- ST. PAUL'S SCHOOL,
- _September 1912_.
-
-
-
-
-TABLE OF CONTENTS
-
-
- PAGE
-
- INTRODUCTION v
-
- 1485. DEVICE FOR THE CORONATION OF
- HENRY VII. _Rutland Papers_ 1
-
- 1486. INTRODUCTION OF THE YEOMEN OF THE
- GUARD. THE SWEATING SICKNESS _Holinshed_ 3
-
- 1486. INSURRECTION OF LAMBERT SIMNEL " 4
-
- 1490. THE LEVYING OF BENEVOLENCES " 9
-
- 1496. THE REBELLION OF THE CORNISHMEN " 10
-
- 1499. PERKIN WARBECK'S CONFESSION " 14
-
- 1500. RECEPTION OF PRINCESS CATHARINE _Paston Letters_ 16
-
- 1504. CARDINAL MORTON'S FORK _Holinshed_ 17
-
- 1506. THE MEETING OF HENRY VII. AND
- THE KING OF CASTILE _Paston Letters_ 18
-
- 1509. SUPERSTITION _Erasmus_ 20
-
- 1516. THE MAKING OF BEGGARS AND THIEVES _More_ 22
-
- 1520. ENCLOSURES _Holinshed_ 26
-
- 1522. VISIT OF CHAS. V. TO ENGLAND _Rutland Papers_ 28
-
- 1522. CARDINAL WOLSEY _John Skelton_ 31
-
- 1524. WOLSEY AND THE POPEDOM _Burnet's "Collection
- of Records"_ 34
-
- 1528. WOLSEY AND THE KING'S MARRIAGE _Burnet's "Collection
- of Records"_ 36
-
- 1528. ON THE TRANSLATION OF
- THE SCRIPTURES _William Tyndale_ 39
-
- 1529. ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS OF
- THE BIBLE BURNT _Hall_ 41
-
- 1529. TWO LETTERS WRITTEN BY KING HENRY _Burnet's "Collection
- TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD of Records"_ 43
-
- 1529. CARDINAL CAMPEGGIO'S JUDGMENT ON
- THE DIVORCE OF QUEEN KATHARINE _Hall_ 45
-
- 1529. ANNE BOLEYN'S HATRED OF WOLSEY _Cavendish_ 47
-
- 1529. WOLSEY'S FALL " 48
-
- 1530. A LETTER WRITTEN BY WOLSEY TO
- DR. STEPHEN GARDNER _Cavendish_ 49
-
- 1532. THE KING'S LAST LETTER _Burnet's "Collection
- TO THE POPE of Records"_ 51
-
- 1534. SUBMISSION OF THE CLERGY AND
- RESTRAINT OF APPEALS _Statutes of the Realm_ 56
-
- 1534. THE ECCLESIASTICAL APPOINTMENTS
- ACT. THE ABSOLUTE RESTRAINT OF
- ANNATES " " 57
-
- 1534. ACT FORBIDDING PAPAL
- DISPENSATIONS AND THE PAYMENT
- OF PETER'S PENCE " " 58
-
- 1534. FIRST ACT OF SUCCESSION " " 58
-
- 1534. THE SUPREMACY ACT " " 60
-
- 1534. LETTERS OF HENRY VIII.
- TO ANNE BOLEYN _Lettres a Anne Boleyn_ 61
-
- 1534. THE SWEATING SICKNESS " " 62
-
- 1536. QUEEN ANN BOLEYN TO KING HENRY, _Burnet's "History of
- FROM THE TOWER the Reformation"_ 62
-
- 1536. ACT FOR DISSOLUTION OF
- THE LESSER MONASTERIES _Statutes of the Realm_ 64
-
- 1536. SUPPRESSION OF THE _Burnet's "Collection
- MONASTERY OF TEWKESBURY of Records"_ 66
-
- 1537. THE INSURRECTION IN
- LINCOLNSHIRE _Hall_ 70
-
- 1538. INJUNCTIONS TO THE CLERGY _Burnet's "Collection
- MADE BY CROMWELL of Records"_ 75
-
- 1539. ACT FOR THE DISSOLUTION OF
- THE GREATER MONASTERIES _Statutes of the Realm_ 79
-
- 1539. THE SIX ARTICLES ACT " " 80
-
- 1539. HENRY VIII. AND SPORT _Hall and Holinshed_ 82
-
- 1540. THE ATTAINDER OF THOMAS _Burnet's "Collection
- CROMWELL of Records"_ 87
-
- 1544. HERTFORD'S ORDERS FOR THE
- NAVY AND ARMY _Hamilton Papers_ 91
-
- 1544. HERTFORD AND OTHERS
- TO HENRY VIII. " " 94
-
- 1545. ATTEMPTED INVASION OF
- ENGLAND BY THE FRENCH _Holinshed_ 102
-
- 1545. THE CAPTURE OF THE BARQUE AGER _Hall_ 105
-
- 1546. SPEECH MADE BY KING HENRY VIII.
- AT THE OPENING OF PARLIAMENT _Hall_ 106
-
- 1549. SERMON ON "THE PLOUGHERS" _Latimer_ 110
-
- THE RULES OF JUSTING _Lord Tiptolfe_ 114
-
- PREFACE TO COLET'S "LATIN
- GRAMMAR" _Knight's "Life of Colet"_ 117
-
-
-
-
- THE REFORMATION AND
- THE RENAISSANCE
- (1485-1547)
-
-
-
-
-DEVICE FOR THE CORONATION OF KING HENRY VII. (1485).
-
-+Source.+--_Rutland Papers_, p. 12. Published by the Camden Society,
-1842.
-
-
-This done, the Cardinal, as Archbishop of Canterbury, shewing the King
-to the people at the iiij parties of the said pulpit, shall say in
-this wise; "Sirs, I here present Henry, true and rightful, and
-undoubted inheritor of the laws of God and man, to the crown and royal
-dignity of England, with all things thereunto annexed and
-appertaining, elect, chosen, and required by all three estates of the
-same land, to take upon him the said crown, and royal dignity,
-whereupon ye shall understand that this day is prefixed and appointed
-by all the peers of this land for the consecration, enunciation, and
-coronation." Whereunto the people shall say, with a great voice, "Yea.
-Yea. Yea. So be it King Henry! King Henry!"
-
-Soon upon the said Cardinal, as Archbishop of Canterbury, being
-reuysshed[1] as appertaineth for celebration of mass and also the
-foresaid Bishops of Exeter and Ely on both sides as above, with other
-Bishops, and with the Abbot of Westminster, who oweth always to be
-near the King for his information in such things as concerneth the
-solemnity of the coronation, the King shall be brought honourably from
-his said seat unto the high altar, where the Chancellor of England
-shall set down the chalice, and likewise the Bishop of Chichester his
-patten.
-
-The Queen following the King thither, going afore her the lords as
-above bearing her crown, sceptre, and rod, and the abovesaid Bishops
-sustaining her, for her shall be ordained, on the left side of the
-high altar, a folding stool wherein she shall sit while the King shall
-be required of the keeping of the customs and laws of England, and
-that done, whilst "Veni Creator Spiritus" is a singing, and all the
-while the King is anointed, she shall kneel praying for the King and
-her self.
-
-At the which altar the King ought to offer a pall, and a pound of
-gold, xxiiij-li[2] in coin, which shall be delivered unto him by the
-Chamberlain; and, forthwith, the pavement afore the high altar
-worshipfully arrayed with carpets and cushions, the King shall then
-lie down grovelling, whilst the said Cardinal as Archbishop, say upon
-him, "Deus humilium," which done, the said Cardinal may, at his
-pleasure, command some short sermon to be said, during the which the
-said Cardinal shall sit before the altar, his back towards the same,
-as is the custom, and the King shall sit opposite him, face to face,
-in a chair prepared as to his high estate accordeth.
-
-The sermon ended, if any such be, the Cardinal and the King that is to
-be crowned so sitting as is above said, the same Cardinal with an open
-and distinct voice shall ask the King under this form: "Will ye grant
-and keep, to the people of England, the laws and customs to them as of
-old rightful and devout kings granted, and the same ratify and confirm
-by your oath and especially the laws, customs, and liberties to be
-granted to the clergy and people by your noble predecessor and
-glorious King Saint Edward?" The King shall answer, "I grant and
-promise." And when the King, before all the people, hath promised
-truly to grant and keep all the promises, then shall the said Cardinal
-open unto him the special articles whereunto the King shall be sworn,
-the same Cardinal saying as followeth: "Ye shall keep, after your
-strength and power, to the Church of God, to the clergie, and the
-people, whole peace, and goodly concord." The King shall answer, "I
-shall keep."
-
-"Ye shall make to be done after your strength and power, equal and
-rightful justice in all your dooms and judgements, and discretion with
-mercy and truth." The King shall answer, "I shall do." "Do ye grant
-the rightful laws and customs to be holden, and promise ye, after your
-strength and power, such laws as to the worship of God shall be chosen
-by your people by you to be strengthened and defended?" The King shall
-answer, "I grant and promise."
-
-[Footnote 1: = revested.]
-
-[Footnote 2: = L24 in coin.]
-
-
-
-
-YEOMEN OF THE GUARD FIRST BROUGHT IN. THE SWEATING SICKNESS (1486).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed's _Chronicle_, Vol. III., p. 482. (London, 1808.)
-
-
-Shortly after for the better preservation of his royal person, he
-constituted and ordained a certain number as well of archers, as of
-divers other persons, hardy, strong, and active to give daily
-attendance on his person, whom he named yeomen of his guard, which
-precedent men thought that he learned of the French king when he was
-in France. For it is not remembered that any king of England before
-that day used any such furniture of daily soldiers. In this same year
-a kind of sickness invaded suddenly the people of this land, passing
-through the same from the one end to the other. It began about the one
-and twentieth of September, and continued until the latter end of
-October, being so sharp and deadly that the like was never heard of to
-any man's remembrance before that time.
-
-For suddenly a deadly burning sweat so assailed their bodies and
-distempered their blood with a most ardent heat, that scarce one
-amongst an hundred that sickened did escape with life; for all in
-manner as soon as the sweat took them, or within a short time after,
-yielded the ghost. Beside the great number which deceased within the
-city of London, two mayors successively died within eight days and six
-aldermen. At length, by the diligent observation of those that escaped
-(which marking what things had done them good, and holpen to their
-deliverance, used the like again), when they fell into the same
-disease the second or third time as to divers it chanced, a remedy was
-found for that mortal malady which was this. If a man on the day time
-were taken with the sweat, then should he straight lie down with all
-his clothes and garments and continue in the sweat four and twenty
-hours after so moderate a sort as might be. If in night he chanced to
-be taken, then should he not rise out of his bed for the space of four
-and twenty hours, so casting the clothes that he might in no wise
-provoke the sweat, but lie so temperately that the water might distil
-out softly of its own accord. And to abstain from all meat if he might
-so long suffer hunger and to take no more drink neither hot nor cold
-than would moderately quench and assuage his thirsty appetite. Thus
-with lukewarm drink, temperate heat and measurable clothes many
-escaped: few which used this order (after it was found out) died of
-that sweat. Marry! one point diligently above all other in this cure
-is to be observed, that he never did put his hand or feet out of the
-bed to refresh or cool himself, which to do is no less jeopardy than
-short and present death. Thus this disease coming in the first year of
-King Henry's reign, was judged (of some) to be a token and sign of a
-troublesome reign of the same king, as the proof partly afterwards
-shewed itself.
-
-
-
-
-LAMBERT SIMNEL (1486).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed's _Chronicle_, Vol. III., p. 484. (London, 1808.)
-
-
-Amongst other such monsters and limbs of the devil, there was one Sir
-Richard Simond, priest, a man of base birth and yet well learned, even
-from his youth. He had a scholar called Lambert Simnel, one of a
-gentle nature and pregnant wit, to be the organ and chief instrument
-by the which he might convey and bring to pass his mischievous
-attempt. The devil, chief master of such practices, put in the
-venomous brain of this disloyal and traitorous priest to devise how he
-might make his scholar the aforesaid Lambert to be reputed as right
-inheritor to the crown of this realm. Namely for that the fame went
-that King Edward's children were not dead, but fled secretly into some
-strange place, and there to be living: and that Edward, Earl of
-Warwick, son and heir to the Duke of Clarence, either was, or shortly
-should be put to death.
-
-These rumours though they seemed not to be grounded of any likehood to
-the wise sort of men, yet encouraged this peevish priest to think the
-time come that his scholar Lambert might take upon him the person and
-name of one of King Edward's children. And thereupon at Oxford, where
-their abiding was, the said priest instructed his pupil both with
-princely behaviour, civil manners and good literature, declaring to
-him of what lineage he should affirm himself to be descended, and
-omitted nothing that might serve for his purpose. Soon after, the
-rumour was blown abroad, that the Earl of Warwick was broken out of
-prison. And when the priest, Sir Richard Simond heard of this, he
-straight intended now by that occasion to bring his invented purpose
-to pass, and changing the child's name of baptism, called him Edward,
-after the name of the young Earl of Warwick, the which were both of
-like years and of like stature.
-
-Then he with his scholar sailed into Ireland, where he so set forth
-the matter unto the nobility of that country, that not only the Lord
-Thomas Gerardine, Chancellor of that land, deceived through his crafty
-tale, received the counterfeit earl into his castle with all honour
-and reverence, but also many other noble men determined to aid him
-(with all their powers) as one descended of the blood royal and
-lineage come of the house of York, which the Irish people evermore
-highly favoured, honoured and loved above all other. By this mean
-every man throughout all Ireland was willing and ready to take his
-part and submit themselves to him; already reputing and calling him of
-all hands king. So that now they of this sect (by the advice of the
-priest) sent into England certain privy messengers to get friends here.
-
-Also they sent into Flanders to the Lady Margaret, sister to King
-Edward and late wife to Charles, Duke of Burgoyne, to purchase, aid
-and help at her hands. This Lady Margaret bore no small rule in the
-low countries, and in very deed sore grudged in her heart that the
-King Henry (being descended of the house of Lancaster) should reign
-and govern of the realm of England, and therefore though she well
-understood that this was but a coloured matter, yet to work her
-malicious intention against King Henry, she was glad to have so fit an
-occasion, and therefore promised the messengers all the aid that she
-should be able to make in furtherance of the quarrel, and also to
-procure all the friends she could in other places to be aiders and
-partakers of the same conspiracy.
-
-King Henry, advertised of all these doings, was greatly vexed
-therewith, and therefore to have good advice in the matter he called
-together his council at the Charterhouse beside his manor of Richmond,
-and there consulted with them, by which means lest this begun
-conspiracy might be appeased and disappointed without more
-disturbance. It was therefore determined that a general pardon should
-be published to all offenders that were content to receive the same.
-This pardon was so freely granted that no offence was excepted, no not
-so much as high treason committed against the King's royal person. It
-was further agreed in the same council for the time then present that
-the Earl of Warwick should personally be shewed abroad in the city and
-other public places; whereby the untrue report falsely spread abroad
-that he should be in Ireland, might be among the community proved and
-known for a vain imagined lie.
-
-When all things in this counsel were sagely concluded and agreed to
-the King's mind, he returned to London, giving in commandment that the
-next Sunday ensuing, Edward, the young Earl of Warwick, should be
-brought from the Tower through the most public streets in all London,
-to the cathedral church of St. Paul. Where he went openly in
-procession, that every man might see him, having communication with
-many noble men and with them especially that were suspected to be
-partakers of the late begun conspiracy, that they might perceive how
-the Irishmen upon a vain shadow moved war against the King and his
-realm. But this medicine little availed evil disposed persons. For the
-Earl of Lincoln, son to John de la Poole, Duke of Suffolk, and
-Elizabeth, sister to King Edward the Fourth thought it not meet to
-neglect and omit so ready an occasion of new trouble.
-
-Wherefore they determined to uphold the enterprise of the Irishmen, so
-that consulting with Sir Thomas Broughton, and certain other of his
-most trusty friends, he proposed to sail into Flanders to his aunt,
-the Lady Margaret, Duchess of Burgoyne, trusting by her help to make a
-puissant army and to join with the companions of the new raised
-sedition. Therefore after the dissolution of the parliament which was
-then holden, he fled secretly into Flanders unto the said Lady
-Margaret, where Francis, Lord Lovell, landed certain days before.
-Here, after long consultation as how to proceed in their business, it
-was agreed, that the Earl of Lincoln and the Lord Lovell should go
-into Ireland, and there attend upon the Duchess her counterfeit
-nephew, and to honour him as a king with the power of the Irishmen to
-bring him into England.
-
-Now they concluded, that if their doings had success, then the
-aforesaid Lambert (misnamed the Earl of Warwick) should by consent of
-the council be deposed, and Edward the true Earl of Warwick delivered
-out of prison and anointed king. King Henry supposing that no man
-would have been so mad as to have attempted any further enterprise in
-the name of the new found and counterfeit earl, he only studied how to
-subdue the seditious conspiracy of the Irishmen. But learning that the
-Earl of Lincoln was fled into Flanders, he was somewhat moved
-therewith, and caused soldiers to be put in readiness out of every
-part of his realm, and to bring them into one place assigned, that
-when his adversaries should appear, he might suddenly set upon them,
-vanquish and overcome them.
-
-Thus disposing things for his surety, he went towards St. Edmund's
-Bury, and being certified that the Marquis of Dorset was coming
-towards his majesty to excuse himself of things he was suspected to
-have done when he was in France, he sent the Earl of Oxford to arrest
-the said Marquis by the way, and to convey him to the Tower of London
-there to remain till his truth might be tried. From thence the King
-went forth to Norwich and tarrying there Christmas Day, he departed
-after to Walsingham, where he offered to the image of Our Lady, and
-then by Cambridge he shortly returned to London. In which mean time,
-the Earl of Lincoln had gotten together by the aid of the Lady
-Margaret about two thousand Almains, with one Martin Sward, a valiant
-and noble captain to lead them.
-
-With this power the Earl of Lincoln sailed into Ireland and at the
-city of Dublin caused young Lambert to be proclaimed and named King of
-England, after the most solemn fashion, as though he were the very
-heir of the blood royal lineally born and descended. And so with a
-great multitude of beggarly Irishmen almost all naked and unarmed,
-saving skins and mantles, of whom the Lord Thomas Gerardine was
-captain and conductor, they sailed into England with this new found
-king and landed for a purpose at the pile of Fowdreie, within a little
-of Lancaster, trusting there to find aid by the means of Sir Thomas
-Broughton, one of the chief companions of the conspiracy. The King had
-knowledge of the enemies' intent before their arrival, and therefore
-having assembled a great army (over which the Duke of Bedford and the
-Earl of Oxenford were chief captains), he went to Coventry where he
-was advertised that the Earl of Lincoln was landed at Lancaster with
-his new king. Here he took advice of his counsellors what was best to
-be done, whether to set on the enemies without further delay or to
-protract time a little. But at length it was thought best to delay no
-time but to give them battle before they should increase their power,
-and thereupon he removed to Nottingham, and there by a little wood
-called Bowres he pitched his field.
-
-Shortly after this came to him the Lord George Talbot, Earl of
-Shrewsbury, the Lord Strange, Sir John Cheyne, right valiant captains,
-with many other noble and expert men of war, namely of the counties
-near adjoining, so that the King's army was wonderfully increased. In
-this space the Earl of Lincoln being entered into Yorkshire passed
-softly on his journey without spoiling or hurting any man, trusting
-thereby to have some company of people resort unto him. But after he
-perceived few or none to follow him, and that it was too late now to
-return back, he determined to try the matter by dint of sword, and
-thereupon direct his way from York to Newark-upon-Trent.
-
-
-
-
-BENEVOLENCES (1490).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, Vol. III., p. 496.
-
-
-King Henry, sorely troubled in his mind therewith, determining no more
-with peaceable message, but with open war to determine all
-controversies betwixt him and the French King, called his high court
-of Parliament and there declared the cause why he was justly provoked
-to make war against the Frenchmen, and thereupon desired them of their
-benevolent aid of men and money towards the maintenance thereof. The
-cause was so just that every man allowed it and to the setting forth
-of the war taken in hand for so necessary an occasion, every man
-promised his helping hand. The king commended them for their true and
-faithful hearts. And to the intent that he might spare the poorer sort
-of the commons (whom he ever desired to keep in favour) he thought
-good first to exact money of the richest sort by way of a benevolence.
-
-Which kind of levying money was first devised by King Edward the
-Fourth, as it appeareth before in his history. King Henry, following
-the like example, published abroad that by their open gifts he would
-measure and search their benevolent hearts and good minds towards him,
-and he that gave little to be esteemed according to his gift. By this
-it appeareth that whatsoever is practised for the prince's profit and
-brought to a precedent by matter of record, may be turned to the great
-prejudice of the people, if rulers in authority will so adjudge and
-determine it. But by this means King Henry got innumerable great sums
-of money, with some grudge of the people, for the extremity shewed by
-the commissioners in divers places.
-
-
-
-
-THE REBELLION OF THE CORNISHMEN (1496).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, Vol. III, p. 514.
-
-
-These unruly people, the Cornishmen, inhabiting in a barren country
-and unfruitful, at the first sore repined that they should be so
-grievously taxed and burdened by the king's council as the only cause
-of such polling and pilling, and so being in their rage, menaced the
-chief authors with death and present destruction. And thus being in a
-rave, two persons of the affinity, the one called Thomas Flammock, a
-gentleman, learned in the laws of the realm, and the other Michael
-Joseph, a smith, men of stout stomachs and high courage, took upon
-them to be captains of this seditious company. They laid the fault and
-cause of this exaction unto John Morton, Archbishop of Canterbury, and
-to Sir Reginald Bray, because they were chief of the King's council.
-Such reward have they commonly that be in great authority with kings
-and princes. The captains Flammock and Joseph exhorted the common
-people to put on harness and not be afeared to follow them in that
-quarrel, promising not to hurt any creature, but only to see them
-punished that procured such exactions to be laid on the people,
-without any reasonable cause, as under the colour of a little trouble
-with the Scots, which (since they were withdrawn home) they took to be
-well quieted and appeased. So these captains, bent on mischief (were
-their outward pretence never so finely coloured), yet persuaded a
-great number of people to assemble together and condescend to do as
-their captains would agree and appoint. Then these captains praising
-much the hardiness of the people, when all things were ready for their
-important journey, set forth with their army and came to Taunton,
-where they slew the Provost of Perin, which was one of the
-commissioners of the subsidy, and from thence came to Wells, so
-intending to go to London, where the King then sojourned.
-
-When the King was advertised of these doings, he was somewhat
-astonished, and not without cause, being thus troubled with the war
-against the Scots and this civil commotion of his subjects at one
-instant. But first meaning to subdue his rebellious subjects and after
-to proceed against the Scots, as occasion should serve, he revoked the
-Lord Daubeney which (as you have heard) was going against the Scots,
-and increased his army with many chosen and picked warriors. Also
-mistrusting that the Scots might now (having such opportunity) invade
-the realm again, he appointed the Lord Thomas Howard, Earl of Surrey
-(which after the death of the Lord Dinham was made high treasurer of
-England) to gather a band of men in the county Palatine of Durham,
-that they, with the aid of the inhabitants adjoining and the
-borderers, might keep back the Scots if they chanced to make any
-invasion. The nobles of the realm, hearing of the rebellion of the
-Cornishmen, came to London every man with as many men of war as they
-could put in a readiness to aid the King if need should be. In the
-which number were the Earl of Essex and the Lord Montjoy, with divers
-other.
-
-In the meantime, James Twitchet, Lord Audely being confederate with
-the rebels of Cornwall, joined with them, being come to Wells, and
-took upon him as their chief captain to lead them against the natural
-lord and king. From Wells they went to Salisbury, and from thence to
-Winchester, and so to Kent where they hoped to have had great aid, but
-they were deceived in that their expectation. For the Earl of Kent,
-George, Lord of Abergavenny, John Brook, Lord Cobham, Sir Edward
-Poinings, Sir Richard Gilford, Sir Thomas Bourchier, John Peche,
-William Scot, and a great number of people, were not only prest and
-ready to defend the country to keep the people in due obedience, but
-bent to fight with such as would lift up sword or other weapon against
-their sovereign lord, insomuch that the Kentishmen would not once come
-near the Cornishmen to aid or assist them in any manner or wise. Which
-thing marvellously dismayed the hearts of the Cornishmen when they saw
-themselves thus deceived of the succours which they most trusted upon,
-so that many of them (fearing the evil chance that might happen) fled
-in the night from their company and left them, in hope so to save
-themselves. The captains of the rebels, perceiving they could have no
-help of the Kentishmen, putting their only hope in their own
-puissance, brought their people to Blackheath, a four miles distant
-from London, and there in a plain on the top of an hill they ordered
-their battles either ready to fight with the King if he would assail
-them, or else assault the city of London; for they thought the King
-durst not have encountered with them in battle. But they were
-deceived, for the King, although he had power enough about to have
-fought with them before their coming so near to the city, yet he
-thought it best to suffer them to come forward, till he had them far
-off from their native country, and then to set upon them being
-destitute of aid of some place of advantage.
-
-The city was in a great fear at the first knowledge given how the
-rebels were so near encamped to the city, every man getting himself to
-harness and placing themselves some at the gates some on the walls, so
-that no part was undefended. But the King delivered the city of that
-fear; for after that he perceived how the Cornishmen were all day
-ready to fight and that on the hill, he sent straight to John, Earl of
-Oxenford, Henry Bourchier, Earl of Essex, Edmund de la Poole, Earl of
-Suffolk, Sir Rise ap Thomas, and Sir Humphrey Stanley, noble warriors
-with a great company of archers and horsemen, to environ the hill on
-the right side, and on the left, to the intent that all byways being
-stopped and foreclosed, all hope of flight should be taken from them.
-And incontinently he himself, being as well encouraged with manly
-stomachs as furnished with a populous army and plenty of artillery,
-set forward out of the city, and encamped himself in Saint George's
-field, where he on the Friday at night then lodged.
-
-On the Saturday in the morning, he sent the Lord Daubeney with a great
-company to set on them early in the morning, which first got the
-bridge at Dertford Strand, which was manfully defended by certain
-archers of the rebels, whose arrows (as is reported) were in length a
-full cloth yard. While the earls set on them on every side, the Lord
-Daubeney came into the field with his company, and without long
-fighting the Cornishmen were overcome; and first they took the Lord
-Daubeney prisoner, but whether it were for fear or for hope of favour,
-they let him go at liberty without hurt or detriment. There were slain
-of the rebels which fought and resisted, above two thousand men (as
-Edward Hall noteth), and taken prisoners an infinite number, and
-amongst them the blacksmith and other the chief captains, which were
-shortly after put to death. When this battle was ended, the King
-wanted of all his numbers but three hundred which were slain at that
-conflict.
-
-Some affirm, that the King appointed to have fought with them not till
-the Monday and preventing the time set on them on the Saturday before,
-taking them unprovided and in no array of battle, and so by that
-policy obtained the field and victory. The prisoners as well as
-captains and others were pardoned, saving the chief captains and first
-beginners, to whom he shewed no mercy at all. The Lord Audley was
-drawn from Newgate to Tower Hill in a coat of his own arms painted
-upon paper reversed and all torn, and there was beheaded the four and
-twentieth of June. Thomas Flammock and Michael Joseph were hanged,
-drawn and quartered after the manner of traitors, and their heads and
-quarters were pitched upon stakes and set up in London and in other
-places, although at the first the King meant to have sent them into
-Cornwall to have been set up there for a terror to all others. But
-hearing that the Cornishmen at home were ready to begin a new
-conspiracy, lest he should the more irritate and provoke them by that
-displeasant sight, he changed his purpose, for doubt to wrap himself
-in more trouble than needed.
-
-
-
-
-PERKIN WARBECK'S CONFESSION (1499).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, Vol. III., p. 522.
-
-
-The confession of Perkin as it was written with his own hand, which he
-read openly upon a scaffold by the Standard in Cheape.
-
-"It is first to be known that I was born in the town of Turney in
-Flanders, and my father's name is John Osbeck, which said John Osbeck
-was controller of the said town of Turney, and my mother's name is
-Katherine de Faro. And one of my grandsires upon my father's side was
-named Diricke Osbecke, which died. After whose death my grandmother
-was married unto Peter Flamin, that was receiver of the forenamed town
-of Turney and dean of the boatmen that row upon the water or river
-called the Schelt. And my grandsire upon my mother's side was Peter de
-Faro, which had in his keeping the keys of the gate of St. John's
-within the same town of Turney. Also I had an uncle called Master John
-Stalin, dwelling in the parish of St. Pias within the same town which
-had married my father's sister whose name was Johne Jane with whom I
-dwelt a certain season. And after, I was led by my mother to Antwerp
-for to learne Flemish in a house of a cousin of mine, an officer of
-the said town called John Stienbeck, with whom I was the space of half
-a year. And after that I returned again to Turney by reason of wars
-that were in Flanders. And within a year following I was sent with a
-merchant of the said town of Turney named Berlo, to the mart of
-Antwerp where I fell sick, which sickness continued upon me five
-months. And then the said Berlo sent me to board in a skinner's house
-that dwelled beside the house of the English nation. And by him I was
-from thence carried to Barrow mart and I lodged at the 'Sign of the
-Old Man' where I abode for the space of two months.
-
-"After this the said Berlo sent me with a merchant of Middlesborough
-to service for to learn the language, whose name was John Strew, with
-whom I dwelt from Christmas to Easter, and then I went into Portugal
-in company of Sir Edward Brampton's wife in a ship which was called
-the queen's ship. And when I was come thither, then was I put in
-service to a knight that dwelled in Lushborne, which was called Peter
-Vacz de Cogna, with whom I dwelt an whole year, which said knight had
-but one eye. And because I desired to see other countries I took
-licence of him and then I put myself in service with a Breton called
-Pregent Meno, who brought me with him into Ireland. Now when we were
-there arrived in the town of Cork, they of the town (because I was
-arrayed with some cloths of silk of my said master's) came unto me and
-threatened upon me that I should be the Duke of Clarence's son that
-was before time at Dublin.
-
-"But forasmuch as I denied it, there was brought unto me the holy
-evangelists and the cross, by the mayor of the town which was called
-John Llellewyn, and there in the presence of him and others I took
-mine oath (as the truth was) that I was not the foresaid duke's son,
-nor none of his blood. And after this came unto me an English man
-whose name was Stephen Poitron and one John Water, and said to me, in
-swearing great oaths, that they knew well that I was King Richard's
-bastard son, to whom I answered with like oaths that I was not. Then
-they advised me not to be afeared but that I should take it upon me
-boldly, and if I would do so they would aid and assist me with all
-their power against the King of England, and not only they, but they
-were well assured that the Earl of Desmond and Kildare should do the
-same.
-
-"For they forced not[3] what they took, so that they might be revenged
-on the King of England, and so against my will made me learn English
-and taught me what I should do and say. And after this they called me
-the Duke of York, second son to King Edward the fourth, because King
-Richard's bastard son was in the hands of the King of England. And
-upon this the said Water, Stephen Poitron, John Tiler, Hughbert Burgh
-with many others, as the aforesaid earls, entered into this false
-quarrel, and within short time others. The French King sent an
-ambassador into Ireland whose name was Loit Lucas and master Stephen
-Friham to advertise me to come into France. And thence I went into
-France and from thence into Flanders, and from Flanders into Ireland,
-and from Ireland into Scotland, and so into England."
-
-[Footnote 3: = cared not.]
-
-
-
-
-RECEPTION OF PRINCESS CATHARINE (1500).
-
-+Source.+--_Paston Letters_, Vol. III., Letter 943. March 20th, 1500 A.D.
-
-
- HENRY VII. TO SIR JOHN PASTON.
- _To our trusty and well beloved knight Sir John Paston._
- BY THE KING.
-
-"Trusty and well-beloved, we greet you well, letting you know that our
-dearest cousins, the King and Queen of Spain, have signified unto us
-by their sundry letters that the right excellent Princesse the Lady
-Catharine, their daughter, shall be transported from the parties of
-Spain aforesaid to this our Realm, about the month of May next coming,
-for the solemnization of matrimony between our dearest son the Prince
-and the said Princess. Wherefore we, considering that it is right
-fitting and necessary, as well for the honour of us as for the honour
-and praise of our said Realm, to have the said Princess honourably
-received at her arrival, have appointed you to be one among others to
-give attendance for the receiving of the said Princess; willing and
-desiring you to prepare yourself for that intent, and so to continue
-in readiness upon an hour's warning, till that by our other letters we
-shall advertise you of the day and time of her arrival, and where ye
-shall give your said attendance; and not to fail therein as ye tender
-our pleasure, the honour of yourself and this our foresaid Realm.
-
-"Given under our signet at our Manor of Richmond, the xxth day of
-March."
-
-
-
-
-CARDINAL MORTON'S FORK (1504).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, p. 532.
-
-
-The clergy was of two sorts, the one shewing themselves as they were
-wealthy, seemly and comely; the other pretending that which was not,
-poverty, bareness and scarcity, but both were of one mind, and devised
-all the ways they could to save their purses. The first being called
-alledged that they were daily at great charges and expenses in keeping
-of hospitalities, in maintaining themselves, their house and families,
-besides extraordinaries which daily did grow and increase upon them,
-and by that means they were but bare and poor, and prayed that they be
-borne with all and pardoned for that time. The other sort alledged
-that their livings were but small and slender and scarce able to
-maintain themselves with all which compelled them to go bare and to
-live a hard and poor life, and therefore (they having nothing) prayed
-that they might be excused. The bishop when he heard them at full and
-well considered thereof, very wittily and with a pretty dilemma
-answered them both, saying to the first: "It is true you are at great
-charges, are well beseen in your apparell, well mounted upon your fair
-palfreys and have your men waiting upon you in good order; your
-hospitality is good and your daily expenses are large, and you are for
-the same well reported amongst your neighbours; all which are plain
-demonstrations of your wealth and ability, otherwise you would not be
-at such voluntary charges. Now having store to spend in such order,
-there is no reason but that to your prince you should much more be
-well willing and ready to yield yourselves contributory and dutiful,
-and therefore you must pay." To the other sort he said: "Albeit your
-livings be not of the best, yet good, sufficient, and able to maintain
-you in better estate than you do employ it, but it appeareth that you
-are frugual and thrifty men, and what others do voluntarily spend in
-apparell, house and family, you warily do keep and have it lie by you;
-and therefore it is good reason that of your store you should spare
-with a good will and contribute to your prince, wherefore be
-contented, for you shall pay." And so by this pretty dilemma he
-reduced them to yield a good payment to the King.
-
-
-
-
-THE MEETING OF HENRY VII. AND THE KING OF CASTILE (1506).
-
-WILLIAM MAKEFYN TO DARCY AND ALINGTON.
-
-+Source.+--_Paston Letters_, Vol. III., Letter 953. Jan. 17th, 1506.
-
-
- _To the right worshipful Master Roger Darcy and Master Giles
- Alington, being in the George in Lombard street, be this delivered in
- haste._
-
-Right worshipful masters, I recommend me unto you, certifying you that
-the King's Grace and the King of Castile met this day at three of the
-Clock, upon Cleworth Green, 2 miles out of Windsor, and that the King
-received him in the goodliest manner that ever I saw, and each of them
-embraced the other in arms.
-
-To shew you the King's apparell of England, thus it was: his horse of
-bay, trapped with neddlework; a gown of purple velvet, a chain with a
-George[4] of diamonds, and a hood of purple velvet, which he put not
-off at the meeting of the said King of Castile; his hat and his bonnet
-he doffed and the King of Castile likewise. And the King of Castile
-rode upon a sorrel hoby,[5] which the King gave unto him; his apparell
-was all black, a gown of black velvet, a black hood, a black hat, and
-his horse harness of black velvet....
-
-These be the Spears: Master Saint John upon a black horse, with
-harness of Cloth of Gold, with tassels of plunkett[6] and white, a
-coat of plunkett and white, the body of goldsmiths' work, the sleves
-full of spangles.
-
-John Carr and William Parr with coats alike, the horses gray, of Parr
-trapped with crimson velvet with tassells of gold and gilt bells.
-Carr's horse bay with an Almayn harness of silver, an inch broad of
-beaten silver, both the coats of goldsmiths' work on the bodies, the
-sleeves one stripe of silver, the other of gold.
-
-Edward Neville upon a gray horse trapped with black velvet full of
-small bells, his coat the one half of green velvet, the other of white
-cloth of gold; these to the rutters of the spurs, with other divers
-well appointed.
-
-Of the King of Castile's party, the Lord Chamberlain the chief, I
-cannot tell his name as yet; his apparell was sad, and so was all the
-residue of his company with cloaks of sad tawny black, guarded, some
-with velvet, some with sarsenet, not passing a dozen in number. It is
-said there is many behind which comes with the Queen of Castile, which
-shall come upon Tuesday.
-
-When the King rode forth to Windsor Castle, the King rode upon the
-right hand of the King of Castile, howbeit the King's Grace offered to
-take him upon the right hand, the which he refused. And at the
-lighting the King of Castile was off his horse a good space or our
-King was alight; and then the King's grace offered to take him by the
-arm, the which he would not, but took the King by the arm, and so went
-to the King of Castile's chamber, which is the richestly hanged that
-ever I saw: 7 chambers together hanged with cloth of Arras, wrought
-with gold as thick as could be; and as for three beds of estate, no
-king christened can shew such three.
-
-This is so far as I can shew you of this day, and when I can know
-more, ye shall have knowledge.
-
-From Windsor this Saturday, at five of the Clock,
-
- By your,
- WILLIAM MAKEFYN.
-
-[Footnote 4: = figure of St. George, _i.e._ part of the insignia of
-the Garter.]
-
-[Footnote 5: = horse.]
-
-[Footnote 6: = lead green.]
-
-
-
-
-SUPERSTITION (1509).
-
-+Source.+--Erasmus, _The Praise of Folly_, p. 90. 1887. Hamilton
-Adams, Glasgow.
-
-
-The next to be placed among the regiment of fools are such as make a
-trade of telling or inquiring after incredible stories of miracles and
-prodigies. Never doubting that a lie will choke them, they will muster
-up a thousand several strange relations of spirits, ghosts,
-apparitions, raising of the devil, and such like bugbears of
-superstition, which the farther they are from being probably true, the
-more greedily they are swallowed, and the more devoutly believed. And
-those diversities do not only bring an empty pleasure, and cheap
-divertisement, but they are a good trade, and procure a comfortable
-income to such priests and friars as by this craft get their gain.
-
-To these again are related such others as attribute strange virtues to
-the shrines and images of saints and martyrs, and so would make their
-credulous proselytes believe, that if they pay their devotion to St.
-Christopher in the morning, they shall be guarded and secured the day
-following from all dangers and misfortunes. If soldiers when they
-first take arms, shall come and mumble over such a set prayer before
-the picture of St. Barbara, they shall return safe from all
-engagements. Or if any pray to Erasmus on such particular holidays,
-with the ceremony of wax candles, and other poperies, he shall in a
-short time be rewarded with a plentiful increase of wealth and riches.
-The Christians have now their gigantic St. George, as well as the
-Pagans have their Hercules: they paint the saint on horseback, and
-drawing the horse in splendid trappings, very gloriously accoutred,
-they scarce refrain in a literal sense from worshipping the very beast.
-
-What shall I say of such as cry up and maintain the cheat of pardons
-and indulgences? That by these compute the time of each soul's
-residence in purgatory, and assign them a longer and shorter
-continuance, according as they purchase more or fewer of these paltry
-pardons and saleable exemptions? Or what can be said bad enough of
-others, who pretend that by the force of such magical charms, or by
-the fumbling over their beads in the rehearsal of such and such
-petitions, which some religious impostors invented, either for
-diversion or what is more likely for advantage; they shall procure
-riches, honour, pleasure, health, long life, and lusty old age, nay,
-after death a sitting at the right hand of our Saviour in His kingdom.
-
-Though as to this last part of their happiness, they care not how long
-it be deferred, having scarce any appetite towards a tasting the joys
-of heaven; till they are surfeited, glutted with, and can no longer
-relish their enjoyments on earth. By this easy way of purchasing
-pardons, any notorious highwayman, any plundering soldier, or any
-bribe-taking judge, shall disburse some part of their unjust gains,
-and so think all their grossest impieties sufficiently atoned for. So
-many perjuries, lusts, drunkeness, quarrels, bloodsheds, cheats,
-treacheries, and all sorts of debaucheries, shall all be as it were,
-struck a bargain for, and such a contract made, as if they had paid
-off all arrears and might now begin upon a new score.
-
-And what can be more ridiculous, than for some others to be confident
-of going to heaven by repeating daily those seven verses out of the
-Psalms which the devil taught St. Bernard, thinking thereby to have
-put a trick on him, but that he was overreached in his cunning.
-
-And of all the prayers and intercessions that are made to these
-respective saints the substance of them is no more than downright
-folly. Among all the trophies that for tokens of gratitude are hung
-upon the walls and ceilings of churches, you shall find no relics
-presented as a memorandum of any that were ever cured of folly or had
-been made one dram the wiser.
-
-Almost all Christians being wretchedly enslaved to blindness and
-ignorance, which the priests are so far from preventing or removing,
-that they blacken the darkness, and promote delusion. Wisely forseeing
-that the people, like cows, which never give down their milk so well
-as when they are gently stroked, would part with less if they knew
-more, their bounty only proceeding from a mistake of Charity.
-
-Now if any wise man should stand up, and unseasonably speak the truth,
-telling everyone that a pious life is the only way of securing a happy
-death; that the best title to a pardon of our sins is purchased by a
-hearty abhorrence of our guilt, and sincere resolutions of amendment;
-that the best devotion that can be paid to any saints is to imitate
-them in their exemplary life. If he should proceed thus to inform them
-of their several mistakes, there would be quite another estimate put
-upon tears, watchings, masses, fastings, and other severities, which
-before were so much prized, as persons will now be vexed to lose that
-satisfaction formerly they found in them.
-
-
-
-
-THE MAKING OF BEGGARS AND THIEVES (1516).
-
-+Source.+--Sir Thomas More, _The First Booke of Utopia_, 1516.
-Cambridge Press, p. 29, l. 18.
-
-
-But let us consider those things that chance daily before our eyes.
-First, there is a great number of gentlemen, which cannot be content
-to live idle by themselves, like drones, of that which others have
-laboured for; their tenants I mean, whom they poll and shave to the
-quick, by raising their rents (for this only point of frugality do
-they use, men else through their lavish and prodigal spending likely
-to bring them to very beggary). These gentlemen, I say, do not only
-live in idleness themselves, but also carry about with them at their
-tails a great flock or train of idle and loitering serving men, which
-never learned any craft whereby to get their livings. These men as
-soon as their master is dead, or be sick themselves, be incontinent
-thrust out of doors. For gentlemen had rather keep idle persons, than
-sick men, and many times the dead man's heir is not able to maintain
-so great a house, and keep so many serving men as his father did. Then
-in the mean season they that be thus destitute of service, either
-starve for hunger, or manfully play the thieves. For what would you
-have them to do? When they have wandered abroad so long, until they
-have worn threadbare their apparell, and also appaired their health,
-these gentlemen, because of their pale and sickly faces, and patched
-coats, will not take them into service. And husbandmen dare not set
-them a work, knowing well enough that he is nothing meet to do true
-and faithful service to a poor man with a spade and a mattock for
-small wages and hard fare, which being daintily and tenderly pampered
-up in idleness and pleasure, was wont with a sword and buckler by his
-side to strut through the street with a bragging look, and to think
-himself too good to be any man's mate. Nay, by Saint Mary, Sir (quod
-the lawyer), not so. For this kind of men must we make most of. For in
-them as men of stouter stomachs, bolder spirits, and manlier courages
-than handycraftsmen and plowmen be, doth consist the whole power,
-strength, and puisance of our army, when we must fight in battle.
-Forsooth, Sir, as well you might say (quod I) that for war's sake you
-must cherish thieves. For surely you shall never lack thieves, while
-you have them. No, nor thieves be not the most false and faint-hearted
-soldiers, nor soldiers be not the cowardliest thieves: so well these
-two crafts agree together. But this fault, though it be much used
-among you, yet is it not peculiar to you only, but common also to most
-nations. Yet France, besides this, is troubled and infected with a
-much sorer plague. The whole realm is filled and besieged with hired
-soldiers in peace time (if that be peace) which be brought in under
-the same colour and pretence, that hath persuaded you to keep these
-idle serving men. For these wise fools and very archdolts thought the
-wealth of the whole country herein to consist, if there were ever in a
-readiness a strong and sure garrison, specially of old practised
-soldiers, for they put no trust at all in men unexercised. And
-therefore they must be forced to seek for war, to the end they may
-ever have practised soldiers and cunning manslayers, lest that (as it
-is prettily said of Sallust) their hands through idleness or lack of
-exercise should wax dull; but how pernicious and pestilent a thing it
-is to maintain such beasts, the Frenchmen by their own harms have
-learnt. For not only the kingdom but also their fields and cities by
-divers occasions have been overrunned and destroyed by their own
-armies beforehand had in a readiness. Now how unnecessary a thing this
-is, hereby it may appear that the French soldiers, which from their
-youth have been practised and inured in feates of arms, do not crack
-nor advance themselves to have very often got the upper hand and
-mastery of your new made and unpractised soldiers. But in this point I
-will not use many words, lest perchance I may seem to flatter you.
-
-Yet this is not only the necessary cause of stealing. There is
-another, which, as I suppose, is proper and peculiar to you Englishmen
-alone. Your sheep that were wont to be so meek and tame, and so small
-eaters, now, as I hear say, be become so great devourers and so wild,
-that they eat up, and swallow down the very men themselves. They
-consume, destroy, and devour whole fields, houses and cities. For look
-in what parts of the realm doth grow the finest and therefore dearest
-wool, these noblemen and gentlemen, yea, and certain abbots, holy men
-no doubt, not contenting themselves with the yearly revenues and
-profits, that were wont to grow to their forefathers and predecessors
-of their lands, nor being content that they live in rest and pleasure
-nothing profiting, yea, much annoying the weal public, leave no ground
-for tillage, they enclose all into pastures; they throw down houses;
-they pluck down towns, and leave nothing standing, but only the church
-to be made a sheep house. And as though you lost no small quantity of
-ground by forests, chases, lands and parks, those good holy men turn
-all dwelling places and all glebeland into desolation and wilderness.
-Therefore that one covetous and insatiable cormorant may compass about
-and enclose many thousand acres of ground together within one pale or
-hedge, the husbandmen be thrust out of their own, or else either by
-coveyn[7] and fraud or by violent oppression they be put besides it,
-or by wrongs and injuries they be so wearied, that they be compelled
-to sell all; by one means therefore or by other, either by hooke or
-crooke they must needs depart away, poor, silly, wretched souls, men,
-women, husbands, wives, fatherless children, widows, woful mothers,
-with their young babes, and their whole household small in substance
-and much in number, as husbandry requireth many hands. Away they
-trudge, I say, out of their known and accustomed houses, finding no
-place to rest in. All their household stuff, which is very little
-worth, though it might well abide the sale; yet being suddenly thrust
-out, they be constrained to sell it for a thing of nought. And when
-they have wandered abroad till that be spent, what can they else do
-but steal, and then justly pardy[8]! be hanged, or else go about a
-begging. And yet then also they be cast in prison as vagabonds,
-because they go about and work not: whom no man will set at work,
-though they never so willingly profer themselves thereto. For one
-shepherd or herdman is enough to eat up that ground with cattle, to
-the occupying whereof about husbandry many hands were requisite. And
-this is also the cause why victuals be now in many places dearer. Yea,
-besides this the price of wool is so risen, that poor folks, which
-were wont to work it and make cloth thereof, be now able to buy none
-at all. And by this means very many be forced to forsake work, and to
-give themselves to idleness. For after that so much ground was
-inclosed for pasture, an infinite number of sheep died from the rot,
-such vengeance God took of their inordinate, unsatiable covetousness,
-sending among the sheep that pestiferous murrain, which much more
-justly should have fallen on the sheep masters own heads. And though
-the number of sheep increase never so fast, yet the price falleth not
-one mite, for there be so few sellers. For they be almost all come
-into a few rich mens hands, whom no need forceth to sell before they
-lust, they lust not before they may sell as dear as they lust. Now the
-same cause bringeth in like dearth of the other kinds of cattle, yea
-and that so much the more, because that after farms plucked down and
-husbandry decayed, there is no man that passeth for the breeding of
-young store. For these men bring not up the young of great cattle as
-they do lambs. But first they buy them abroad very cheap, and
-afterward, when they be fatted in their pastures, they sell them again
-exceeding dear. And therefore, I suppose, the whole incommodity hereof
-is not yet felt. For yet they make dearth only in those places where
-they sell. But when they shall fetch them away from thence where they
-be bred faster than they can be brought up; then shall there also be
-felt great dearth, store beginning then to fail, when the ware is
-bought. Thus the unreasonable covetousness of a few hath turned that
-thing to the utter undoing of your land, in the which thing the chief
-felicity of your realm did consist. For this great dearth of victuals
-causes men to keep as little houses and as small hospitality as they
-possible may, and to put away their servants: whither, I pray you, but
-a begging: or else (which these gentle bloods and stout stomachs will
-sooner set their minds unto) a stealing?
-
-[Footnote 7: = conspiracy.]
-
-[Footnote 8: = pardieu.]
-
-
-
-
-ENCLOSURES (1520)
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, p. 659.
-
-
-About this time the King having regard to the common wealth of his
-realm, considered how for the space of fifty years past and more, the
-nobles and gentlemen of England had been given to grazing of cattle,
-and keeping of sheep, and inventing a means how to increase their
-yearly revenues, to the great decaying and undoing of husbandmen of
-the land. For the said nobles and gentlemen, after the manner of the
-Numidians, more studying how to increase their pastures, than to
-maintain tillage, began to decay husband tacks[9] and tenements, and
-to convert arable land into pasture, furnishing the same with beasts
-and sheep, and also deer, so inclosing the field with hedges, ditches,
-and pales, which they held in their own hands, ingrossing[10] wools,
-and selling the same, and also sheep and beasts at their own prices,
-and as might stand most with their own private commodity.
-
-Hereof a threefold evil chanced to the commonwealth, as Polydore
-noteth. One, for that thereby the number of husbandmen was sore
-diminished, the which the prince useth chiefly in his service for the
-wars: another for that many towns and villages were left desolate and
-became ruinous: the third, for that both wool and cloth made thereof,
-and the flesh of all manner of beasts used to be eaten, was sold at
-far higher prices than was accustomed. These enormities at the first
-beginning being not redressed, grew in short space to such force and
-vigour by evil custom, that afterwards they gathered to such an united
-force, that hardly they could be remedied. Much like a disease, which
-in the beginning with little pain to the patient, and less labour to
-the surgeon may be cured; whereas the same by delay and negligence
-being suffered to putrify, becometh a desperate sore, and then are
-medicines nothing available, and not to be applied. The King therefore
-causing such good statutes as had been devised and established for
-reformation in this behalf to be reviewed and called upon, took order
-by directing forth his commissions unto the justices of peace, and
-other such magistrates, that presentment should be had and made of all
-such inclosures, and decay of husbandry, as had chanced within the
-space of fifty years before that present time. The justices and other
-magistrates, according to their commission, executed the same. And so
-commandment was given, that the decayed houses should be built up
-again, that the husbandmen should be placed eftsoones in the same, and
-that inclosed grounds should be laid open, and sore punishment
-appointed against them that disobeyed.
-
-These so good and wholesome ordinances shortly after were defeated by
-means of bribes given unto the cardinal: for when the nobles and
-gentlemen which had for their pleasures imparted the common fields,
-were loath to have the same again disparked, they redeemed their
-vexation with good sums of money; and so had licence to keep their
-parks and grounds inclosed as before.
-
-Thus the great expectation which men had conceived of a general
-redress, proved void: howbeit, some profit the husbandmen in some
-parts of the realm got by the moving of this matter, where inclosures
-were already laid open, ere Mistress Money could prevent them; and so
-they enjoyed their commons, which before had been taken from them.
-
-[Footnote 9: = rented farms.]
-
-[Footnote 10: = "cornering."]
-
-
-
-
-VISIT OF CHARLES V. TO ENGLAND (1522).
-
-+Source.+--_Rutland Papers_ (Camden Society), p. 79.
-
-
-_Remembrances as touching the Emperor's coming._
-
-First, the certainty to be known how many messes[11] of meat shall be
-ordered for the Emperor and his nobles at the King's charge; viii
-messes, x messes more or less?
-
-Item, how many of these messes shall be served as noblemen, and how
-many otherwise.
-
-Item, how many messes of meat shall be served for my Lord Cardinal and
-his chamber at the King's charge; v or vi more or less? Or whether his
-grace will be contented with a certainty of money by the day to his
-diet, and cause his own officers to make provision for the same, and
-to serve it.
-
-Item, whether the emperor and his nobles shall be served with his own
-diaper,[12] or else with the king's? THE EMPEROR AND HIS COURT WITH
-THE KING'S.[13]
-
-Item, whether the Emperor shall be served with his own silver vessels,
-or else with the king's? AT DOVER WITH THE KING'S.[13]
-
-Item, how many of the emperors carriages shall be at the king's
-charge, and whether any parcell of the King's carriage shall be at the
-King's charge or us?
-
-Item, whether any of the great officers, as my lord Steward, Master
-Treasurer, or Master Comptroller, shall give attendance upon the
-Emperor at Dover or not?
-
-Item, whether there shall be any banquetting, and in what places?
-AT[14] GREENWICH, LONDON, RICHMOND, AND WINDSOR.
-
-Item, placards to be had for the purveyors of the poultry and others.
-
-Item, letters to be directed to the Lords both spiritual and temporal,
-for fishing of their ponds for dainties.
-
-Item, a warrant to be had and directed to Master Micklow for ready
-money.
-
-Item, to know whether the King's grace will have any of his sergeant
-officers to attend upon the emperor, or yeomen for his mouth daily or
-not?
-
-Wines laid in divers places for the King and the Emperor between Dover
-and London.
-
- Dover ii days. {Gascon Wine. iii dolia[15]
- {Rhenish Wine. i vat[16] of ii alnes.[17]
-
- Canterbury iiii days. {Gascon Wine. iii dolia.
- {Rhenish Wine. ii vats of v alnes.
-
- Sittingbourne i day. {Gascon Wine. i dolium.
- {Rhenish Wine. demy vat.
-
- Rochester ii meals. {Gascon Wine. i dolium.
- {Rhenish Wine. demy vat.
-
- Gravesend and upon {Gascon Wine. i dolium.
- Thames ii meals. {Rhenish Wine. demy vat.
-
- Greenwich iiii meals. {Gascon Wine. } Plenty.
- {Rhenish Wine.}
-
- To Blackfriars in {Gascon Wine. viii dolium.
- London viii meals. {Rhenish Wine. iii vats of vi alnes.
-
- Richmond x meals. {Gascon Wine. } Plenty.
- {Rhenish Wine.}
-
- Hampton Court. {Gascon Wine.
- {Rhenish Wine.
-
- Windsor. {Gascon Wine. } Plenty.
- {Rhenish Wine.}
-
-
-_Remembrances for my Lord Mayor of London._
-
-First, to assign iiii bakers within the city of London to serve the
-noblemen belonging to the Emperor that be lodged in the Canons' houses
-of Paules and their abbots and other places within the City.
-
-Item, to assign the King's wax chandler to serve them of torches.
-
-Item, to assign a tallow chandler for white lights.
-
-Item, to assign iiii butchers for serving of oxen, sheep, calves,
-hogges of gresse,[18] flitches of bacon, marrow bones, and such other
-as shall be called for.
-
-Item, to assign ii fishmongers for provision of lynges to be ready
-watered, pikes, tenches, breams, caller salmon, and such other
-dainties of the fresh water.
-
-Item, to appoint ii fishmongers for provision of sea-fish.
-
-Item, to appoint iiii poulterers to serve for the said persons of all
-manner poultry.
-
-Item, to provide into every lodging wood, coal, rushes, straw, and
-such other necessaries.
-
-Item, it is requested that there may be always two carpenters in
-readiness to furnish every place with such things as shall be thought
-good, as cupboards, forms, boards, trestles, bedsteads, with other
-necessaries, where lack shall be.
-
-Item, to see every lodging furnished with pewter dishes, and saucers
-as shall be thought sufficient.
-
-Item, to furnish every house with all manner kitchen stuff, if there
-be any lack of such like within any of the said houses, as broches[19]
-of diverse sorts, pots and pans, ladles, skimmers, gridirons, with
-such other stuff as shall be named by the officers of the said
-noblemen.
-
-Item, appoint ii men to serve all manner of sauces for every lodging.
-
-Item, to appoint ii tallow chandlers to serve for all manner of
-sauces.
-
-Item, to warn every owner of the house to put all their stuff of
-household in every office against their coming to be in a readiness.
-
-Item, the King's grocers to be appointed to serve in all manner of
-spices.
-
-Bill of fare for the ordinary dieting of the Emperor's attendants per
-diem.
-
-ccviii noblemen and gentlemen, by estimation every of them to have a
-mess full furnished of this fare as followeth.
-
-_ccviii messes._
-
- _The first course for dinner._ _The first course supper._
- Potage. Potage.
- Boiled Capon. xxxiiii-dd viii. Chickens boiled. lxix-dd.
- Young Veal. xxxii. Legges of Mutton. xxi.
- Grene[20] Gese. lxix-dd iiii. Capons. xxxiiii-dd vi.
- Kid or lamb. ciiii. Kid or lamb. ciiii.
- Custards. ccviii. Dowcettes.[22]
- Fruttour.[21] ccviii messes.
-
- _The second course._ _The second course._
- Jussell.[23] Jelly Ipocras.[24]
- Chickens. cxxxviii-dd viiii. Peacocks. cxxxviii-dd viii.
- Peacocks. cxxxviii-dd viii Chickens. cxxxviii-dd viii.
- Rabbits. cxxxviii-dd viii. Rabbits. cxxxviii-dd viii.
- Tarts. cc. Tarts. ccviii.
-
-[Footnote 11: A sufficient quantity of provisions for four persons.]
-
-[Footnote 12: Linen.]
-
-[Footnote 13: = the answer to the question in the original written in
-the margin.]
-
-[Footnote 14: = the answer to the question in the original written in
-the margin.]
-
-[Footnote 15: = cask.]
-
-[Footnote 16: vat = about 20 gallons.]
-
-[Footnote 17: alne = ell: _i.e._ 45 inches. This refers to the
-dimensions of the barrel.]
-
-[Footnote 18: = fat hogs.]
-
-[Footnote 19: = spits.]
-
-[Footnote 20: = Goslings.]
-
-[Footnote 21: A compote of fruit.]
-
-[Footnote 22: = Pasties.]
-
-[Footnote 23: The recipe for Jussell was "grated bread, eggs, sage,
-saffron and good broth."]
-
-[Footnote 24: A kind of sweet wine.]
-
-
-
-
-CARDINAL WOLSEY (1522).
-
-"WHY COME YE NOT TO COURTE."
-
-+Source.+--John Skelton, _Chalmers' Works of the English Poets_.
-London, 1810. Vol. II., p. 274.
-
-
-Once yet again
-Of you I would frayne,[25]
-Why come ye not to court?
-To which court?
-To the King's court?
-Or to Hampton Court:
-The king's court
-Should have the excellence;
-But Hampton Court
-Hath the preeminence,
-And Yorkes Place,[26]
-With my lord's grace,
-To whose magnificence
-Is all the confluence,
-Suits and supplications,
-Embassies of all nations.
-Be it sour or be it sweet
-His wisdom is so discreet,
-That in a fume or an heat--
-"Warden of the fleet,
-Set him fast by the feet!"
-And of his royal power
-When him list to lower,
-Then, "Have him in the tower,
-[27]'Saunz aulter' remedy!
-Have him for the by and by
-[28]To the Marshalsea,
-Or to the King's bench!"
-He diggeth so in the trench
-Of the court royal,
-That he ruleth them all.
-So he doth undermine
-And such sleights doth find,
-That the king's mind
-By him is subverted,
-And so straightly coarted[29]
-In credensynge his tales,
-That all is but nutshells
-That any other saith;
-He hath in him such faith.
-And, yet all this might be,
-Suffered and taken in gre[30]
-If that that he wrought
-To any good end were brought:
-But all he bringeth to nought,
-By God, that me dear bought!
-He beareth the king on hand,
-That he must pull his land,
-To make his coffers rich.
-But he layeth all in the ditch
-And useth such abusion
-That in the conclusion
-He cometh to confusion,
-Perceive the cause why,
-To tell the truth plainly
-He is so ambitious
-And so superstitious
-And so much oblivious
-From whence that he came,
-That he falleth into a "caeciam"[31]
-Which, truly to express,
-Is a forgetfulness
-Or wilful blindness.
-"A caecitate cordis,"
-In the Latin sing we,
-"Libera nos, Domine!"
-But this mad Amalecke
-Like to a Mamelek,
-He regardeth lordes,
-No more than potsherdes,[32]
-He is in such elation
-Of his exaltation,
-And the supportation
-Of our sovereign lord,
-That, God to record,
-He ruleth all at will
-Without reason or skill,
-How be it the primordial
-Of his wretched original,
-And his base progeny,
-And his greasy genealogy,
-He came of the sank[33] royal,
-That was cast out of a butcher's stall.
-But however he was borne,
-They would have the less scorn,
-If he could consider
-His birth and room together,
-And call to his mind
-How noble and how kind
-To him he hath found,
-Our sovereign lord, chief ground
-Of all this prelacy
-And set him nobly
-In great authority,
-Out from a low degree
-Which he cannot see.
-For he was, parde![34]
-Nor doctor of divinity,
-Nor doctor of the law,
-Nor of none other saw;[35]
-But a poore master of arte,
-God wot, had little parte
-Of the quatrivials,[36]
-Nor yet of trivials,[37]
-Nor of philosophy,
-Nor of philology,
-Nor of good policy,
-Nor of astronomy,
-Nor acquainted worth a fly
-With honourable Italy,
-Nor with royal Ptholomy,
-Nor with Albumasar
-To treate of any star
-Fixed or else mobile;
-His Latin tongue doth hobble,
-He doth but clout and cobble
-In Tully's faculty
-Called humanity;
-Yet proudly he dare pretend
-How no man can him amend
-But have ye not heard this,
-How an one-eyed man is
-Well sighted when
-He is among blind men?
-[38]Than our process for to stable,
-This man was full unable
-To reach to such degree,
-Had not our prince be
-Royal Henry the eight,
-Take him in such conceit,
-That to set him on sight
-In exemplifying
-Great Alexander the King
-In writing as we find;
-Which of his royal mind,
-And of his noble pleasure,
-Transcending out of measure
-Thought to do a thing
-That pertaineth to a king,
-To make up one of nought,
-And made to him be brought
-A wretched poore man
-Which his living won
-With planting of lekes
-By the days and by the wekes,
-And of this pore vassall
-He made a king royal,
-And gave him a realm to rule,
-That occupied a shovel,
-A mattock and a spade,
-Before that he was made
-A king, as I have told,
-And ruled as he would.
-Such is a king's power,
-To make within an hour,
-And work such a miracle,
-That shall be a spectacle,
-Of renown and worldly fame:
-In likewise now the same
-Cardinal is promoted,
-Yet with lewd conditions coted,
-Presumption and vain glory,
-Envy, wrath, and lechery,
-Covetousness and gluttony,
-Slothful to do good,
-Now frantick, now starke wode.[39]
-
-[Footnote 25: Pray.]
-
-[Footnote 26: Wolsey's Palace as Archb. of York: after his fall it
-became the Royal Palace of Whitehall.]
-
-[Footnote 27: Sans autre.]
-
-[Footnote 28: The name of a prison.]
-
-[Footnote 29: Restrained.]
-
-[Footnote 30: Good will.]
-
-[Footnote 31: Caecitatem = blindness.]
-
-[Footnote 32: Potsherdes = broken pieces of earthenware.]
-
-[Footnote 33: Sang (Fr.), blood.]
-
-[Footnote 34: Pardieu.]
-
-[Footnote 35: Sort.]
-
-[Footnote 36: Quatrivials = astrology, geometry, arithmetic, music.]
-
-[Footnote 37: The trivials = grammar, rhetoric, and logic.]
-
-[Footnote 38: To make good our story.]
-
-[Footnote 39: Mad.]
-
-
-
-
-WOLSEY AND THE POPEDOM (1524).
-
-_Cardinal Wolsey to King Henry._
-
-FROM THE ORIGINALS LENT ME BY SIR WILLIAM COOK.
-
-
-LETTER I.
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_, Part III.; _Collection
-of Records_, Book I., No. 7.
-
- SIR,
-
-It may like your highness to understand I have this hour received
-letters from your Orators Resident in the court of Rome, mentioning
-how the xivth day of this instant month, it pleased Almighty God to
-call the Pope's Holiness to His mercy, whose soul our Lord pardon. And
-in what train the matters then were at that time for election of the
-future Pope, your Highness shall perceive by the letters of your said
-Orators, which I send unto the same at this time, whereby appeareth
-that mine absence from thence shall be the only obstacle (if any be)
-in the election of me to that dignity; albeit there is no great
-semblance that the college of Cardinals shall consent upon any being
-there present, because of the sundry factions that be among
-themselves, for which cause, though afore God, I repute myself right
-unmeet and unable to so high and great dignity, desiring much rather
-to demure, continue and end my life with your Grace, for doing of such
-service as may be to your Honour and Wealth of this your realm, than
-to be x Popes, yet nevertheless, remembering what mind and opinion
-your grace was of, at the last vacation, to have me preferred
-thereunto, thinking that it should be to the honour, benefit, etc.
-advancement of your affairs in time coming; and supposing that your
-Highness persisteth in the same mind and intent, I shall devise such
-instructions, commissions and other writings, as the last time was
-delivered to Mr. Pace for that purpose: And the same I shall send to
-your grace by the next post, whom it may like to do farther therein as
-will stand with your gracious pleasure, whereunto I shall always
-conform myself accordingly. And to the intent it may appear farther to
-your grace what mind and determination they be of, towards mine
-advancement, which as your Orators wrote, have now at this present
-time the principal authority and chief stroke in the election of the
-Pope, making in manner _Triumviratum_, I send unto your Highness their
-several letters to me addressed in that behalf, beseeching Our Lord
-that such one may be chosen as may be to the Honour of God, the weal
-of Christ's Church, and the benefit of all Christendom. And thus Jesu
-preserve your most Noble and Royal Estate: At the More the last Day of
-September, by
-
- Your most humble chaplain,
- T. CARLIS. EBOR.
-
-
-LETTER II.
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_, Vol. III.; _Collection
-of Records_, Part I., No. 8.
-
- SIR,
-
-It may like your Grace to understand that ensuing the tenor of my
-letter sent unto your Highness yesterday, I have devised such
-Commissions and Letters to be sent unto your counsellors the Bishop of
-Bath, Mr. Richard Pace, and Mr. Thomas Hanibal, jointly and severally,
-as at the last time of vacation of the Papal Dignity were delivered
-unto the said Mr. Richard Pace; for the Preferment either of me, or
-that failing of the Cardinal de Medici unto the same, which letters
-and commissions if it stand with your gracious pleasure to have that
-matter set forth, it may like your Highness of your benign Grace and
-Goodness to sign, so to be sent to the Court of Rome in such diligence
-as the importance of the same, with the brevity of the time doth
-necessarily require. And to the intent also that the Emperor may the
-more effectually and speedily concur with your Highness for the
-furtherance hereof, albeit, I suppose verily that ensuing the
-Conference and Communications which he hath had with your Grace in
-that behalf, he hath not praetermitted before this time to advance the
-same, yet nevertheless for the more acceleration of this furtherance
-to be given thereunto, I have also devised a familiar letter in the
-name of your grace to be directed unto his Majesty, which if it may
-please your Highness to take the pain for to write with your own hand,
-putting thereunto your secret sign and mark, being between your Grace
-and the said Emperor, shall undoubtedly do singular benefit and
-furtherance to your gracious Intent and virtuous purpose in that
-behalf. Beseeching Almighty God that such effect may ensue thereof, as
-may be in his pleasure, the contentation of your highness, the weal
-and exaltation of your most Royal estate, realm, and affairs, and
-howsoever the matter shall chance, I shall no less knowledge myself
-obliged and bounden far above any my deserts unto your Highness, than
-if I had attained the same, whereunto I would never in thought aspire,
-but to do honour good and service unto your Noble Person and this your
-Realm. And thus Jesu preserve your most Noble and Royal Estate, at the
-More the first day of October, by
-
- Your most humble chaplain,
- T. CARLIS. EBOR.
-
-
-
-
-WOLSEY AND THE KING'S MARRIAGE (1527).
-
-_A Part of Cardinal Wolsey's Letter to the King._
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_, Part III., Book I.;
-_Collection of Records_, Number 12.
-
-
-We daily and hourly musing and thinking on your Grace's great and
-secret affair, and how the same may come to good effect and desired
-end, as well for the deliverance of your Grace out of the thrauld,[40]
-pensive, and dolorous life that the same is in, as for the continuance
-of your health and the surety of your realm and succession,
-considering also that the Pope's consent, or his Holiness detained in
-captivity, the authority of the cardinals now to be convoked into
-France equivalent thereunto, must concur for approbation of such
-process as I shall make in that behalf; and that if the Queen shall
-fortune, which it is to be supposed she will do, either appeal or
-utterly decline from my Jurisdiction (one of the said authorities is
-also necessarily requisite). I have none other thought nor study but
-how in available manner the same may be attained. And after long
-discussion and debating with myself, I finally am reduced and resolved
-to two points; the one is that the Pope's consent cannot be obtained
-and had in this case, unless his deliverance out of captivity be first
-procured; the other is that the Cardinals can nothing do in this
-behalf, unless there be by them consultation and order taken, what
-shall be done _in Administratione rerum Ecclesiasticarum durante dicta
-captivitate summi Pontificis_.
-
-As touching the restitution of the Pope to liberty, the state of the
-present affairs considered the most prompt sure and ready way is, by
-conclusion of the peace betwixt the Emperor and the French King: for
-the advancement and setting forward whereof I shall put myself in
-extreme devour, and by all possible means induce and persuade the said
-French King to strain himself and condescend to as much of the
-Emperor's demands as may stand with reason and surety of his and your
-Grace's affairs; moving him further, that forasmuch as the Emperor
-taketh your Highness as a Mediator making fair demonstration in words,
-that he will at your contemplation and arbitre, not only declare the
-bottom of his mind concerning his demand, but also remit and relent in
-the same, he will be contented that your Grace forbearing the
-intimation of hostility may in the managing of the said Peace and
-inducing the Emperor to reasonable conditions, be so taken and reputed
-of him, without any outward declaration to the contrary until such
-time as the conducing of the said peace shall be clearly desperate.
-Whereby if the said French King can be induced thereunto, may in the
-mean season use the benefit of their intercourse in the Emperor's
-Low-Countries: not omitting nevertheless for the time of soliciting
-the said peace, the diligent zeal and effectual execution of the sword
-by Monsieur de Lautrek in the parties of Italy: whereby your Grace's
-said mediation shall be the more set by and regarded.
-
-And in case the said peace cannot be by these means brought to effect,
-whereupon might ensue the Pope's deliverance, by whose authority and
-consent your Grace's affair should take most sure honourable effectual
-and substantial end, and who I doubt not considering your Grace's
-gratitude, would facilely be induced to do all things therein that
-might be to your Grace's good satisfaction and purpose, then and in
-that case there is none other remedy but the Convocation of the said
-Cardinals; who as I am informed will not nor can conveniently converse
-in any other place but at Avignon, where the Administration of the
-Ecclesiastical jurisdiction hath been in semblable cases heretofore
-exercised. To the which place if the said Cardinals can be induced to
-come, your Highness being so contented, I purpose also to repair, not
-sparing any labour, travail or pain in my body, charges or expense, to
-do service unto your Grace in that behalf; according to that most
-bounden duty and hearty desire, there to consult and devise with them
-for the governance and administration of the authority of the Church
-during the said captivity: which shall be a good ground and fundament
-for the effectual execution of your Grace's secret affair.
-
-And forasmuch as thus repairing to Avignon I shall be near to the
-Emperor's confines, and within an hundred miles of Perpinian, which is
-a commodious and convenient place to commune and treat with the
-Emperor's person, I think in my poor opinion that the conducing of
-peace by your Grace's mediation not being desperate, nor intimation of
-hostility made on your behalf, it should much confer as well for the
-deliverance of the Pope, as for concluding of the Peace between the
-French King and the Emperor, if his Majesty can be so contented that a
-meeting might be between him, my Lady the French king's mother, and me
-at the said Perpinian; to the which....
-
-(_The rest of this letter has been lost._)
-
-[Footnote 40: Enslaved.]
-
-
-
-
-WILLIAM TYNDALE ON THE TRANSLATION OF THE SCRIPTURES (1528).
-
-+Source.+--Tyndale's _Obedience of a Christian Man and how Christian
-Rulers ought to Govern_, 1528, p. 12.
-
-
-That thou mayest perceive how that the Scripture ought to be in the
-mother tongue, and that the reasons which our spirits make for the
-contrary are but sophistry and false wiles to fear thee from the
-light, that thou mightest follow them blindfold and be their captive
-to honour their ceremonies and to offer to their belly.
-
-First God gave the children of Israel a law by the hand of Moses in
-their mother tongue, and all the prophets wrote in their mother
-tongue, and all the psalms were in the mother tongue. And there was
-Christ but figured and described in ceremonies, in riddles, in
-parables and in dark prophecies. What is the cause that we may not
-have the Old Testament with the New also, which is the light of the
-old, and wherein is openly declared before the eyes that there was
-darkly prophesied? I can imagine no cause verily, except it be that we
-should not see the work of Antichrist and juggling of hypocrites. What
-should be the cause that we which walk in the broad day should not see
-as well as they that walked in the night, or that we should not see as
-well at noon as they did in the twilight? Came Christ to make the
-world more blind? By this means, Christ is the darkness of the world,
-and not the light as he saith himself, John viii.
-
-Moreover, Moses saith, Deutero. vi, "Hear, Israel, let these words
-which I command thee this day stick fast in thine heart, and whet them
-on thy children, and talk of them as thou sittest in thine house and
-as thou walkest by the way and when thou liest down and when thou
-risest up, and bind them for a token of thine hand, and let them be a
-remembrance between thine eyes, and write them on the posts and gates
-of thine house." This was commanded generally unto all men. How cometh
-it that God's word pertaineth less unto us than unto them? Yea, how
-cometh it that our Moseses forbid us and command us the contrary, and
-threat us if we do, and will not that we once speak of God's word? How
-can we whet God's word (that is put in practise, use and exercise)
-upon our children and household, when we are violently kept from it
-and know it not? How can we (as Peter commandeth) give a reason for
-our hope, when we wot not what it is that God hath promised or what to
-hope? Moses also commandeth in the said chapter: if the son ask what
-the testimonies, laws and observances of the Lord mean, that the
-father teach him. If our children ask what our ceremonies (which are
-no more than the Jewses were) mean, no father can tell his son. And in
-the xi chapter he repeateth all again, for fear of forgetting.
-
-They will say haply "the Scripture requireth a pure mind and a quiet
-mind. And therefore the lay-man, because he is altogether cumbered
-with worldly business, cannot understand them." If that be the cause,
-then it is a plain case that our prelates understand not the
-Scriptures themselves. For no lay-man is so tangled with worldly
-business as they are. The great things of the world are ministered by
-them. Neither do the lay people any great thing but at their
-assignment.
-
-"If the Scripture were in the mother tongue," they will say, "then
-would the lay people understand it every man after his own ways."
-Wherefore serveth the curate but to teach them the right way?
-Wherefore were the holidays made but that the people should come and
-learn? Are ye not abominable schoolmasters in that ye take so great
-wages, if ye will not teach? If ye would teach, how could ye do it so
-well and with so great profit as when the lay people have the
-Scripture before them in their mother tongue? For then should they
-see, by the order of the text, whether thou juggledest or not. And
-then would they believe it because it is the Scripture of God, though
-thy living be never so abominable. Where now, because your living and
-your preaching are so contrary and because they grope out in every
-sermon your open and manifest lies and smell your unsatiable
-covetousness, they believe you not when you preach truth. But alas,
-the curates themselves (for the most part) wot no more what the New or
-Old Testament meaneth than do the Turks. Neither know they of any more
-than that they read at masse, matins, and evensong, which yet they
-understand not. Neither care they but even to mumble up so much every
-day (as the pie and popinjay speak they wot not what) to fill their
-bellies with all. If they will not let the lay-man have the word of
-God in his mother tongue, yet let the priests have it, which, for a
-great part of them, do understand no Latin at all; but sing and say
-and patter all day with the lips only that which the heart
-understandeth not.
-
-
-
-
-ENGLISH TRANSLATIONS OF THE BIBLE BURNT (1529).
-
-+Source.+--Edward Hall's _Henry VIII_. Grafton's Edition, 1548.[41]
-
-
-Here is to be remembered, that at this present time, William Tindale
-had newly translated and imprinted the New Testament in English, and
-the Bishop of London, not pleased with the translation thereof,
-debated with himself, how he might compass and devise to destroy that
-false and erroneous translation, (as he said). And so it happened that
-one Augustine Packington, a Mercer and Merchant of London, and of
-great honesty, the same time was in Antwerp, where the Bishop then
-was, and this Packington was a man that highly favoured William
-Tindale, but to the bishop utterly showed himself to the contrary. The
-bishop desirous to have his purpose brought to pass, communed of the
-New Testament, and how gladly he would buy them. Packington then
-hearing that he wished for, said unto the bishop, my Lord, if it be
-your pleasure, I can in this matter do more, I dare say, than most of
-the Merchants of England that are here, for I know the Dutchmen and
-strangers, that have bought them of Tyndale, and have them here to
-sell, so that if it be your lordship's pleasure, to pay for them (for
-otherwise I cannot come by them, but I must disburse money for them) I
-will then assure you, to have every book of them, that is imprinted
-and is here unsold. The Bishop thinking that he had God by the toe,
-when indeed he had (as after he thought) the Devil by the fist, said,
-gentle Master Packington, do your diligence and get them, and with all
-my heart I will pay for them, whatsoever they cost you, for the books
-are erroneous and naughty, and I intend surely to destroy them all,
-and to burn them at Paul's Cross. Augustine Packington came to William
-Tyndale and said, William I know thou art a poor man, and hast a heap
-of new Testaments and books by thee for the which thou hast both
-endangered thy friends, and beggared thyself, and I have now gotten
-thee a Merchant, which with ready money shall dispatch thee of all
-that thou hast, if you think it so profitable for yourself. Who is the
-merchant, said Tyndale. The bishop of London, said Packington. O that
-is because he will burn them, said Tyndale. Yea Mary, quod Packington.
-I am the gladder, said Tyndale, for these two benefits shall come
-thereof, I shall get money of him for these books, to bring myself out
-of debt, and the whole world shall cry out upon the burning of God's
-word. And the overplus of the money that shall remain to me, shall
-make me more studious, to correct the said New Testament, and so newly
-to imprint the same once again, and I trust the second will much
-better like you, than ever did the first: And so forward went the
-bargain, the bishop had the books, Packington the thanks, and Tyndale
-had the money. Afterwards, when more new Testaments were imprinted,
-they came thick and threefold into England. The bishop of London
-hearing that still there were so many New Testaments abroad, sent for
-Augustine Packington and said unto him: Sir, how cometh this that
-there are so many New Testaments abroad, and you promised and assured
-me that you had bought all? Then said Packington, I promise you I
-bought all that there was to be had: but I perceive they have made
-more since, and it will never be better, as long as they have the
-letters and stamps; therefore it were best for your lordship, to buy
-the stamps too, and then are you sure: the bishop smiled at him and
-said, Well Packington, well. And so ended this matter.
-
-[Footnote 41: No reference has been given to the paging, as it is
-improbable that readers will have access to the Grafton Edition.
-Should there be need for further reference to Hall's Life, no
-difficulty will be found, as in all editions each year has a separate
-chapter.]
-
-
-
-
-TWO LETTERS WRITTEN BY KING HENRY TO THE UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD, FOR
-THEIR OPINION IN THE CAUSE OF HIS MARRIAGE (1529).
-
-
-LETTER I. BY THE KING.
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_, Book III.;
-_Collection of Records_, Book II. No 17.
-
-Trusty and well beloved subjects, we greet you well. And whereas we
-have, for an high and weighty cause of ours, not only consulted many
-and substantial well learned men within our Realm and without, for
-certain considerations our conscience moving, we think it also very
-convenient to feel the minds of you amongst you in our University of
-Oxenford, which be erudite in the faculty of Divinity, to the intent
-we may perceive of what conformity ye be with the others, which
-marvellously both wisely and substantially have declared to us their
-intent and mind: not doubting but that ye for the allegiance and
-fidelity that ye are bound unto us in, will as sincerely and truly
-without any abuse declare your minds and conscience in this behalf, as
-any of the other have done. Wherefore we will and command you, that ye
-not leaning to wilful and sinister opinions of your own several minds,
-not giving credence to misreports and sinister opinions or
-persuasions, considering we be your sovereign Liege Lord, totally
-giving your true mind and affection to the true overture of Divine
-learning in this behalf, do shew and declare your true and just
-learning in the said cause, like as ye will abide by; wherein ye shall
-not only please Almighty God, but also us your Liege Lord. And we for
-your so doing shall be to you and our University there so good and
-gracious a Sovereign Lord for the same, as ye shall perceive it well
-employed to your well fortune to come; in case you do not uprightly
-according to Divine Learning hand yourselves herein, ye may be
-assured, that we, not without great cause, shall so quickly and
-sharply look to your unnatural misdemeanour herein, that it shall not
-be to your quietness and ease hereafter. Wherefore we heartily pray
-you, that according both to Duty to God and your Prince, you set apart
-all untrue and sinister informations, and accommodate yourselves to
-mere truth as it becometh true subjects to do; assuring you that those
-that do, shall be esteemed and set forth, and the contrary neglected
-and little set by: trusting that now you know our mind and pleasure,
-we shall see such conformity among you, that we shall hereof take
-great consolation and comfort, to the great allegement of our
-conscience; willing and commanding you among you to give perfect
-credence to my Lord of Lincoln our Confessor in this behalf and
-matter: and in all things which he shall declare unto you or cause to
-be declared in our behalf, to make unto us either by him or the
-authentic letters full answer and resolution, which, your duties
-well-remembered, we doubt not but that it shall be our high contention
-and pleasure.
-
- Given under, etc.
-
-
-LETTER II. BY THE KING.
-
-Trusty and well-beloved, we greet you well. And of late being
-informed, to our no little marvel and discontentation, that a great
-part of the youth of that our University with contentious factions and
-manner, daily combining together, neither regarding their duty to us
-their Sovereign Lord, nor yet conforming themselves to the opinions
-and orders of the virtuous, wise, sage, and profound learned men of
-that University, wilfully to stick upon the opinion to have a great
-number of regents and non-regents to be associate unto the doctors,
-proctors, and Bachelors of Divinity, for the determination of our
-question; which we believe hath not been often seen, that such a
-number of right small learning in regard to the other, should be
-joined with so famous a sort, or in a manner stay their seniors in so
-weighty a cause: which as we think should be no small dishonour to our
-University there, but most especially to you the seniors and rulers of
-the same, assuring you that this their unnatural and unkind demeanour
-is not only right much to our displeasure, but much to be marvelled
-of, upon what ground and occasion they being our mere subjects, should
-show themselves more unkind and wilful in this matter, than all other
-universities both in this and in all other regions do. Finally, we
-trusting in the dexterity and wisdom of you and other the said
-discreet and substantial learned men of that University, be in perfect
-hope, that ye will condemn and frame the said young persons unto good
-order and conformity, as it becometh you to do. Wherefore we be
-desirous to hear with incontinent diligence, and doubt you not we
-shall regard the demeanour of everyone of the University, according to
-their merits and deserts. And if the youth of the University will play
-masteries, as they begin to do, we doubt not but that they shall well
-perceive that _non est bonum irritare crabrones_.
-
- Given under, etc.
-
-
-
-
-CARDINAL CAMPEGGIO'S JUDGMENT ON THE DIVORCE OF QUEEN KATHARINE (1529).
-
-+Source.+--Cavendish's _Life of Wolsey_, p. 229.
-
-
-"I will give no judgement herein until I have made relation unto the
-Pope of all our proceedings, whose counsel and commandment in this
-high case I will observe. The case is too high and notable known
-throughout the world, for us to give any hasty judgement, considering
-the highness of the persons and the doubtful allegations; and also
-whose commissioners we be, and under whose authority we sit here. It
-was therefore reason, that we should make our chief head of counsel in
-the same, before we proceed to judgement definitive. I come not so far
-to please any man, for fear, meed, or favour, be he king or any other
-potentate. I have no such respect to the persons that I will offend my
-conscience. I will not for favour or displeasure of any high estate or
-mighty prince do that thing that should be against the law of God. I
-am an old man, both sick and impotent, looking daily for death. What
-should it then avail me to put my soul in the danger of God's
-displeasure, to my utter damnation, for the favour of any prince or
-high estate in this world? My coming and being here is only to see
-justice ministered according to my conscience, as I thought thereby
-the matter either good or bad. And for as much as I do understand, and
-having perceivance by the allegations and negations in this matter
-laid for both the parties, that the truth in this case is very
-doubtful to be known, and also that the party defendant will make no
-answer thereunto, but doth rather appeal from us, supposing that we be
-not indifferent, considering the king's high dignity and authority
-within his own realm which he hath over his own subjects; and we being
-his subjects, and having our livings and dignities in the same, she
-thinketh that we cannot minister true and indifferent justice for fear
-of his displeasure. Therefore to avoid all these ambiguities and
-obscure doubts, I intend not to damn my soul for no prince nor
-potentate alive. I will therefore, God willing, wade no farther in
-this matter, unless I have the just opinion and judgement, with the
-assent of the pope, and such other of his counsel as hath more
-experience and learning in such doubtful laws than I have. Wherefore I
-will adjourn this court for this time, according to the order of the
-court in Rome, from whence this court and jurisdiction is derived. And
-if we should go further than our commission doth warrant us, it were
-folly and vain, and much to our slander and blame; and we might be
-accounted the same breakers of this order of the higher court from
-whence we have (as I said) our original authorities."
-
-
-
-
-ANNE BOLEYN'S HATRED OF WOLSEY (1529).
-
-+Source.+--Cavendish's _Life of Wolsey_ (published by Harding and
-Lepard, 1827), p. 241.
-
-
-And as I[42] heard it reported by them that waited upon the king at
-dinner, that Mistress Anne Boleyn was much offended with the King, as
-far as she durst, that he so gently entertained my lord, saying, as
-she sat with the King at dinner, in communication of him, "Sir," quoth
-she, "is it not a marvellous thing to consider what debt and danger
-the cardinal hath brought you in with all your subjects?" "How so,
-sweetheart?" quoth the King. "Forsooth," quoth she, "there is not a
-man in all your realm, worth five pounds, but he hath indebted you
-unto him," (meaning by a loan that the king had but late of his
-subjects). "Well, well," quoth the King, "as for that there is in him
-no blame; for I know that matter better than you, or any other." "Nay,
-Sir," quoth she, "besides all that, what things hath he wrought within
-this realm to your great slander and dishonour? There is never a
-nobleman within this realm that if he had done but half so much as he
-hath done, but he were well worthy to lose his head. If my Lord of
-Norfolk, my Lord of Suffolk, my lord my father, or any other noble
-person within your realm, had done much less than he, but they should
-have lost their heads ere this." "Why, then, I perceive," quoth the
-king, "ye are not the Cardinal's friend?" "Forsooth, Sir," then quoth
-she, "I have no cause, nor any other that loveth your grace, no more
-have your grace if ye consider well his doings."
-
-[Footnote 42: "I" refers to Cavendish, who was Wolsey's Gentleman Usher.]
-
-
-
-
-WOLSEY'S FALL (1529).
-
-+Source.+--Cavendish's _Life of Wolsey_, p. 246.
-
-
-After Cardinal Campeggio was thus departed and gone, Michaelmas Term
-drew near, against the which my lord returned unto his house at
-Westminster; and when the Term began, he went to the Hall in such like
-sort and gesture as he was wont most commonly to do, and sat in the
-Chancery, being Chancellor. After which day he never sat there more.
-The next day he tarried at home, expecting the coming of the Dukes of
-Suffolk and Norfolk, who came not that day: but the next day they came
-thither unto him: to whom they declared how the king's pleasure was
-that he should surrender and deliver up the great seal into their
-hands, and to depart simply unto Asher, (Esher) a house situate nigh
-Hampton Court, belonging to the Bishoprick of Winchester. My lord,
-understanding their message, demanded of them what commission they had
-to give him any such commandment, who answered him again, that they
-were sufficient commissioners in that behalf, having the King's
-commandment by his mouth so to do. "Yet," quoth he, "that is not
-sufficient for me, without further commandment of the King's pleasure;
-for the great seal of England was delivered me by the King's own
-person, to enjoy during my life, with the ministration of the office
-and high room of Chancellorship of England: for my surety whereof, I
-have the King's letters patent to show." Which matter was greatly
-debated between the Dukes and him, with many stout words between them;
-whose words and checks he took in patience for the time; in so much
-that the dukes were fain to depart again, without their purpose at
-that present: and returned again unto Windsor to the King: and what
-report they made I cannot tell; howbeit the next day they came again
-from the King, bringing with them the King's letters. After the
-receipt and reading of the same by my lord, which was done with much
-reverence, he delivered unto them, the great seal, contented to obey
-the King's high commandment: and seeing that the King's pleasure was
-to take his house, with the contents, was well pleased simply to
-depart to Asher, taking nothing but only some provision for his house.
-
-
-
-
-A LETTER WRITTEN BY CARDINAL WOLSEY TO
-DR. STEPHEN GARDNER (1530).
-
-+Source.+--Cavendish's _Life of Wolsey_ (published by Harding and
-Lepard, 1827), p. 474.
-
-
- MY OWN GOOD MASTER SECRETARY,
-
-After my most hearty commendations I pray you at the reverence of God
-to help, that expedition be used in my pursuits, the delay whereof so
-replenisheth my heart with heaviness, that I can take no rest; not for
-any vain fear, but only for the miserable condition that I am
-presently in, and likelihood to continue in the same, unless that you,
-in whom is my assured trust do help and relieve me therein; For first,
-continuing here in this moist and corrupt air, being entered into the
-passion of the dropsy, _Cum prostatione appetitus et continuo
-insomnio_. I cannot live: Wherefore of necessity I must be removed to
-some other dryer air and place, where I may have commodity of
-physicians. Secondly, having but Yorke, which is now decayed, by L800
-by the year, I cannot tell how to live, and keep the poor number of
-folks which I now have, my houses there be in decay, and of everything
-meet for household unprovided and furnished. I have no apparel for my
-houses there, nor money to bring me thither, nor to live with till the
-propice time of the year shall come to remove thither. These things
-considered, Mr. Secretary, must needs make me in agony and heaviness,
-mine age therewith and sickness considered, alas Mr. Secretary, ye
-with other my lords showed me, that I should otherwise be furnished
-and seen unto, ye know in your learning and conscience, whether I
-should forfeit my spiritualities of Winchester or no. Alas! the
-qualities of mine offences considered, with the great punishment and
-loss of goods that I have sustained, ought to move pitiful hearts; and
-the most noble king, to whom if it would please you of your charitable
-goodness to show the premises after your accustomed wisdom and
-dexterity, it is not to be doubted, but his highness would have
-consideration and compassion, augmenting my living, and appointing
-such thing as should be convenient for my furniture, which to do shall
-be to the king's high honour, merit, and discharge of conscience, and
-to you great praise for the bringing of the same to pass for your old
-bringer up and loving friend. This kindness exhibited from the king's
-highness shall prolong my life for some little while, though it shall
-not be long, by the means whereof his grace shall take profit, and by
-my death not. What is it to his Highness to give some convenient
-portion out of Winchester, and St. Albans, his Grace taking with my
-hearty good will the residue. Remember, good Mr. Secretary, my poor
-degree, and what service I have done, and how now approaching to
-death, I must begin the world again. I beseech you therefore, moved
-with pity and compassion, succour me in this my calamity, and to your
-power which I know is great, relieve me; and I with all mine shall not
-only ascribe this my relief unto you, but also pray to God for the
-increase of your honour, and as my poor shall increase, so I shall not
-fail to requite your kindness. Written hastily at Asher,[43] with the
-rude and shaking hand of
-
- Your daily bedesman
- and assured friend,
- T. CARLIS EBOR.
-
- To the right honourable
- and my assured friend, Master Secretary.
-
-[Footnote 43: Esher.]
-
-
-
-
-THE KING'S LAST LETTER TO THE POPE (1532).
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_, Part I.; _Collection
-of Records_, Book II. xlii.
-
-
-"After most humble commendations, and most devout kissing of your
-blessed feet. Albeit that we have hitherto deferred to make answer to
-those letters dated at Bonony, the 7th day of October; which letters
-of late were delivered unto us by Paul of Casali. Yet when they appear
-to be written for this cause, that we deeply considering the contents
-of the same, should provide for the tranquillity of our own
-conscience, and should purge such scruples and doubts conceived of our
-cause of Matrimony. We could neither neglect those letters sent for
-such a purpose, nor after that we had diligently examined and
-perpended the effects of the same, which we did very diligently,
-noting, conferring and revolving every thing in them contained, with
-deep study of mind, pretermit nor leave to answer unto them. For since
-that your Holiness seemeth to go about that thing chiefly, which is to
-vanquish those doubts, and to take away inquietations which daily do
-prick our conscience: and insomuch as it doth appear at the first
-sight to be done of zeal, love and piety, we therefore do thank you of
-your good will. Howbeit since it is not performed in deed, that you
-pretend, we have thought it expedient to require your Holiness to
-provide us other remedies: wherefore forasmuch as your Holiness would
-vouchsafe to write unto us concerning this matter, we heartily thank
-you greatly lamenting also both the chance of your Holiness and also
-ours, unto whom both twain it hath chanced in so high a matter of so
-great moment to be frustrated and deceived: that is to say, that your
-Holiness not being instructed, nor having knowledge of the matter, of
-your self should be compelled to hang upon the judgement of others,
-and so put forth and make answers, gathered of other men, being
-variable and repugnant among themselves. And that we being so long
-sick and exagitate with this same sore, should so long time in vain
-look for remedy: which when we have augmented our aegritude and
-distress, by delay and protracting of time, you do so cruciate the
-patient and afflicted as who seeth it should much avail to protract
-the cause, and thorough vain hope of the end of our desire to lead us
-whither you will. But to speak plainly to your Holiness; forasmuch as
-we have suffered many injuries, which with great difficulty we do
-sustain and digest; albeit that among all things passed by your
-Holiness, some cannot be laid, alleged, nor objected against your
-Holiness, yet in many of them some default appeareth to be in you,
-which I would to God we could so diminish as it might appear no
-default; but it cannot be hid, which is so manifest and though we
-could say nothing, the thing itself speaketh. But as to that that is
-affirmed in your letters, both of God's law, and man's, otherwise than
-is necessary and truth, let that be ascribed to the temerity and
-ignorance of your Counsellors, and your Holiness to be without all
-default save only for that you do not admit more discreet and learned
-men to be your Counsellors, and stop the mouths of them which
-liberally would speak the truth. This truly is your default, and
-verily a great fault, worthy to be alienated and abhorred of Christ's
-Vicar, in that you have dealt so variably, yea, rather so inconstantly
-and deceivably. Be ye not angry with my words and let it be lawful for
-me to speak the truth without displeasure; if your Holiness shall be
-displeased with that we do rehearse, impute no default in us, but in
-your own deeds, which deeds have so molested and troubled us
-wrongfully that we speak now unwillingly, and as enforced thereunto.
-Never was there any prince so handled by a Pope, as your Holiness hath
-intreated us. First when our cause was proponed to your Holiness, when
-it was explicated and declared afore the same; when certain doubts in
-it were resolved by your Counsellors, and all things discussed, it was
-required that answer might be made thereunto by the order of the Law.
-There was offered a commission, with a promise also that the same
-commission should not be revoked; and whatsoever sentence should be
-given, should straight without delay be confirmed. The judges were
-sent unto us, the promise was delivered to us, subscribed with your
-Holiness' hand; which avouched to confirm the sentence and not to
-revoke the Commission, nor grant anything else that might let the
-same; and finally to bring us in a greater hope, a certain Commission
-Decretal, defining the cause, was delivered to the Judges' hands. If
-your Holiness did grant us all these things justly, you did injustly
-revoke them; and if by good and truth the same was granted, they were
-not made frustrate or annihilate without fraud; so as if there were no
-deceit nor fraud in the revocation, then how wrongfully and subtly
-have been done those things that have been done! Whether will your
-Holiness say, that you might do those things that you have done, or
-that you might not do them? If you will say that you might do them,
-where then is the faith which becometh a friend, yea, and much more a
-Pope to have those things not being performed, which lawfully were
-promised? And if you will say that you might not do them, have we not
-then very just cause to mistrust those medicines and remedies with
-which in your letters you go about to heal our conscience, especially
-in that we may perceive and see those remedies to be prepared for us,
-not to relieve the sickness and disease of our mind, but for other
-means, pleasures and worldly respects? And as it should seem
-profitable that we should ever continue in hope or despair, so always
-the remedy is attempted; so that we being always a-healing, and never
-healed, should be sick still. And this truly was the chief cause why
-we did consult and take the advice of every learned man, being free
-without all affection, that the truth (which now with our labour and
-study we seem partly to have attained) by their judgements more
-manifestly divulged, we might more at large perceive; whose judgements
-and opinions it is easy to see how much they differ from that, that
-those few men of yours do shew unto you, and by those your letters is
-signified. Those few men of yours do affirm the prohibition of our
-marriage to be inducted only by the law positive, as your Holiness has
-also written in your letters; but all others say the prohibition to be
-inducted, both by the law of God and Nature. Those men of yours do
-suggest, that it may be dispensed for avoiding all slanders. The
-others utterly do contend, that by no means it is lawful to dispense
-with that, that God and Nature have forbidden. We do separate from our
-cause the authority of the See Apostolic, which we do perceive to be
-destitute of that learning whereby it should be directed; and because
-your Holiness doth ever profess your ignorance and is wont to speak of
-other men's mouths, we do confer the sayings of those, with the
-sayings of them that be of the contrary opinion; for to confer the
-reasons it were too long. But now the Universities of Cambridge,
-Oxford in our realms; Paris, Orleans, Biturisen,[44] Andegavon[45] in
-France; and Bonony[46] in Italy, by one consent; and also divers other
-of the most famous and learned men, being freed from all affection,
-and only moved in respect of verity, partly in Italy, and partly in
-France, do affirm the Marriage of the brother with the brother's wife
-to be contrary both to the Law of God and Nature, and also do
-pronounce that no dispensation can be lawful or available to any
-Christian man in that behalf. But others think the contrary by whose
-counsels your Holiness hath done that, that since you have confessed
-you could not do, in promising to us as we have above rehearsed, and
-giving that Commission to the Cardinal Campeggio to be shewed unto us;
-and after, if it so should seem profitable to burn it, as afterwards
-it was done indeed as we have perceived. Furthermore, those which so
-do moderate the power of your Holiness, that they do affirm that the
-same cannot take away the Appellation which is used by man's law and
-yet is available to Divine matters everywhere without distinction. No
-princes heretofore have more highly esteemed, nor honoured the See
-Apostolic than we have, wherefore we be the more sorry to be provoked
-to this contention which to our usage and nature is most alienate and
-abhorred. Those things so cruel we write very heavily, and more glad
-would have been to have been silent if we might, and would have left
-your authority untouched with a good will and constrained to seek the
-verity, we fell, against our will into this contention, but the
-sincerity of the truth prohibited us to keep silence and what should
-we do in so great and many perplexities! For truly if we should obey
-the letters of your Holiness in that they do affirm that we know to be
-otherwise, we should offend God and our conscience and we should be a
-great slander to them that do the contrary, which be a great number,
-as we have before rehearsed. Also, if we should dissent from those
-things which your Holiness doth pronounce we would account it not
-lawful, if there were not a cause to defend the fact as we now do,
-being compelled by necessity, lest we should seem to contemn the
-Authority of the See Apostolic. Therefore, your Holiness ought to take
-it in good part though we do somewhat at large and more liberally
-speak in this cause which does so oppress us, especially forasmuch as
-we pretend none atrocity, nor use no rhetoric in the exaggerating and
-increasing the indignity of the matter; but if I speak of anything
-that toucheth the quick, it proceedeth of the mere verity, which we
-cannot nor ought not to hide in this cause, for it toucheth not
-worldly things but divine, not frail but eternal; in which things no
-feigned, false nor painted reasons, but only the truth shall obtain
-and take place; and God is the truth to whom we are bound to obey
-rather than to men; and nevertheless we cannot but obey unto men also,
-as we were wont to do, unless there be an express cause why we should
-not, which by those our letters we now do to your Holiness, and we do
-it with charity, not intending to spread it abroad nor yet further to
-impugn your authority, unless you do compel us; albeit also, that that
-we do, doth not impugn your authority, but confirmeth the same, which
-we revocate to its first foundations; and better it is in the middle
-way to return than always to run forth headlong and do ill. Wherefore
-if your Holiness do regard or esteem the tranquillity of our mind, let
-the same be established with verity which hath been brought to light
-by the consent of so many learned men; so shall your Holiness reduce
-and bring us to a certainty and quietness, and shall deliver us from
-all anxiety, and shall provide both for us and our realm and finally
-shall do your office and duty. The residue of our affairs we have
-committed to our Ambassadors to be propounded unto you, to whom we
-beseech your Holiness to give credence, etc."
-
-[Footnote 44: Bourges.]
-
-[Footnote 45: Anjou.]
-
-[Footnote 46: Bologna.]
-
-
-
-
-THE SUBMISSION OF THE CLERGY AND RESTRAINT OF APPEALS (1534).
-
-+Source.+--25 H. VIII. cap. 19. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III 469.)
-
-
-... And be it further enacted by authority aforesaid, that from the
-Feast of Easter, which shall be in the year of our Lord God, 1534, no
-manner of appeals shall be had, provoked, or made out of this realm,
-or out of any of the King's Dominions, to the Bishop of Rome, nor to
-the See of Rome, in any causes or matters happening to be in
-contention, and having their commencement or beginning in any of the
-courts within this realm, or within any of the King's dominions, of
-what nature, condition, or quality soever they be of; but that all
-manner of appeals, of what nature or condition soever they be of, or
-what cause or matter soever they concern, shall be made and had by the
-parties agreed, or having cause of appeal, after such manner, form and
-condition, as is limited for appeals to be had and prosecuted within
-this realm in causes of matrimony, tithes, oblations and observations,
-by a statute made and established since the beginning of this present
-Parliament, and according to the form and effect of the said statute:
-any usage, custom, prescription or any thing or things to the contrary
-hereof notwithstanding.
-
-And for lack of justice at or in any the courts of the Archbishops of
-this realm, or in any the king's dominions, it shall be lawful to the
-parties grieved to appeal to the King's Majesty in the King's Court of
-Chancery; and that upon every such appeal, a commission shall be
-directed under the great seal to such persons as shall be named under
-the King's Highness, his heirs or successors, like as in case of
-appeal from the Admiral's Court, to hear and definitely determine such
-appeals and the causes concerning the same. Which commissioners, or
-appointed, shall have full power and authority to hear and so by the
-King's Highness, his heirs or successors, to be named definitively
-determine every such appeal, with the causes and all circumstances
-concerning the same; and that such judgement and sentence as the said
-commissioners shall make and decree, in and upon any such appeal,
-shall be good and effectual, and also definitive; and no further
-appeals to be had or made from the said commissioners for the same.
-
-
-
-
-THE ECCLESIASTICAL APPOINTMENTS ACT. THE ABSOLUTE RESTRAINT OF
-ANNATES, ELECTION OF BISHOPS AND LETTERS MISSIVE ACT (1534).
-
-+Source.+--25 H. VIII. cap. 21. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 462.)
-
-
-And for as much as in the said Act it is not only plainly and
-certainly expressed in what manner and fashion archbishops and bishops
-shall be elected, presented, invested, and consecrated within this
-realm and in all other the King's Dominions; be it now therefore
-enacted by the King our sovereign Lord, by the assent of the Lords
-spiritual and temporal, and the Commons, in this Present Parliament
-assembled, and by the authority of the same, that the said Act, and
-everything herein contained shall be and stand in strength, virtue,
-and effect; except only, that no person or persons hereafter shall be
-presented, nominated, or commended to the said Bishop of Rome,
-otherwise called the Pope, or to the See of Rome, to or for the
-dignity or office of any archbishop or bishop within this realm, or in
-any other the King's Dominions, nor shall send nor procure there for
-any manner of bulls, briefs, palls or other things requisite for an
-archbishop or bishop, nor shall pay any sums of money for Annates,
-first-fruits or otherwise, for expedition of any such bulls, briefs or
-palls; but that by the authority of this act, such presenting,
-nominating, or commending to the said Bishop of Rome, or to the See of
-Rome, and such bulls, briefs, palls, annates, first-fruits, and every
-other sums of money heretofore limited, accustomed, or used to be paid
-at the said See of Rome, for procuration or expedition of any such
-bulls, briefs or palls, or other thing concerning the same, shall
-utterly cease and no longer be used within this realm or within any of
-the King's Dominions: anything contained in the said Act
-aforementioned, or any use, custom, or prescription to the contrary
-thereof notwithstanding.
-
-
-
-
-ACT FORBIDDING PAPAL DISPENSATIONS AND THE PAYMENT OF PETER'S PENCE
-(1534).
-
-+Source.+--25 H. VIII. cap. 21. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 464.)
-
-
-For where this your Grace's realm recognizing no superior under God,
-but only your Grace, has been and is free from subjection to any man's
-laws, but only to such as have been devised, made, and ordained within
-this realm, for the wealth of the same, or to such other as, by
-sufferance of your Grace and your progenitors, the people of this your
-realm have taken at their free liberty, by their own consent, to be
-used amongst them, and have bound themselves by long use and custom to
-the observance of the same, not as to the observance of the laws of
-any foreign prince, potentate, or prelate, but to the accustomed and
-ancient laws of this realm, originally established as laws of the
-same, by the said sufferance, consents, and custom, none otherwise.
-
-
-
-
-FIRST ACT OF SUCCESSION (1534).
-
-+Source.+--25 H. VIII. cap. 22. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 471.)
-
-
-... In consideration whereof, your said most humble and obedient
-subjects, the nobles and Commons of this realm, calling further to
-their remembrance that the good unity, peace and wealth of this realm,
-and the succession of the subjects of the same, most especially and
-principally above all worldly things consists and rests in the
-certainty and surety of the procreation and posterity of your
-Highness, in whose most royal person, at this present time, is no
-manner of doubt nor question; do therefore most humbly beseech your
-Highness, that it may please your Majesty, that it may be enacted by
-your Highness, with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal,
-and the Commons, in this present Parliament assembled, and by the
-authority of the same, that the marriage heretofore solemnized between
-your Highness and the Lady Katherine, being before lawful wife to
-Prince Arthur, your elder brother, shall be, by authority of this
-Present Parliament, definitively, clearly and absolutely declared,
-deemed, and adjudged to be against the laws of Almighty God, and also
-accepted, reputed, and taken of no value nor effect, but utterly void
-and annulled, and the separation, thereof, made by the said
-Archbishop, shall be good and effectual to all intents and purposes;
-any licence, dispensation, or any other act or acts going afore, or
-ensuing the same, or to the contrary thereof, in anywise
-notwithstanding; and that every such licence, dispensation, act or
-acts, thing or things heretofore had, made and done or to be done, to
-the contrary thereof, shall be void and of none effect; and that the
-said Lady Katherine shall be henceforth called and reputed only
-dowager to Prince Arthur, and not Queen of this realm, and that the
-lawful matrimony had and solemnized between your highness and your
-most dear and entirely beloved wife Queen Anne, shall be established,
-and taken for undoubtful, true, sincere, and perfect ever hereafter,
-according to the just judgement of the said Thomas, Archbishop of
-Canterbury, metropolitan and primate of all this realm, whose grounds
-of judgement have been confirmed, as well by the whole clergy of this
-realm in both the Convocations, and by both the universities thereof,
-as by the Universities of Bologna, Padua, Paris, Orleans, Toulouse,
-Anjou, and divers others, and also by the private writings of many
-right excellent well-learned men; which grounds so confirmed, and
-judgement of the said Archbishop ensuring the same, together with your
-marriage solemnized between your Highness and your said lawful wife
-Queen Anne, we your said subjects, both spiritual and temporal, do
-purely, plainly, constantly, and firmly accept, approve and ratify for
-good and consonant to the laws of Almighty God, without end or
-default, most humbly beseeching your Majesty, that it may be so
-established for ever by your most gracious and royal assent.
-
-
-
-
-THE SUPREMACY ACT (1534).
-
-+Source.+--25 H. VIII. cap. I. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 492.)
-
-
-Albeit the King's Majesty justly and rightfully is and ought to be the
-supreme head of the Church of England, and so is recognized by the
-clergy of this realm in their Convocations, yet nevertheless for
-corroboration and confirmation thereof, and for increase of virtue in
-Christ's religion within this realm of England, and to repress and
-extirpate errors, heresies, and other enormities and abuses heretofore
-used in the same; be it enacted by the authority of this present
-parliament, that the king our sovereign lord, his heir and successors,
-kings of this realm, shall be taken, accepted and reputed the only
-supreme head in earth of the Church of England, called Anglicana
-Ecclesia: and shall have and enjoy, annexed and united to the imperial
-crown of this realm, as well the title and style thereof, as all
-honours, dignities, pre-eminences, jurisdictions, privileges,
-authorities, immunities, profits and commodities to the said dignity
-of supreme head of the same Church belonging and appertaining. And
-that our said sovereign lord, his heirs and successors, kings of this
-realm, shall have full power and authority from time to time to visit,
-repress, redress, reform, order, correct, restrain, and amend all such
-errors, heresies, abuses, offences, contempts, and enormities,
-whatsoever they be, which by any manner, spiritual authority or
-jurisdiction ought or may lawfully be reformed, repressed, ordered,
-redressed, corrected, restrained, or amended, most to the pleasure of
-Almighty God, the increase of virtue in Christ's religion, and for the
-conservation of the peace, unity, and tranquillity of this realm; any
-usage, custom, foreign law, foreign authority, prescription or any
-other thing or things to the contrary hereof notwithstanding.
-
-
-
-
-LETTERS OF HENRY VIII. TO ANNE BOLEYN.
-
-CIRC. 1534.
-
-+Source.+--_Henry VIII. Lettres a Anne Boleyn._ Crapelet, Paris.
-
-
-Letter XII.
-
-There came to me in the night the most afflicting news possible. For I
-have reason to grieve upon three accounts. First, because I heard of
-the sickness of my mistress, whom I esteem more than all the world,
-whose health I desire as much as my own, and the half of whose
-sickness I would willingly bear to have her cured. Secondly, because I
-fear I shall suffer yet longer that tedious absence, which has
-hitherto given me all possible uneasiness, and, as far as I can judge,
-is like to give me more. I pray God he would deliver me from so
-troublesome a tormentor. The third reason is, because the Physician,
-in whom I trust most, is absent at present, when he could do me the
-greatest pleasure. For I should hope by him and his means, to obtain
-one of my principal joys in this world, that is my mistress cured;
-however, in default of him, I send you the second, and the only one
-left, praying God that he may soon make you well, and then I shall
-love Him more than ever. I beseech you to be governed by his advices
-with relation to your illness; by your doing which, I hope shortly to
-see you again, which will be to me a greater cordial than all precious
-stones in the world. Written by the Secretary who is, and always will
-be,
-
- H. (AB) Rex.
-
-
-
-
-THE SWEATING SICKNESS.
-
-+Source.+--_Henry VIII. Lettres a Anne Boleyn._ Crapelet, Paris.
-
-
-Letter XIII.
-
-Since your last letters, mine own darling, Walter Welsh, Master Brown,
-John Case, John Cork the pothecary be fallen of the sweat in this
-house, and, thanked be God, all well recovered, so that as yet the
-plague is not fully ceased here; but I trust shortly it shall. By the
-mercy of God the rest of us yet be well, and I trust shall pass it,
-either not to have it, or at the least as easily as the rest have
-done.... As touching your abode at Herne, do therein as best shall
-like you; for you know best what air does best with you; but I would
-it were come thereto (if it pleased God), that neither of us need care
-for that; for I ensure you I think it long. Suche is fallen sick of
-the sweat; and therefore I send you this bearer, because I think you
-long to hear tidings from us, as we do likewise from you. Written with
-the hand _de votre seul_.
-
- H. Rex.
-
-
-
-
-QUEEN ANN BOLEYN TO KING HENRY, FROM THE TOWER, MAY 6 (1536).
-
-+Source.+--From Appendix to Burnet's _History of the Reformation_,
-Vol. I., p. 154.
-
-
- SIR,
-
-Your Grace's displeasure, and my imprisonment, are things so strange
-unto me, as what to write, or what to excuse I am altogether ignorant.
-Whereas you send unto me (willing me to confess in truth, and so to
-obtain your favour), by such a one whom you know to be my ancient
-professed enemy; I no sooner receive this message, than I rightly
-conceive your meaning: and, if as you say, confessing a truth indeed
-may procure my safety, I shall with all willingness and duty perform
-your command. But let not your Grace ever imgaine that your poor wife
-will ever be brought to acknowledge a fault, when not so much as a
-thought ever proceeded: and to speak a truth, never Prince had wife
-more loyal in all duty, and in all true affection, than you have ever
-found in Anne Bullen; with which name and place I could willingly have
-contented myself, if God and your Grace's pleasure had so been
-pleased. Neither did I at any time forget myself in my Exaltation, or
-received queenship, but that I always looked for such an alteration as
-now I find, the ground of my preferment being on no surer foundation
-than your Grace's fancy, the least alteration whereof, I knew, was fit
-and sufficient to draw that fancy to some other subject.
-
-You have chosen me from a low estate to be your Queen and Companion,
-far beyond my desert or my desire: if then you find me worthy of such
-Honour, Good your Grace, let not any light fancy, or bad counsel of my
-enemies, withdraw your princely favour from me; neither let that
-stain, that unworthy stain of a disloyal heart towards your Good
-Grace, ere cast so foul a blot on your most dutiful wife, and the
-infant princess your daughter. Try me, good king, but let me have a
-lawful trial; and let not my sworn enemies sit as my accusers and
-judge, yea, let me receive an open trial, for my truths shall fear no
-open shames; then shall you see, either my innocency cleared, your
-suspicion and conscience satisfied, the ignominy and slander of the
-world stopped, or my guilt openly declared: so that whatsoever God or
-you may determine of me, your Grace is at liberty, both before God and
-Man, not only to execute worthy punishment on me as an unfaithful
-wife, but to follow your affection, already settled on that party for
-whose sake I now am as I am, whose name I could some while since have
-pointed to, your grace not being ignorant of my suspicion therein. But
-if you have already determined of me, and that not only my death, but
-an infamous slander must bring you the enjoying of a desired
-Happiness: then I desire of God, that he will pardon your great sin
-herein, and likewise my enemies, the instruments thereof; and that he
-will not call you to a strict account for your unprincely and cruel
-usage of me, at his general judgement-seat, where both you and myself
-must shortly appear, and in whose just judgement, I doubt not,
-whatsoever the world may think of me, my innocency shall be openly
-known, and sufficiently cleared.
-
-My last and only request shall be, that myself may bear the burden of
-your Grace's displeasure and it may not touch the innocent souls of
-those poor Gentlemen, who, as I understand, are in strait imprisonment
-for my sake. If ever I have found favour in your sight, if ever the
-name of Ann Bullen hath been pleasing in your ears, let me obtain this
-last request, I will so leave to trouble your Grace any further, with
-my earnest prayers to the Trinity, to have your Grace in his good
-keeping, and to direct you in all your actions.
-
- Your most loyal and faithful wife,
- ANN BULLEN.
-
- From my doleful prison in the Tower,
- The sixth of May, 1536.
-
-
-
-
-ACT FOR THE DISSOLUTION OF THE LESSER MONASTERIES (1536).
-
-+Source.+--27 Henry VII. cap. 28. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 575.)
-
-
-Forasmuch as manifest sin, vicious, carnal and abominable living is
-daily used and committed among the little and small abbeys, priories,
-and other religious houses of monks, canons, and nuns, where the
-congregation of such religious persons is under the number of twelve
-persons, whereby the governors of such religious houses, and their
-convent, spoil, destroy, consume, and utterly waste, as well their
-churches, monasteries, priories, principal houses, farms, granges,
-lands, tenements, and hereditaments, as the ornaments of their
-churches, and their goods and chattels, to the high displeasure of
-Almighty God, slander of good religion, and to the great infamy of the
-King's highness and the realm, if redress should not be had thereof.
-And albeit that many continual visitations hath been heretofore had,
-by the space of two hundred years and more, for an honest and
-charitable reformation of such unthrifty carnal and abominable living,
-yet nevertheless little or none amendment hath been hitherto had, but
-their vicious living shamelessly increases and augments, and by a
-cursed custom so rooted and infested, that a great multitude of the
-religious persons in such small houses do rather choose to rove abroad
-in apostasy, than to conform themselves to the observation of good
-religion, so that without such small houses be utterly suppressed, and
-the religious persons therein committed to great and honourable
-monasteries of religion in this realm, where they may be compelled to
-live religiously for reformation of their lives, there cannot else be
-no reformation in this behalf:
-
-In consideration whereof the king's most royal majesty, being supreme
-head on earth, under God, of the Church of England, daily finding and
-devising the increase, advancement and exaltation of true doctrine and
-virtue in the said Church, to the glory and honour of God, and the
-total extirping and destruction of vice and sin, having knowledge that
-the premises be true, as well by the accounts of his late visitations,
-as by sundry credible informations, considering also that divers and
-great solemn monasteries of this realm, wherein (thanks be to God)
-religion is right well kept and observed, be destitute of such full
-numbers of religious persons, as they ought and may keep--has thought
-good that a plain declaration should be made of the premises, as well
-to the Lords spiritual and temporal, as to other his loving subjects,
-the Commons, in this present Parliament assembled: whereupon the said
-Lords and Commons, by a great deliberation, finally be resolved, that
-it is, and shall be much more to the pleasure of Almighty God, and for
-the honour of this his realm, that the possessions of such small
-religious houses; now being spent, spoiled and wasted for increase and
-maintenance of sin, should be used and converted to better uses, and
-the unthrifty religious persons, so spending the same, to be compelled
-to reform their lives: and thereupon most humbly desire the king's
-highness, that it may be enacted by authority of this present
-Parliament, that his majesty shall have and enjoy to him and his heirs
-for ever, all and singular such monasteries, priories, and other
-religious houses of monks, canons and nuns, of what kinds of
-diversities of habits, rules, or orders soever they be called or
-named, which have not in lands, tenements, rents, tithes, portions,
-and other hereditaments above the clear yearly value of two hundred
-pounds.
-
-
-
-
-SUPPRESSION OF THE MONASTERY OF TEWKESBURY (1536).
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_. 1st Part;
-_Collection of Records_, Book III. 3, Sec. V. "Copied from a book that
-is in the Augmentation Office," 1536.
-
-
-COUNTY: GLOUCESTER.
-
- {Surrender to the use of the King's Majesty and of
- {his Heirs and Successors for ever made bearing date
- Tewkesbury {under the Covent-Seal[47] of the same late monastery,
- late {the 9th day of January, in the 31st year of the reign
- Monastery. {of our most dread victorious Sovereign Lord, King Henry
- {the Eighth: and the said day and year clearly dissolved
- {and suppressed.
-
- The clear yearly {As well Spiritual as Temporal, over and
- value of all the {besides L136 8s. 1d. in Fees, Annuities and
- said possessions {Custodies, granted to divers persons by Letters
- belonging to the {Patents under the Covent-Seal of the said late
- Monastery {Monastery for term of their lives L1595 15 6
-
- { L s. d.
- {John Wich, late Abbot there 266 13 04
- {John Beley, late Prior there 16 00 00
- Pensions {J. Bromsegrove, late Prior of Delehurst 13 06 08
- assigned to the {Robert Circester, Prior of St. James 13 06 08
- late Religious {Will Didcote, Prior of Cranborne 10 00 00
- dispatched: {Robert Cheltenham, B.D. 10 00 00
- that is to say, {Two Monks, L8 a piece 16 00 00
- to {One Monk 07 00 00
- {27 Monks L6 13s. 6d. each 180 00 00
- { L s. d.
- { And so remains clear 1044 08 10
-
- { {Remain in the Treasury there under
- Records {Belonging to {the custody of John Whittington,
- and {the late {Kt. the keys thereof being delivered
- Evidences {Monastery {to Richard Pauler, Receiver.
-
- {The Lodging called the Newark, }
- {leading from the Gate to the late }
- {Abbots lodging, with Buttery, }
- {Pantry, Cellar, Kitchen, Larder }
- {and Pastry thereto adjoining. The }
- {late Abbots Lodging, the Hostery,[48]}
- Houses and {the Great Gate entering into the } Committed
- Buildings {Court, with the lodging over the } to the custody
- assigned to {same; the Abbots Stable, Bakehouse, } of John
- remain {Brewhouse and Slaughterhouse, } Whittington,
- undefaced. {the Almry, Barn, Dairyhouse, } Knight.
- {the great barn next the }
- {Avon, the Maltinghouse, with the }
- {garners in the same, the Oxhouse }
- {in the Barton,[49] the Barton Gate, }
- {and the lodging over the same. }
-
- {The Church, with Chappels, Cloisters,}
- {Chapterhouse, Misericord, the }
- {two Dormitories, Infirmary with }
- {Chappels and Lodgings within the }
- {same; the workhouse, with another }
- Deemed {House adjoining to the same, } Committed
- to be {the Convent Kitchen, the Library, } as
- superfluous. {the old Hostery, the chamberer's } abovesaid.
- {Lodging, the new Hall, the old }
- {Parlour adjoining to the Abbots }
- {lodging; the Cellarers Lodging, the }
- {Poultry-House, the Garden, the }
- {Almary, and all other Houses and }
- {lodgings not above reserved. }
-
- {The Quire, Aisles, and Chapels }
- Leads[52] {annext the Cloister Chapterhouse, }
- remaining {Frater,[50] St. Michaels Chappel, } 180 Foder.[51]
- upon {Halls, Fermory, and Gate-house, }
- {esteemed to }
-
- Bells {In the steeple there are eight poize,} 14600
- remaining {by estimation } weight.
-
- Jewels { }
- reserved to {Mitres garnished with gilt, rugged }
- the use of {Pearls, and counterfeit stones. }
- the King's { }
- Majesty. { }
-
- Plate of silver {Silver gilt 329 ounces.}
- reserved to {Silver parcel gilt 605 ounces.} 1431.
- the same use. {Silver white 497 ounces.}
-
- {One cope of Silver Tissue, with one }
- Ornaments {Chasuble, and one Tunicle of the }
- reserved to {same; one cope of gold Tissue, }
- the said use. {with one Cope and two Tunicles of }
- {the same. }
-
- Sum of all the { }
- Ornaments, {Sold by the said Commissioners, as }
- Goods, and {in a Particular Book of Sales } L s. d.
- Chattels {thereof made ready to be shewed, } 194 08 0
- belonging to {as more at large may appear. }
- the said { }
- Monastery. { }
-
- {To 38 late Religious Persons }
- {of the said late Monastery } L s. d.
- { to the late {of the King's mat. (Majesty) } 80 13 4
- Payments {Religious and {reward }
- { Servants { }
- { despatched. {To an 144 late Servants of } L s. d.
- {the said late Monastery, for } 75 10 0
- {their wages and liveries. }
-
- {To divers Persons for }
- {Victuals and Necessaries of }
- {them had to the use of the }
- {said Monastery, with L10 paid}
- { For debts {to the late Abbot there, for }
- Payments { owing by the {and in full payment of } L s. d.
- { said late {L124 5s. 4d. by him to be } 18 12 0
- { Monastery. {paid to certain Creditors of }
- {the said late Monastery, by }
- {Covenants made with the }
- {aforesaid Commissioners. }
-
-And so remains clear L19 12 08
-
-Then follows a list of some small Debts owing to and by the
-said Monastery.
-
-Then follows a list of the Livings in their Gift.
-
- County of Glouc. Four Parsonages and 10 vicarages.
-
- County of Worcest. Two Parsonages and 2 vicarages.
-
- County of War. Two Parsonages.
-
- County of Will. (_sic_),} Five Parsonages and 1 vicarage.
- Bristol. }
-
- County of Wilts. 00 2 vicarages.
-
- County of Oxon. One Parsonage and 2 vicarages.
-
- County of Dorset. Four Parsonages and 2 vicarages.
-
- County of Sommers. Three Parsonages.
-
- County of Devon. 00 1 vicarage.
-
- County of Cornwall. 00 2 vicarages.
-
- County of Glamorgan } 00 5 vicarages.
- and Morgan. }
-
-In all, 21 Parsonages and 27 vicarages.
-
-[Footnote 47: Covent = convent; cf. Covent Garden.]
-
-[Footnote 48: = Hostelry, _i.e._ the Guest House.]
-
-[Footnote 49: = Farmyard.]
-
-[Footnote 50: = The Refectory.]
-
-[Footnote 51: = A measure of lead, etc., about one ton.]
-
-[Footnote 52: _i.e._ the lead with which the roofing was covered.]
-
-
-
-
-THE INSURRECTION IN LINCOLNSHIRE (1537).
-
-+Source.+--Edward Hall's _Life of Henry VIII_. (1547).
-
-
-In the time of this Parliament, the bishops and all the clergy of the
-realm held a solemn convocation at Paules Church in London, where
-after much disputation and debating of matters they published a book
-of religion entitled, "Articles devised by the King's Highness, etc."
-In this book is specially mentioned but three sacraments, with the
-which the Lincolnshiremen (I mean their ignorant priests) were
-offended, and of that occasion deproved the king's doings. And this
-was the first beginning, as after ye shall plainly hear.
-
-After this book, which passed by the king's authority with the consent
-of the Clergy, was published, the which contained certain articles of
-religion necessary to be taught unto the people, and among other it
-specially treated of no more than three sacraments, and beside this
-book, certain injunction were that time given whereby a number of
-their holidays were abrogated and especially such as fell in the
-harvest time, the keeping of which was much to the hindrance of the
-gathering in of corn, hay, fruit, and other such like necessary and
-profitable commodities.
-
-These articles thus ordained and to the people delivered. The
-inhabitants of the north parts being at that time very ignorant and
-rude, knowing not what true religion meant, but altogether noseled in
-superstition and popery, and also by the means of certain abbotts and
-ignorant priests, not a little stirred and provoked for the
-suppression of certain monasteries, and for the extirpation and
-abolishment of the bishop of Rome, now taking an occasion at this
-book, saying "See, friends, now is taken from us four of the vii
-Sacraments and shortly ye shall lose the other three also, and thus
-the faith of the Holy Church shall utterly be suppressed and
-abolished": and therefore they suddenly spread abroad and raised great
-and shameful slanders only to move the people to sedition and
-rebellion, and to kindle in the people hateful and malicious minds
-against the King's Majesty and the Magistrates of the realm, saying,
-Let no folly bind ourselves to the maintenance of religion, and rather
-than to suffer it thus to decay, even to die in the field. And amongst
-them also were too many even of the nobility, that did not a little to
-provoke and stir up the ignorant and rude people the more stiffly to
-rebel and stand therein, faithfully promising them, both aid and
-succour against the King and their own native country (like foolish
-and wicked men) thinking by their so doing to have done God high
-pleasure and service. There were also certain other malicious and busy
-persons who added oil (as the adage says) to the furnace. These made
-open clamours in every place where opportunity served, that Christian
-religion should be utterly violate, despised and set aside, and that
-rather than so it behoved and was the parts of every true and
-Christian man to defend it even to the death, and not to admit and
-suffer by any means the faith (in which their forefathers so long and
-so many thousand years have lived and continued) now to be subverted
-and destroyed. Among these were many priests which deceived also the
-people with many false fables and venomous lies and imaginations
-(which could never enter nor take place in the heart of any good man,
-nor faithful subject), saying that all manner of prayer and fasting
-and all God's service should utterly be destroyed and taken away, that
-no man should marry a wife or be partaker of the Sacraments, or at
-length should eat a piece of roast meat, but he should for the same
-first pay unto the king a certain sum of money, and that they should
-be brought in more bondage and in a more wicked manner of life, than
-the Saracens be under the great Turk.... And at the last they in
-writing made certain petitions to the King's Majesty, professing that
-they never intended hurt toward his royal person. The King's Majesty
-received those petitions and made answer to them as followeth:
-
-First, we begin and make answer to the four and six articles, because
-upon them dependeth much of the rest. Concerning choosing of
-councillors, I never have read, heard, or known, that princes'
-councillors and prelates should be appointed by rude and ignorant
-common people, nor that they were persons meet, nor of liability to
-discern and choose meet and sufficient councillors for a prince: how
-presumptuous then are ye the rude commons of one shire, and that one
-of the most brute and beastly of the whole realm, and of the least
-experience, to find fault with your Prince for the electing of his
-councillors and prelates, and to take upon you contrary to God's law
-and man's law to rule your prince, whom ye are bound by all laws to
-obey and serve with both your lives, lands, and all goods, and for no
-worldly cause to withstand the contrary whereof you like traitors and
-rebels have attempted, and not like true subjects as ye name
-yourselves.
-
-As to the suppression of religious houses, monasteries, we will that
-ye and all our subjects should well know that this is granted us by
-all the nobles spiritual and temporal of this our Realm, and by all
-the Commons in the same by Act of Parliament, and not set forth by any
-councillor or councillors upon their mere will and phantasy, as ye
-full falsely would persuade our realm to believe.
-
-And when ye allege that the service of God is much diminished, the
-truth thereof is contrary, for there be no houses suppressed where God
-was well served, but where most vice, mischief, and abomination of
-living was used, and that doth well appear by their own confessions
-subscribed with their own hands in the time of their visitations, and
-yet we suffered a great many of them (more than we needed by the Act)
-to stand, wherein if they amend not their living, or fear, we have
-more to answer for than for the suppression of all the rest. And as
-for the hospitality for the relief of the poor, we wonder that ye be
-not ashamed to affirm that they have been a great relief of poor
-people, when a great many or the most part hath not past four or five
-religious persons in them, and divers but one which spent the
-substance of the goods of their houses in nourishing of vice and
-abominable living. Now what unkindness and unnaturality may be impute
-to you and all our subjects that be of that mind, that had liefer such
-an unthrifty sort of vicious persons, should enjoy such possessions,
-profits and enrolments, as grow of the said houses, to the maintenance
-of their unthrifty life, than he your natural prince, Sovereign lord
-and king, which doth and hath spent more in your defences of your own,
-than six times they be worth. As touching the act of uses, we marvel
-what madness is in your brain, or upon what ground ye would take
-authority upon you to cause us to break those laws and statutes by
-which all the noble knights and gentlemen of this realm (whom the same
-chiefly toucheth) hath been granted and assented to: seeing in no
-manner it toucheth you the base commons of our realm.
-
-As touching the sixteenth,[53] which ye demand of us to be released,
-think ye that we be so faint hearted, that perforce ye of one shire
-(were ye a great many more) could compel us with your insurrections
-and such rebellious demeanour to remit the same? or think ye that any
-man will or may take you to be true subjects, that first make and shew
-a loving grant and then perforce would compel your sovereign lord and
-king to release the same? the time of payment whereof is not yet come,
-yea and seeing the same will not countrevayl[54] the tenth penny of
-the charges, which we do and daily sustain for your tuition and
-safeguard: make you sure, by your occasions of these your
-ingratitudes, unnaturalness and unkindness to us now administered, ye
-give no cause, which hath always been as much dedicate to your wealth
-as ever was king, not so much to set or study for the setting forward
-of the same, seeing how unkindly and untruly, ye deal now with us,
-without any cause or occasion: and doubt ye not, though you have no
-grace nor naturalness in you to consider your duty of allegiance to
-your king, and sovereign lord, the rest of our realm we doubt not
-hath: and we and they shall so look on this cause, that we trust it
-shall be to your confusion, if according to your former letters you
-submit not yourselves.
-
-Wherefore we charge you eftsoons upon the foresaid bonds and pains,
-that ye withdraw yourselves to your own houses, every man, and no more
-to assemble contrary to our laws, and your allegiances, and to cause
-the provokers of you to this mischief, to be delivered to our
-lieutenants' hands, or ours, and you yourselves to submit you to such
-condign punishment as we and our nobles shall think you worthy: for
-doubt you not else that we and our nobles can nor will suffer this
-injury at your hands unavenged, if ye give not place to us of
-sovreignty, and shew yourselves as bounden and obedient subjects and
-no more to intermeddle yourselves from henceforth with the weighty
-affairs of the realm, the direction whereof only appertaineth to us
-your king and such noblemen and councillors, as we lyst to elect and
-choose to have the ordering of the same: and thus we pray unto
-Almighty God, to give you grace to do your duties, to use yourselves
-towards us like true and faithful subjects, so that we may have cause
-to order you thereafter, and rather obediently to consent amongst you
-to deliver into the hands of our lieutenant a hundred persons, to be
-ordered according to their demerits, at our will and pleasure, than by
-your obstinacy and wilfulness, to put yourselves, your wives,
-children, lands, goods and cattles, beside the indignation of God, in
-the utter adventure of total destruction, and utter ruin, by force and
-violence of the sword.
-
-After the Lincolnshire men had received this the King's answer
-aforesaid, made to their petitions, each mistrusting the other who
-should be noted to be the greatest meddler, even very suddenly they
-began to shrink and out of hand they were all divided, and every man
-at home in his own house in peace: but the captains of these rebels
-escaped not all clear, but were after apprehended, and had as they
-deserved: he that took upon him as captain of this rout, named himself
-Captain Cobles, but it was a monk called Doctor Macherel, with divers
-other which afterward were taken and apprehended.
-
- NOTE.--Within six days a new insurrection broke out in the north,
- known as the Pilgrimage of Grace. The objects of these insurgents
- were as follows: "the maintenance and defence of the faith of Christ,
- and deliverance of Holy Church sore decayed and oppressed, and also
- for the furtherance as well of private as public matters in the realm
- touching the wealth of all the king's poor subjects" (Hall ii., 275).
-
- An army was sent to restore order, but they were prevented from
- reaching the rebels by a river, which suddenly overflowed its banks
- and was considered by the people to be a miracle. On the following
- day the King granted a pardon to all concerned, and the rebellion
- came to an end.
-
-[Footnote 53: = a tax of 1/16th of the assessed value of property.]
-
-[Footnote 54: = balance.]
-
-
-
-
-INJUNCTIONS TO THE CLERGY MADE BY CROMWELL (1538).
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_; _Collection of Records_,
-Part I., Book III. xi.
-
-
-First: That ye shall truly observe and keep all and singular the
-King's Highness' Injunctions, given unto you heretofore in my name, by
-his Grace's Authority; not only upon the pains therein expressed, but
-also in your default after this second monition continued, upon
-further punishment to be straitly extended towards you by the King's
-Highness' Arbitriment, or his Vice-Gerent aforesaid.
-
-Item: That ye shall provide on this side the Feast of [words omitted]
-next coming, one Book of the whole Bible of the largest volume in
-English, and the same set up in some convenient place within the said
-Church that ye have use of, whereas your Parishoners may most
-commodiously resort to the same and read it; the charge of which Book
-shall be ratably born between you, the Parson, and the Parishoners
-aforesaid, that is to say the one half by you, and the other half by
-them.
-
-Item: That ye shall discourage no man privily or apertly from the
-reading or hearing of the said Bible, but shall expressly provoke,
-stir, and exhort every person to read the same, as that which is the
-very lively word of God, that every Christian man is bound to embrace,
-believe, and follow, if he look to be saved: admonishing them
-nevertheless to avoid all contention, altercation therein, and to use
-an honest sobriety in the inquisition of the true sense of the same,
-and refer the explication of the obscure places to men of higher
-judgement in Scripture.
-
-Item: That ye shall every Sunday and Holy Day through the year openly
-and plainly recite to your Parishoners, twice or thrice together or
-oftener, if need require, one particle or sentence of the Pater
-Noster, or creed in English, to the intent that they may learn the
-same by heart. And so from day to day, to give them one little lesson
-or sentence of the same, till they have learned the whole Pater Noster
-and creed in English by rote. And as they be taught every sentence of
-the same by rote, ye shall expound and declare the understanding of
-the same unto them, exhorting all parents and householders to teach
-their children and servants the same, as they are bound in conscience
-to do. And that done, ye shall declare unto them the Ten Commandments,
-one by one, every Sunday and Holy-day, till they be likewise perfect
-in the same.
-
-Item: That ye shall in Confessions every Lent examine every Person
-that cometh to Confession unto you, whether they can recite the
-Articles of our Faith, and the Pater Noster in English, and hear them
-say the same particularly; wherein if they be not perfect, ye shall
-declare to the same, that every Christian person ought to know the
-same before They should receive the blessed Sacrament of the Altar;
-and monish them to learn the same more perfectly by the next year
-following, or else, like as they ought not to presume to come to God's
-Board without perfect knowledge of the same, and if they do, it is to
-the great peril of their souls; so ye shall declare unto them, that ye
-look for other injunctions from the King's Highness by that time, to
-stay and repel all such from God's Board as shall be found ignorant in
-the Premisses; whereof ye do thus admonish them, to the intent they
-should both eschew the peril of their Souls, and also the worldly
-rebuke that they might incur after by the same.
-
-Item: That ye shall make, or cause to be made, in the said Church, and
-any other Cure ye have, one sermon every quarter of the year at least,
-wherein ye shall purely and sincerely declare the very Gospel of
-Christ, and in the same exhort your hearers to the Works of Charity,
-Mercy, and Faith, especially prescribed and commanded in Scripture,
-and not to repose their trust or affiance in any other works devised
-by men's fantasies besides Scripture; as in wandering to Pilgrimages,
-offering of Money, Candles, or Tapers, to Images, or Reliques; or
-kissing or licking the same over, saying over a number of Beads, not
-understanded or minded on, or in such like superstition: for the doing
-whereof, ye not only have no promise or reward in Scripture, but
-contrariwise great threats and maledictions of God, as things tending
-to idolatry and superstition, which of all other offences God Almighty
-doth most detest and abhor, for that same diminisheth most of his
-honour and glory.
-
-Item: That such feigned Images as ye know in any of Cures to be so
-abused with Pilgrimages or offerings of anything made thereunto, ye
-shall, for avoiding the most detestable offence of idolatry, forthwith
-take down, and without delay; and shall suffer from henceforth no
-Candles, Tapers, or Images of wax to be set afore any Image or
-Picture, but only the Light that commonly goeth across the church by
-the Rood-Loft, the Light before the Sacrament of the Altar, and the
-Light about the Sepulchre; which for the adorning of the Church and
-Divine Service ye shall suffer to remain: still admonishing your
-Parishoners, that images serve for none other purpose, but as to be
-books of unlearned men, that ken no letters, whereby they might be
-otherwised admonished of the lives and conversation of them that the
-said images do represent: which images if they abuse, for any other
-intent than for such remembrances, they commit idolatry in the same,
-to the great danger of their souls: And therefore the King's Highness
-graciously tendering the weal of his Subjects' Souls, hath in part
-already, and more will hereafter, travail for the abolishing of such
-images as might be an occasion of so great an offence to God, and so
-great a danger to the Souls of his loving subjects.
-
-Item: That you, and every Parson, Vicar or Curate within this Diocese,
-shall for every Church keep one Book or Register, wherein he shall
-write the day and year of every Wedding, Christening, and Burying,
-made within your parish for your time, and so every man succeeding you
-likewise; and also there insert every persons name that shall be so
-wedded, christened, and buried; and for the safe keeping of the same
-book the Parish shall be bound to provide, of their Common Charges,
-one sure Coffer with two Locks and Keys, whereof the one to remain
-with you, and the other with the Wardens of every such Parish wherein
-the said Book shall be laid up: which book ye shall every Sunday take
-forth, and in the presence of the said Wardens or one of them write a
-record in the same, all the Weddings, Christenings, and Buryings made
-the whole week afore; and that done to lay up the book in the said
-Coffer as afore. And for every time that the same be omitted, the
-party that shall be in the fault thereof, shall forfeit to the said
-Church 3s. 4d. to be employed on the reparation of the said Church.
-
-Item: That no person shall from henceforth alter or change the order
-and manner of any Fasting-day that is commanded and indicted by the
-Church, nor of any Prayer or of Divine Service, otherwise than is
-specified in the said Injunctions, until such time as the same shall
-be so ordered and transported by the King's Highness' Authority. The
-Eves of such saints whose Holy-days be abrogated be only excepted,
-which shall be declared henceforth to be no Fasting-days; excepted
-also the Commemoration of Thomas Becket, sometime Archbishop of
-Canterbury, which shall be clean omitted, and in the stead thereof the
-Ferial[55] Service used.
-
-Item: Where in times past men have used in divers places in their
-Processions, to sing _Ora pro nobis_ to so many saints, that they had
-no time to sing the good Suffrages following, as _Pace nobis Domine_
-and _Libera nos Domine_, it must be taught and preached, that better
-it were to omit _Ora pro nobis_, and to sing the other Suffrages.
-
-All which and singular Injunctions I minister unto you and your
-Successors, by the King's Highness' Authority to be committed in this
-part, which I charge and command you by the same Authority to observe
-and keep upon pain of Deprivation, Sequestration of your Fruits or
-such other coercion as to the King's Highness, or his Vice-Gerent for
-the time being shall seem convenient.
-
-[Footnote 55: = festival.]
-
-
-
-
-ACT FOR THE DISSOLUTION OF THE GREATER MONASTERIES (1539).
-
-+Source.+--31 H. VIII. cap. 13. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 733.)
-
-
-Where divers and sundry abbots, priors, abbesses, prioresses, and
-other ecclesiastical governors and governesses of divers monasteries,
-abbacies, priories, nunneries, colleges, hospitals, houses of friars,
-and other ecclesiastical and religious houses and places within this
-our sovereign lord the king's realm of England and Wales, of their own
-free and voluntary minds, good wills and assents, without constraint,
-coercion or compulsion of any manner of person or persons, since the
-fourth day of February, the twenty-seventh year of the reign of our
-now most dread sovereign lord, by the due order and course of the
-common laws of this realm of England, and by their sufficient writings
-of record, under their convent and common seals, have severally given,
-granted and by the same their writings severally confirmed all their
-said monasteries, abbacies, priories, nunneries, colleges, hospitals,
-houses of friars, and other religious and ecclesiastical houses and
-places and all their sites, circuits and precincts of the same, and
-all and singular their manors, lordships, granges, manses ...
-appertaining or in any wise belonging to any such monastery, abbacy,
-priory, etc. ... by whatsoever name or corporation they or any of them
-be called, and of what order, habit, religion, or other kind or
-quality soever they or any of them then were reputed, known or taken;
-to have and to hold all the said monasteries, abbacies, priories ...
-etc. to our said sovereign lord, his heirs and successors for ever and
-the same said monasteries ... etc. voluntarily, as is aforesaid, have
-renounced, left, and forsaken, and every of them has renounced, left,
-and forsaken.
-
-
-
-
-THE SIX ARTICLES ACT (1539).
-
-+Source.+--31 Henry VIII. cap. 14. (_Statutes of the Realm_, III. 739.)
-
-
-... And forasmuch as in the said Parliament, synod, and Convocation,
-there were certain Articles, matters, and questions proposed and set
-for the teaching Christian religion, that is to say:
-
-First, whether in the most blessed Sacrament of the Altar remaineth,
-after the consecration, the substance of bread and wine, or no.
-
-Secondly, whether it be necessary by God's law that all men should
-communicate with both kinds or no.
-
-Thirdly, whether priests, that is to say, men dedicate to God by
-priesthood, may, by the law of God, marry after or no.
-
-Fourthly, whether vow of chastity or widowhood, made to God advisedly
-by man or woman, be, by the law of God, to be observed, or no.
-
-Fifthly, whether private masses stand with the law of God, and be to
-be used and continued in the Church and congregation of England, as
-things whereby good Christian people may and do receive both godly
-consolation and wholesome benefits or no.
-
-Sixthly, whether auricular confession is necessary to be retained,
-continued, used and frequented in the Church or no.
-
-The King's most royal Majesty, most prudently providing and
-considering, that by occasion of variable sundry opinions and
-judgements of the said Articles, great discord and variance has
-arisen, as well amongst the clergy of this his realm, as amongst a
-great number of vulgar people, his loving subjects of the same, and
-bring in a full hope and trust, that a full and perfect resolution of
-the said Articles, should make a perfect concord and unity generally
-amongst all his loving and obedient subjects, of his most excellent
-goodness, not only commanded that the said articles should be
-deliberately and advisedly, by his said archbishops, bishops, and
-other learned men of his clergy, be debated, argued, and reasoned, and
-their opinions therein to be understood, declared, and known, but also
-most graciously vouchsafed, in his own princely person, to descend and
-come into his said High Court of Parliament and council, and there,
-like a prince of most high prudence and no less learning, opened and
-declared, many things of high learning and great knowledge, touching
-the said Articles, matters, and questions, for a unity to be had in
-the same; whereupon after a great and long, deliberate, and advised
-disputation and consultation, had and made concerning the said
-Articles, as well by the consent of the king's highness, as by the
-assent of the lords spiritual and temporal, and other learned men of
-the clergy in their Convocation, and by the consent of the Commons in
-this present Parliament assembled, it was and is finally resolved,
-accorded, and agreed in manner and form following, that is to say:
-
-First, that in the most blessed Sacrament of the Altar, by the
-strength and efficacy of Christ's mighty word (it being spoken by the
-priest), is present really, under the form of bread and wine, the
-natural body and blood of our Saviour Jesus Christ, conceived of the
-Virgin Mary; and that after the consecration there remaineth no
-substance of bread or wine, nor any other substances, but the
-substance of Christ, God and man.
-
-Secondly, that Communion in both kinds is not necessary _ad salutem_,
-by the law of God, to all persons; and that it is to be believed, and
-not doubted of, but that in the flesh, under the form of bread, is the
-very blood; and with the blood, under the form of wine, is the very
-flesh; as well apart, as though they were both together.
-
-Thirdly, that priests after the order of priesthood received, as
-afore, may not marry, by the law of God.
-
-Fourthly, that vows of chastity or widowhood, by man or woman made to
-God advisedly, ought to be observed by the law of God; and that it
-exempts them from the liberties of Christian people, ordering
-themselves accordingly, to receive both godly and goodly consolations
-and benefits; and it is agreable also to God's law.
-
- * * * * * * *
-
-Sixthly, that auricular confession is expedient and necessary to be
-retained and continued, used and frequented in the Church of God.
-
-
-
-
-HENRY VIII. AND SPORT (1539).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, 556, 557; Edward Hall, _Henry VIII_.
-
-
-This year the plague was great and reigned in divers parts of this
-realm. The king kept his Christmas at Richmond. The twelfth of January
-divers gentlemen prepared to just, and the king and one of his privy
-chamber called William Compton secretly armed themselves in the little
-park of Richmond and so came into the justs, unknown to all persons.
-The king never ran openly before and did exceeding well. Master
-Compton chanced to be so sore hurt by Edward Nevill Esquire, brother
-to the Lord of Abergavenny, so that he was like to have died. One
-person there was that knew the king and cried: "God Save the King" and
-with that all the people were astonished, and then the king discovered
-himself to the great comfort of the people. The king soon after came
-to Westminster and there kept his Shrovetide with great banquetings,
-dancings and other jolly pastimes.
-
-In this year also came ambassadors, not only from the King of Aragon
-and Castile, but also from the Kings of France, Denmark, Scotland and
-other places, which were highly welcomed and nobly entertained. It
-happened on a day that there were certain noble men made a wager to
-run at the ring and parties were taken, and which party attained or
-took away the ring oftenest with certain courses, should win the
-wager. Whereof the King's Grace hearing, offered to be on the one
-party with six companions. The ambassadors hearing thereof, were much
-desirous to see this wager tried, and specially the ambassadors of
-Spain, who had never seen the king in harness. At the day appointed
-the king was mounted on a goodly courser, trapped in a purple velvet
-coat, the inner side thereof was wrought with flat gold of damask in
-the stool, and the velvet on the other side cut in letters, so that
-the gold appeared as though it had been embroidered with certain
-reasons[56] or posies. And on the velvet between the letters were
-fastened castles and sheafs of arrows of ducat gold with a garment,
-the sleeves compassed over his harness and his bases of the same work
-with a great plume of feathers on his head-piece that came down to the
-arson of his saddle and a great company of fresh gentlemen came in
-with his grace, richly armed and decked with many other right
-gorgeously apparelled, the trumpet before them goodly to behold,
-whereof many strangers (but specially the Spaniards) much rejoiced,
-for they had never seen the king before that time armed.
-
-Now at his returning, many hearing of his going on Maying were
-desirous to see him shoot, for at that time his Grace shot as strong
-and as great a length as any of his guard. There came to his Grace a
-certain man with bow and arrows, and desired his Grace to take the
-muster of him and to see him shoot, for at that time his Grace was
-contented. The man put the one foot in his bosom, and so did shoot and
-shot a very good shot and well towards his mark, whereof, not only his
-Grace, but all other greatly marvelled. So the king gave him a reward
-for his so doing, which person afterwards, of the people and of them
-in court, was called Foot in Bosom. The same year in the feast of
-Pentecost, holden at Greenwich, that is to say the Thursday in the
-same week, his Grace with two other with him, challenged all comers to
-fight with them at the barriers with target and casting the spear of
-eight foot long; and that done, his Grace with the two said aids to
-fight every of them twelve strokes with two handed swords with and
-against all comers, none excepted being a gentleman; where the K.
-behaved himself so well and delivered himself so valiantly by his
-hardy prowess and great strength, that the praise and laud was given
-to his Grace and his aids, notwithstanding that divers and strong
-persons had assailed him and his aids.
-
-Now when the said progress was finished, his Grace, and the queen,
-with all their whole train, in the month of October following, removed
-to Greenwich. The king not minded to see young gentlemen unexpert in
-martial feats, caused a place to be prepared within the park of
-Greenwich, for the queen and the ladies to stand and see the fight
-with battle axes that should be done there, where the king himself
-armed, fought one Grot a gentleman of Almaine, a tall man and a good
-man of arms. And then after they had done, they marched always two and
-two together, and so did their feats and enterprises every man very
-well. Albeit, it happened the said Grot to fight with Sir Edward
-Howard, which Grot was by him stricken to the ground. The morrow after
-this enterprise done, the king with the queen came to the Tower of
-London. And to the intent that there should be no displeasure nor
-malice be born by any of those gentlemen, who fought with the axe
-against other, the king gave unto them a certain sum of gold valued at
-two hundred marks, to make a bank[57] among themselves withall. The
-which bank was made at Fishmongers Hall in Thames Street, where they
-all met to the number of four and twenty, all apparelled in one suit
-or livery, after Almaine fashion, that is to say, their outer garments
-all of yellow satin, yellow hose, yellow shoes, girdles and scabbards,
-and bonnets with yellow feathers; their garments and hose all cut and
-lined with white satin and their scabbards wound about with satin.
-After their bank ended they went by torchlight to the Tower and
-presented themselves before the king who took pleasure to behold them.
-
-_P._ 561. The king about this season was much given to play at tennis
-and at the dice, which appetite certain crafty persons about him
-perceiving, brought in Frenchmen and Lombards to make wagers with him
-and so lost much money, but when he perceived their craft, he eschewed
-their company and let them go.
-
-_P._ 562. ... Then began the trumpets to sound, and the horses to run,
-that many a spear was burst, and many a great stripe given, and for a
-truth the king exceedeth in number of staves all other every day of
-the three days.
-
-
-Edward Hall, _H. VIII_.
-
-The x day of March the king having a new harness made of his own
-device and fashion, such as no armour before that time had seen,
-thought to essay the same at the tilt, and appointed a Justes to serve
-him. On foot were appointed the Lord Marquis Dorset and the Earl of
-Surrey, the king came to the one end of the tilt, and the Duke of
-Suffolk to the other: then a gentleman said to the Duke, "Sir, the
-king is come to the tilt's end." "I see him not," said the Duke, "on
-my faith, for my head piece taketh away from me my sight": with these
-words God knoweth by what chance, the king had his spear delivered him
-by the Lord Marquis, the visor of his head piece being up and not down
-or fastened, so that his head was clean naked. Then the gentleman said
-to the duke, "Sir, the king cometh," then the duke set forward and
-charged his spear, and the king likewise unadvisedly set toward the
-duke: the people perceiving the king's face bare, cried, "Hold, hold,"
-the duke neither saw nor heard, and whether the king remembered that
-his visor was up or no, few can tell. Alas what sorrow was it to the
-people when they saw the splinters of the duke's spear strike on the
-king's head piece. For of a surety the duke struck the king on the
-brow right under the defence of the head-piece on the very coif scull
-or bassenet-piece[58] where unto the barbet[59] for power and defence
-is charneld, to which coif or bassenet never armourer taketh heed, for
-it is evermore covered with the visor, barbet and volant piece,[60]
-and so that piece is so defended that it forceth of no charge: But
-when the spear on that place lighted, it was great jeopardy of death,
-insomuch that the face was bare, for the duke's spear broke all to
-shivers, and bare the king's visor or barbet so far back by the
-counter buff that all the king's head-piece was full of splinters. The
-Armourers for this matter were much blamed, and so was the lord
-Marquis for the delivering of the spear when his face was open, but
-the king said that none was to blame but himself, for he intended to
-have saved himself and his sight. The duke incontinently unarmed him,
-and came to the king, shewing him the closeness of his sight, and
-swore that he would never run against the king more: But if the king
-had been a little hurt, the king's servants would have put the Duke in
-jeopardy. Then the king called his Armourers and put all his pieces
-together and then took a spear and ran six courses very well, by the
-which all men might perceive that he had no hurt, which was great joy
-and comfort to all his subjects there present.
-
-[Footnote 56: = mottoes.]
-
-[Footnote 57: = banquet.]
-
-[Footnote 58: = a close-fitting helmet.]
-
-[Footnote 59: = the lower part of the visor.]
-
-[Footnote 60: = a removable part of the helmet, which covered the throat.]
-
-
-
-
-THE ATTAINDER OF THOMAS CROMWELL (1540).
-
-+Source.+--Burnet's _History of the Reformation_, Part I., Book III.;
-_Collection of Records_, No. 16; from the _Parliament Rolls_, Act 60,
-32 H. VIII.
-
-
-Thomas Cromwell, now Earl of Essex, whom your Majesty took and
-received into your trusty service, the same Thomas then being a man of
-very base and low degree, and for singular Favour, Trust and
-Confidences which your Majesty bare and had in him, did not only erect
-and advance the same Thomas unto the state of an Earl, and enriched
-him with manifold gifts, as well of Goods, as of Lands and Offices,
-but also him, the said Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, did erect and
-make one of your most trusty Counsellors, as well concerning your
-Graces most supreme jurisdictions Ecclesiastical, as your most high
-secret affairs temporal. Nevertheless, your Majesty now of late hath
-found, and tried, by a large number of witnesses, being your faithful
-subjects and personages of great honour, worship and discretion, the
-said Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex contrary to the singular trust and
-confidence your Majesty had in him, to be the most false, and corrupt
-Traitor, Deceiver, and Circumventor against your most Royal Person,
-and the Imperial Crown of this your realm, that hath been known, seen
-or heard of in all the time of your most noble reign: Insomuch that it
-is manifestly proved and declared, by the depositions of the witnesses
-aforesaid that the same Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, usurping upon
-your Kingly Estate, Power, Authority, and Office: without your grace's
-command or assent hath taken upon him to set at liberty divers
-persons, being convicted and attained of Misprision of High Treason;
-and divers other being apprehended, and in Prison, for Suspection of
-High Treason, and over that, divers and many times, at sundry places
-in this your Realm, for manifold sums of money to him given, most
-traitorously hath taken upon him by several writings to give and
-grant, as well unto aliens, as to your subjects, a great number of
-licences for conveying and carrying of Money, Corn, Grain, Beans,
-Beer, Leather, Tallow, Bells, Metals, Horses, and other commodities of
-this your Realm, contrary to your Highness' most Godly and Gracious
-Proclamations made for the Commonwealth of your people of this your
-realm in that behalf, and in derogation of your Crown and Dignity. And
-the same Thomas Cromwell, elated, and full of pride, contrary to his
-most bounden Duty, of his own authority and Power, not regarding your
-Majesty Royal; and further taking upon him your power, Sovereign Lord,
-in that behalf, divers and many times most traitorously hath
-constituted, deputed, and assigned, many singular persons of your
-subjects to be Commissioners in many your great, urgent, and weighty
-causes and affairs, executed and done in this your realm, without the
-assent, knowledge, or consent of your highness. And further also,
-being a person of as poor and low degree, as few be within this your
-realm; pretending to have so great a stroke about you, our, and his
-natural Sovereign Liege Lord, that he let not to say publickly, and
-declare that he was sure of you, which is detestable, and to be
-abhorred amongst all good subjects in any Christian realm, that any
-subject should enterprise or take upon him so to speak of his
-Sovereign Liege Lord and King. And also of his own Authority and
-Power, without your Highness' consent, hath made and granted, as well
-to strangers as to your own subjects, divers and many pass-ports, to
-pass over the seas, with horses, and great sums of money, without any
-search. Most Gracious Sovereign Lord, the same Thomas Cromwell, Earl
-of Essex, hath allured and drawn unto him by retainours, many of your
-subjects sunderly inhabiting in every of your said shires and
-territories, as well as erroneously persuading and declaring to them
-the contents of false erroneous books, to be good, true, and best
-standing with the most Holy Word and Pleasure of God; as other his
-false and heretical opinions and errors; whereby, and by his
-confederacies therein, he hath caused many of your faithful subjects
-to be greatly infected with heresies, and other errors, contrary to
-the right laws and pleasure of Almighty God. And the same Thomas
-Cromwell, Earl of Essex, by the false and traitorous means
-above-written, supposing himself to be fully able, by force and
-strength, to maintain and defend his said abominable treasons,
-heresies, and errors, not regarding his most bounden duty to Almighty
-God, and his laws, nor the natural duty of Allegiance to your Majesty,
-in the last day of March in the 30th year of your most gracious reign,
-in the parish of St. Peter the Poor, within your City of London, upon
-demonstration and declaration then and there made unto him, that there
-were certain new preachers, as Robert Barnes, clerk, and others,
-whereof part were committed to the Tower of London, for preaching and
-teaching of lewd learning against your Highness' Proclamations; the
-same Thomas affirming the same preacher to be good, most detestably,
-arrogantly, erroneously, wilfully, maliciously, and traitorously,
-expressly against your Laws and Statutes, then and there did not let
-to declare, and say, these most traitorous and detestable words
-ensuing, amongst other words of like matter and effect; that is to
-say, That _if the King would turn from it yet I would not turn; and if
-the King did turn, and all his people, I would fight in the field in
-mine own person, with my sword in my hand, against him and all
-others_; and then and there, most traitorously pulled out his dagger,
-and held it on high, saying these words: _Or else this dagger thrust
-me to the heart, if I would not die in the quarrel against them all;
-and I trust, if I live one year or two, it shall not lie in the King's
-power to resist or let it if he would_. And further, then and there
-swearing by a great oath, traitorously affirmed the same his
-traitorous saying and pronunciation of words saying, _I will do so
-indeed_, extending up his arm, as though he had had a sword in his
-hand; to the most perilous, grievous, and wicked Example of all other
-your loving, faithful and obedient Subjects in this your Realm, and to
-the peril of your most Royal Person. And moreover, our most gracious
-Sovereign Lord, the said Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, hath acquired
-and obtained into his possession, by Oppression, Bribery, Extort,
-Power, and false promises made by him, to your Subjects of your Realm,
-innumerable Sums of Money and Treasure; and being so enriched, hath
-had your nobles of your realm in great disdain, derision, and
-detestation, as by express words by him most opprobriously spoken hath
-appeared. And being put in remembrance of others, of his estate, which
-your Highness hath called him unto, offending in like treasons, the
-last day of January, in the 31 year of your most noble reign, at the
-Parish of St. Martin's in the Field, in the County of Middlesex, most
-arrogantly, willingly, maliciously, and traitorously, said, published,
-and declared, that _if the Lord would handle him so, that he would
-give them such a breakfast as never was made in England, and that the
-proudest of them should know_; to the great peril and danger, as well
-of your Majesty, as of your Heirs and Successors. For the which his
-most detestable and abominable heresies and treasons, and many other
-his like offences and treasons over-long here to be rehearsed and
-declared: Be it enacted, ordained, and established by your Majesty,
-with the assent of the Lords Spiritual and Temporal, and the Commons
-in this present Parliament assembled, and by the authority of the
-same, that the said Thomas Cromwell, Earl of Essex, for his abominable
-and detestable heresies and treasons, by him most abominably,
-heretically, and traitorously practised, committed, and done, as well
-against Almighty God, and against your Majesty, and this your said
-Realm, shall be, and stand, by authority of this present Parliament,
-convicted and attainted of Heresie and High Treason, and be adjudged
-an abominable and detestable Heretick and Traitor; and shall have and
-suffer such pains of Death, losses and forfeitures of Goods, Debts and
-Chattels, as in cases of heresy and high treason, or as in cases of
-either of them, at the pleasure of your most Royal Majesty.
-
-
-
-
-HERTFORD'S ORDERS FOR THE NAVY AND ARMY.
-
-(APRIL 28TH, 1544.)
-
-+Source.+--_Hamilton Papers_, No. 227, Vol. II., H.M. General Register
-House, Edinburgh.
-
-
-51. Wafters[61] appointed for the vawarde:
-
-The "Pauncye," the "Minion," the "Swallow," the "Gabian" of Ipswich,
-the "John Evangeliste," the "Gallye Subtile," Harwoddes "Barke of
-Calais" to attend upon the "Pauncye."
-
-Wafters appointed for the battell:
-
-The "Swepestake," the "Swanne" of Hamburghe, the "Mary Grace," the
-"Elizabeth" of Lynne, Cumberfordes Shippe.
-
-Wafters appointed for the rerewarde:
-
-The "Great Galley," the "Gillian" of Dartmouth, the "Peter" of Fowery,
-the "Anthony Fulford," the "Bark Riveley."
-
-
-Orders taken at the Shelys within Tynemouth haven, the xxviiith day of
-April in the xxxvith year of the reign of our sovereign lord King
-Henry the Eighth, by the Earl of Hertford, great Chamberlain of
-England, his highness' lieutenant in the north parties, and
-captain-general of His Majesty's army by sea and land at this present
-against the Scots.
-
-1. First, his lordship in the King's Majesty's name, straightly
-chargeth and commandeth, that all captains, with their soldiers and
-mariners, shall be in readiness on shipboard in such ships as they be
-appointed unto by the said lord lieutenant, according to such
-proclamations as have been made in his lordship's name for that
-purpose, to the intent that every such ship may weigh anchor with the
-first prosperous wind that God shall send to depart.
-
-2. Item, the lord admiral, with certain wafters with him, shall be
-foremost of the fleet, bearing in his fore top-mast a flag of St.
-George's Cross, and in the night ii lights of a good height in his
-ship. And all those ships (whose captains with their soldiers be
-appointed to the vaward, whereof the said lord admiral is chieftain)
-shall as near as they can follow the said lord admiral. And at such
-time as the said lord admiral shall come to an anchor, all the ships
-of the vaward shall likewise come to an anchor, as near unto his ship
-as they may conveniently.
-
-3. Item, the said lord lieutenant hath appointed his own ship, and the
-ship which the King's treasure is in, to make sail next unto the fleet
-of the vaward, and all such ships (whose captains with their soldiers,
-are appointed to be about his person in the battell) shall follow his
-lordship as near as they can, and shall come to an anchor as near as
-they can about him. And his lordship hath ordained to have upon his
-main top-mast a flag of Saint George's Cross, and every night two
-lights on high in his shrouds, and one above his main top, to the
-intent that every man may know his lordship's ship from all other, as
-well by night as by day.
-
-4. Item, next unto the said fleet of battell, the Earl of Shrewsbury
-(whom the said lord lieutenant hath appointed to be chieftain of the
-rearwarde) shall make sail, bearing upon his mizzen top mast one flag
-of St. George's Cross, and every night in the prow of his ship, one
-cressitt[62] burning, to the intent all the fleet appointed to the
-rereward may know the said Earl of Shrewsbury his ship from all
-others.
-
-5. Item, when the said lord lieutenant would have the lord admiral to
-come on board his ship, his lordship hath appointed to put out a flag
-above his forecastle. And when his lordship would have the captain of
-the rearward to come on board his ship, his pleasure is to set out a
-flag on the poop of his ship. And when his lordship would have all the
-captains of the middle ward to come on board his ship, he hath
-appointed to set out a banner of counsel against the midst of his
-mainmast. And forbecause, that every captain of the vaward shall have
-better knowledge of the tokens afforerehersed, his lordship straightly
-chargeth and commandeth, that no ship shall spread any flag in any
-place above the hatches, nor bear any lights in the night above the
-decks, other than the said lord lieutenant's own ship, the lord
-admiral's ship, and the captain of the rereward his ship as aforesaid.
-
-6. Item, that if any ship or crayer chance by tempest of weather or
-other cause to be put from the fleet, the same ships or crayers shall
-resort to the Firth, as they will answer for the contrary at their
-perils.
-
-7. Item, that every captain, as well of the vaward, rereward and
-battell, shall cause their boats to be in readiness for the landing of
-their men, when they shall be commanded by the said lord lieutenant or
-the said chieftaines. And that every captain (whose ship hath any
-baseis or double verseis)[63] shall cause a trestle to be made in the
-fore part of his boat with ii halys[64] to carye ii baseis or verseis,
-for the more annoyance of their enemies at landing.
-
-
-Officers to be appointed.
-
-My lord admiral--The Chieftain of the vawarde.
-
-The Earl of Shrewsbury--The Chieftain of the rearewarde.
-
-Sir Rafe Sadler--Treasurer of the Wars.
-
-Sir Rise Mansfield--The Knight Marshall.[65]
-
-Constable--The Provost Marshall.[65]
-
-Sir Christopher Morris--The Master of these Ordinances.
-
-Le [words omitted]--Captain of the Pioneers.
-
-Sir Anthony Hungerford--The Captain of the Scout.
-
-
-Item, vii captains to have the rule of the watch,--every night one of
-them to watch, and the Scouts from time to time to send him
-advertisements.
-
-Nevell. Item, one principal man to have the rule and charge of the
-victuals, that the soldiers may have it for their money.
-
-Gower and Everard. Item, one to be appointed, as well to see the
-bringing of the victuals to the market, as also to order such others
-as shall come to the market by any other means.
-
-
-To land 12,000 men as followeth:
-
-Harquebusiers, 500; Archers, 1000; Pikes, 1000; bills, 1500. 4000.
-
-And these to be supported with the rest as they may land.
-
-
-Ordenance to be landed before we march.
-
-Fawcons,[66] 4; Fawconetes,[67] 6; Close waggons, 12. 22.
-
-
-The vawarde.
-
-Harquebusiers, 150; Archers, 1000; pikes, 500; bills, 2000. 3650.
-
-
-The battell.
-
-Harquebusiers, 200; archers, 1000; pikes, 1000; bills, 2500. 4700.
-
-
-The rearewarde.
-
-Harquebusiers, 100; archers, 1000; pikes, 550; bills, 2000. 3650.
-
-To land 12,000 men at two places at one instant, as near as they can
-together and at either place, these numbers following:
-
-Harquebusiers, 250; archers, 1500; pikes, 1000; bills, 1500. 4250.
-
-[Footnote 61: = transport boats.]
-
-[Footnote 62: = An iron basket containing inflammable material, often
-a coil of tarred rope.]
-
-[Footnote 63: _i.e._ "base and verse" = small light cannons.]
-
-[Footnote 64: = ropes?]
-
-[Footnote 65: These officials were responsible for the discipline; the
-former for the officers, and the latter for the men.]
-
-[Footnote 66: = a ten pounder.]
-
-[Footnote 67: = a five pounder.]
-
-
-
-
-HERTFORD AND OTHERS TO HENRY VIII.
-
-A. (MAY 9TH, 1544.)
-
-+Source.+--_Hamilton Papers_, No. 233.
-
-
-Please it your highness to understand that I the Earl of Hertford with
-Your Majesty's army here, marched out of this toun on Wednesday last,
-towards Edinburgh, and being set forwards, came to me an herald and
-trumpet from the provost and council of the toun, declaring on their
-behalf that they would set open the gates and deliver the keys unto me
-to do with the toun and them what I would, upon trust that I would be
-good lord unto them and save their lives and goods without burning or
-spoil of the toun, which should make no resistance unto me.
-
-I told him forasmuch as they had before refused so to do, and had made
-me resolute answer that unless I would capitulate with them in what
-sort I would use them and their toun, they would not yield the same,
-but make resistances, which I took for a final resolution, I would
-therefore remain now at my liberty to do as I thought good when I came
-there; and therewith I asked, whether they would also undertake and
-promise for to deliver the castle? Whereunto he answered that it was
-out of his power to deliver the castle, but for the toun which was in
-their hands, it should be at my commandment. Whereupon I willed them
-to return, and to say unto the said provost and council that if they
-would render all to my will, they should forthwith avoid the toun of
-man, woman and childe, and at mine entry into the toun, if they did
-meet me and submit themselves, I would then do as I saw cause.
-
-Whereupon he departed, and soon after when I came near to the toun,
-the provost and others of the toun with him, came to me and required
-me to be good lord unto them and their toun, which should be committed
-unto me without resistance, trusting that I would save their lives and
-goods, and not burn nor spoil their toun.
-
-I made them in effect like answer as before I made to the herald, but
-being much pressed by them for the safetie of them and their toun with
-their goods as aforesaid, I willed them to return, saying that at mine
-entry within the toun, upon their submission and delivery of the keys
-as they offered, I would then use them with the more favour, as at my
-coming to the gates of the toun I would further declare. They returned
-with this answer, and I supposed verily that they would in this sort
-have delivered and yielded the toun; but immediately after, as soon as
-we were marched hard to the toun, the inhabitants of the suburbs
-raised a fire and a great smoke in one or two of their own houses
-betwixt us and the toun, and forthwith after, I had intelligence that
-they would defend and withstand us to their power. Whereupon I the
-said Earl caused me the Lord Admiral with the forward to march into
-the toun, who passed through the suburbs to the principal port of the
-toun, being an iron gate and well fortified with men and ordinance,
-which they shot so fast that some of our men being killed in the
-streets with the same, the rest began to shrink and retire, but that
-the gentlemen and others of the foreward, your majesty's servants,
-gave the onset and made so sharp assault and approach hard to the
-gate, that they recovered one piece of their artillery, and by
-violence drew it from them through the loops, where the same did lie
-in the gate. Nevertheless the Scots shot out of their windows and
-holes of their houses so fast with hand-guns, that our men being so
-astonied therewith, shot again at adventure, and did more hurt to
-their own fellows than to the enemys, whereby it chanced that one hit
-my Lord William with an arrow above the cheek, but the stroke was so
-faint and weakly shot that, thanked be God, it did him little or no
-hurt at all. In fine the said lord Admiral having caused Sir
-Christopher Morris to lay ordinance to the said gate, after three or
-iiii shots of a culverin, the gate flew open and our men entered the
-toun with such good courage, as all the enemies fled away, and many of
-them were slain, we think about vi or vii score at the least. And
-being thus entered within the toun, and our enemies discomfited,
-although I the said Earl had before taken order, that after the
-winning of the toun and the entry into the same, they should proceed
-no farther, nor make assault to the castle, till upon a future advice,
-yet when the said gate was thus won and opened with the ordinance, the
-gunners of their own courage, without advice or commandment of me the
-said Earl, and without the knowledge of one the Lord Admiral, made
-forthwith an approach with their battery pieces to the Castle of
-Edinburgh, and shot of a little while to the same; but the castle
-being so strong and the approach so dangerous on all sides, that it is
-not possible for men to stand to their pieces without utter
-destruction, the Scots with their shot both of cannon and other pieces
-out of the castle, slew our men and dismounted one of our pieces. So
-that I the said Earl perceiving the same, caused Mr. Lee and the
-Surveyor of Calais to view the approach, who said that the same was so
-dangerous, as the castle seemed to be impregnable without a long
-demour and tarrying upon it; for there could be, as they said, no case
-devised for the approach, but that the same must needs be so open upon
-the shot of the castle, as without the great loss of men it could not
-be entered, the ground being of hard rock, so that there was no earth
-to fill mounds with, nor yet to trench on, and notwithstanding all the
-shot that Sir Christopher Morris made, which endured almost two hours,
-the walls of the castle seemed so strong as they were little or
-nothing battered or impaired with the same. Whereupon I the said Earl
-caused him to retire and withdraw all his pieces of artillery saving
-that which was dismounted, which could not be lead away, the place
-being so dangerous, as men could not stand to mount the same again,
-and therefore I caused him to break it with over charge. And as soon
-as the ordinance was thus withdrawn and set forwards, I commanded the
-captains and soldiers to set fire in the toun, which being so raised
-in sundry parts, the soldiers fell into such a sudden rage and fear,
-that what by reason of the shot out of the castle, which beateth full
-upon the toun, and killed sundry of our soldiers, and again with such
-exclamations and cryings out upon no ground or cause, they began to
-flee so fast out of the toun, as by reason of the straight passage at
-the gate, the throng and press was so great, that one of them was like
-to destroy another; whereof was like to have grown some mischief and
-confusion. And if the smoke had not been such in the toun as blinded
-the Scots so that the same could not see the confusion and throng of
-our soldiers, undoubted with their shot they might have slain a great
-number of your people. But God be thanked, at last it was well
-appeased with much ado, and having made a jolly fire and smoke upon
-the toun, I the said Earl with Your Highness' army returned to our
-camp in this toun. And in this enterprise we lost not in all past xx
-men, but by reason of the said confusion amongst the soldiers the time
-passed and night came so fast on, that we could not tarry so long upon
-the burning of the toun throughout, as we would have done, though it
-be metely well smoked, and therefore we left it for that time. But
-yesterday arrived here the warden of the East and Middle marches, with
-the horsemen to the number of four thousand at the least, and this day
-I the said Earl have eftsoons visited the said toun of Edinburgh,
-which had chosen them a new provost, and intending to make a new
-resistance, had repaired the said chief port of the toun with stone
-and earth and stood somewhat stoutly to their defence. Nevertheless
-they were so well assaulted and quickly handled that the gate was soon
-set upon with our artillery and the toun won once again. In which
-assault were slain iiii or v hundred Scots, and but vii of our men
-lacking, thanks be to God. So that we trust Your Majesty's Commission
-given to me the said Earl for the burning of the said toun, is now
-well executed, for the toun and also the Abbey of Holyrood house is in
-manner wholly brent and desolate; which considering the dangerous
-entry into the same town by reason of the shot of the castle, we found
-to be a far more difficult and dangerous enterprise than before hath
-been supposed.
-
-And whiles the toun was thus brenning, and we standing upon the hill
-without the toun to view the same, we might well hear the women and
-poor miserable creatures of the toun make exclamation and cryings out
-upon the cardinal in these words: "Wa worthe the Cardinal."[68] And
-also your horsemen since their arrival here have ridden abroad in the
-country and brent round about within v miles compass hereabouts and
-have gotten good booties, both of cattle and also ready money and
-plate to a good value and substance....
-
-And finally, having made such devastation of the country hereabouts as
-your majesty hath commanded, I shall then proceed to the execution of
-the rest of my charge in our return home by land, which I trust shall
-be accomplished to your highness' honour and contentment. Thus
-Almighty God preserve your majesty in your royal estate most
-felicitously to endure. At Leith the ixth of May. Your Majesty's
-humble subjects and most bounden servants, E. Hertford, John Lisle,
-Rafe Sadleyr.
-
-
-B. (MAY 18.)
-
-+Source.+--_Hamilton Papers_, No. 240, Vol. II.
-
-Please it Your Highness to understand that like as we wrote in our
-last letters to Your Majesty our determination to depart from Leith
-homewards by land with your army upon Thursday last, and so to
-devastate the country by the way in our return as we might
-conveniently, so have we now accomplished the same. And first before
-our departure from Leith having brent Edinburgh and sundry other towns
-and villages in those parties as we wrote in our said last
-letters,--we did likewise burn the town of Leith, the same morning
-that we departed thence, and such ships and boats as we found in the
-haven, meet to be brought away, we have conveyed thence by sea, and
-the rest are brent; and have also destroyed and brent the pier and
-haven. Which damages we think they shall not be able to recover in our
-time. And in our way homewards we have brent the town of
-Musselborough, Preston, Seton, with Lord Seton's principal house,
-himself being pricking aloof from us with a certain number of
-horsemen, so that he will see his own house and his own toun on fire,
-and also we have brent the touns of Haddington and Dunbar, which we
-dare assure Your Majesty be well burnt, with as many other piles,
-gentlemen's and others houses and villages as we might conveniently
-reach, within the limits or compass of our way homewards. And always
-had such respect towards the keeping of good order and array in our
-marching, as notwithstanding the Scots would daily prick about us, and
-make as many proud shows and braggs, they could take us at none
-advantage. And yesterday the Lords Hume and Seton, and also as we were
-informed, the Earl of Bothwell, had assembled together the number of
-two thousand horsemen and vi thousand footmen, and were once
-determined to have stopped us at the Pease, which is a very straight
-and ill passage for an army, assuring your majesty that three thousand
-men, being men of heart, and having captains of any policy or
-experience of the wars, might keep and defend the said passage against
-a greater power than we had. Nevertheless being the said Scots
-assembled and determined as is aforesaid, to keep that passage, when
-they saw your majesty's army and power marching towards them in an
-honest order and in such sort as they might well perceive were fully
-bent and determined to assault them, they did immediately disperse and
-scale themselves in our sight, and gave us the passage without
-resistance. And so this journey is accomplished to Your Majesty's
-honour.
-
-Touching the castle of Temptallen, like as we wrote to Your Highness
-what we have done to Sir George Douglas in the same, so have I the
-Earl of Hertford since that time received letters from the Earl of
-Angus and the said Sir George, which I send herewith to Your Majesty;
-and what shall be Your Majesty's further pleasure to have done in that
-behalf, I shall accomplish accordingly; and would right gladly have
-returned by Temptallen, and made some countenance of assault to the
-same, but that partly I forbare and tarried for the said answer, and
-chiefly I was constrained to leave it for lack of carriages for great
-pieces of artillery and also for lack of powder; and besides that we
-were so disfurnished by carriages for our victuals, that we were not
-able to carry so much with us, as might serve us for any longer time
-than that we might march home. And yet having made as Good Shift and
-Provision for the same as we could for our lives, the soldiers, ere we
-came half-way home, were fain to drink water the residue of the way
-which they did with as good will as ever did men, and as well content
-to endure labour and pain, without grudging at the same. These
-respects and lacks enforced us to leave both Temptallen and Hume
-Castles much against our wills, and to make the haste we could
-homewards for avoiding of more inconvenience. So that this night we
-arrived here at Berwick with our whole army, and shall forthwith
-dissolve the same, to the intent Your Highness may the sooner be
-exonerated of your great charges sustained in that behalf.
-
-Finally, we have received letters since our arrival here from the
-lords of your majesty's council, by the which it appeareth that Your
-Highness' pleasure to have 3900 soldiers chosen out of this army
-to be transported hence to Calais to serve Your Highness in
-France,--whereupon I the said Earl have called sundry of the captains
-afore me, and appointed such as I thought most meet with their numbers
-for that purpose. Assuring Your Majesty that though the gentlemen are
-most willing to serve, yet they declare their necessity to be such,
-which indeed is most evident,--as we see not how it is possible to
-furnish the said number presently from these parts, to be transported
-to Calais, unless the gentlemen and their men might have time to go
-home and prepare and furnish themselves in such sort as they might be
-able to serve Your Majesty to your honour and their honesties. For
-having in this journey spent all their money, they say that of force
-they must go home to make shift for more, and they have neither tents
-nor pavilions here; for because this enterprise into Scotland was by
-sea, all gentlemen had special commandment to bring no carriages with
-them, so that few or none brought any pavilion hither. And as for the
-soldiers having lain nightly in their clothes, since they came from
-home being now the space of two months, and for this fortnight, every
-night in the fields without covering, they have the most part of them,
-what with cold and great travail and scant victualling have caught
-such diseases both in their bodies and swelling in their legs, and be
-so wearied with labour and pain that few or none of them be meet to go
-to the seas, nor yet able to serve Your Majesty when they come to land
-to your honor. And besides that they be so far out of apparrell both
-in shirts, doublets, coats, and all other things, having also no money
-to furnish the same, that their captains cannot with honesty bring
-them to the field in such plight. So that except they might have time
-to refresh themselves, both to get health and such necessary furniture
-as they now want, undoubtedly we see not how it is possible to pick
-out the said number of 3900 of such men as may be sent with honesty to
-serve Your Highness purpose,--as I the said lord Admiral shall declare
-unto Your Majesty at my coming. In the mean season, we have appointed
-here 500 Harquebusiers, which be as forward and apt men to serve in
-strait feat as ever we saw, and also 200 of the Lord Cobham's men, 200
-pioneers under the conduct of Mr. Lee and 50 of Sir Christopher Mone's
-men, besides 500 of those that come by sea, over and above 2000
-reserved to keep the sea, so that the whole number that can be had
-here is 1450 men, which shall forthwith be embarked and transported to
-Calais, according to Your Majesty's pleasure. And this is as much as
-can be done here in that behalf, without a longer respect as is
-aforesaid. Thus Almighty God preserve Your Majesty in your royal
-estate most felicitously to endure.
-
-At Berwick the xviiith of May and ix o'clock within night. Your
-Majesty's humble subjects and most bounden servants. (Signed) E.
-Hertford, John Lisle, Rafe Sadleyr.
-
-[Footnote 68: _i.e._ Cardinal Beaton, leader of the French Party in
-Scotland.]
-
-
-
-
-ATTEMPTED INVASION OF ENGLAND BY THE FRENCH (1545).
-
-+Source.+--Holinshed, p. 847.
-
-
-The same month also the Lord Lisle Admiral of England with the English
-fleet entered the mouth of the Seine, and came before Newhaven, where
-a great navy of the Frenchmen lay, to the number of a two hundred
-ships, and six and twenty gallies, whereof the Pope (as was reported)
-had sent twenty well furnished with men and money to the aid of the
-French king.
-
-The Englishmen being not past an hundred and threescore sail, and all
-great ships, determined not to set upon the Frenchmen where they lay:
-but yet approaching near unto them, shot off certain pieces of
-ordinance at them, and thereby caused the gallies to come abroad,
-which changed shot again with the Englishmen.
-
-The gallies at the first had great advantage, by reason of the great
-calm.
-
-Thrice either part assaulted other with shot of their great artillery,
-but suddenly the wind rose so high, that the gallies could not endure
-the rage of the seas, and so the Englishmen for fear of flats were
-compelled to enter the main seas and so sailed unto Portsmouth where
-the King lay, for he had knowledge of his espials that the Frenchmen
-intended to land in the Isle of Wight, wherefore he repaired to that
-coast, to see his realm defended.
-
-After this, the eighteenth of July the admiral of France Monseiur
-Danebalte hoisted up sails, and with his whole navy came forth into
-the seas, and arrived on the coast of Sussex before Bright
-Hamsteed,[69] and set certain of his soldiers on land to burn and
-spoil the country: but the beacons were fired and the inhabitants
-thereabouts came down so thick that the Frenchmen were driven to fly
-with loss of divers of their numbers; so that they did little hurt
-there. Immediately thereupon they made to the point of the Isle of
-Wight, called Saint Helen's point, and there in good order upon their
-arrival they cast anchors, and sent daily sixteen of their gallies to
-the very haven of Portsmouth. The English navy lying there in the same
-haven, made them ready, and set out toward the enemies, and still the
-one shot hotly at the other; but the wind was so calm, that the king's
-ships could bear no sail, which greatly grieved the minds of the
-Englishmen, and made the enemies more bold to approach with their
-gallies, and to assail the ships with their shot even within the haven.
-
-The twentieth of July, the whole navy of the Englishmen made out, and
-purposed to set on the Frenchmen, but in setting forward, through too
-much folly, one of the King's ships called the _Marie Rose_ was
-drowned in the midst of the haven, by reason that she was overladen
-with ordinance, and had the ports left open, which were very low, and
-the great artillerie unbreeched so that when the ship should turn, the
-water entered, and suddenly she sank. In her was Sir George Carew
-knight and four hundred soldiers under his guiding. There escaped not
-past forty persons of all the whole number. On the morrow after about
-two thousand of the Frenchmen landed at the Isle of Wight, where one
-of their chief captains named le Chevalier Daux, a Provencois, was
-slain with many other, and the residue with loss and shame driven back
-again to their gallies.
-
-The King perceiving the great Armada of the Frenchmen to approach,
-caused the beacons to be fired, and by letters sent into Hamptonshire,
-Summersetshire, Wiltshire, and into divers other countries adjoining,
-gave knowledge to such as were appointed to be ready for that purpose,
-to come with all speed to encounter the enemies. Whereupon they
-repaired to his presence in great numbers well furnished with armour,
-weapon, vittels, and all other things necessary, so that the Isle was
-garnished, and all the frontiers along the coasts fortified with
-exceeding great multitudes of men. The French captains having
-knowledge by certain fishermen, whom they took, that the King was
-present, and so huge a power ready to resist them, they disanchored
-and drew along the coast of Sussex, and a small number of them landed
-again in Sussex, of whom few returned to their ships; for divers
-gentlemen of the country, as Sir Nicholas Pelham, and others, with
-such power as was raised, upon the sudden, took them up by the way and
-quickly distressed them.
-
-When they had searched everywhere by the coast, and saw men still
-ready to receive them with battle, they turned stern, and so got them
-home again without any act achieved worthy to be mentioned. The number
-of the Frenchmen was great, so that divers of them that were taken
-prisoners in the Isle of Wight and in Sussex did report that they were
-three score thousand. The French king advertised the emperor most
-untruly by letters, that his army had gotten the Isle of Wight with
-the ports of Hamton, and Portsmouth, and divers other places.
-
-[Footnote 69: _i.e._ Brighthelmstone = Brighton.]
-
-
-
-
-THE CAPTURE OF THE BARQUE AGER (1545).
-
-+Source.+--Hall's _Henry VIII_.
-
-
-In this time, there was by the Frenchmen a voyage made towards the
-Isle of Brazil, with a ship called the Barque Ager, which they had
-taken from the Englishmen before. And in their way they fortuned to
-meet suddenly with a little Craer, of whom was Master one Golding,
-which Golding was a fierce and an hardy man. The barque perceiving
-this small Craer to be an Englishman, shot at him and boughed him,
-wherefore the Craer drew straight to the great ship, and six or seven
-of the men leapt into the Barque: the Frenchmen looking over the board
-at the sinking of the Craer, nothing mistrusting anything, that might
-be done by the Englishmen. And so it fortuned that those Englishmen
-which climbed into the ship, found in the end thereof a great number
-of lime pots, which they with water quenched, or rather as the nature
-thereof is, set them a fire, and threw them at the Frenchmen that were
-aboard, and so blinded them, that those few Englishmen that entered
-the ship, vanquished all that were therein, and drove them under
-hatches, and brought the barque clearly away again into England.
-
-
-
-
-SPEECH MADE BY KING HENRY VIII. AT THE OPENING OF PARLIAMENT (1546).
-
-+Source.+--Edward Hall's _Henry VIII_.
-
-
-Although my Chancellor for the time being, hath before this time used,
-very eloquently and substantially, to make answer to such orations, as
-hath been set forth in this high court of Parliament, yet is he not so
-able to open and set forth my mind and meaning, and the secrets of my
-heart, in so plain and ample manner, as I myself am and can do;
-wherefor I taking upon me to answer your eloquent oration, Master
-Speaker, say, that where you, in the name of our well-beloved Commons
-hath both praised and extolled me, for the notable qualities that you
-have conceived to be in me, I most heartily thank you all, that you
-have put me in remembrance of my duty, which is to endeavour myself to
-obtain and get such excellent qualities, and necessary virtues, as a
-Prince or Governor, should or ought to have, of which gifts I
-recognize myself both bare and barren; but of such small qualities as
-God hath endued me withal, I render to his goodness my most humble
-thanks, intending with all my wit and diligence, to get and acquire to
-me such notable virtues and princely qualities as you have alleged to
-be incorporate in my person. These thanks for your loving admonition
-and good counsel first remembered, eftsoons thank you again, because
-that you, considering our great charges (not for our pleasure, but for
-your defences, not for our gain, but to our great cost), which we have
-lately sustained, as well in defence of our and your enemies, as for
-the conquest of that fortress, which was to this realm, most
-displeasant and noisome, and shall be by God's grace hereafter, to our
-nation most profitable and pleasant, have freely of your own mind,
-granted to us a certain subsidy specified in a certain act, which
-verily we take in good part, regarding more your kindness, than the
-profit thereof, as he that setteth more by your loving hearts, than by
-your substance. Besides this hearty kindness, I cannot a little
-rejoice when I consider the perfect trust and sure confidence which
-you have put in me, as men having undoubted hope and unfeigned belief
-in my good doings and just proceedings for you, without my desire or
-request, have committed to mine order and disposition, all Chantries,
-Colleges, Hospitals, and other places specified in a certain act,
-firmly trusting that I will order them to the glory of God, and the
-profit of the commonwealth. Surely if I contrary to your expectation,
-should suffer the ministers of the Church to decay, or learning (which
-is so great a jewel) to be ministered, or poor and miserable people to
-be unrelieved, you might say that I being put in so special a trust,
-as I am in this case, were no trusty friend to you, nor charitable man
-to mine even Christian,[70] neither a lover of the public wealth, nor
-yet one that feared God, to whom account must be rendered of all our
-doings. Doubt not I pray you, but your expectation shall be served,
-more godly and goodly than you will wish or desire, as hereafter you
-shall plainly perceive.
-
-Now sithence I find such kindness on your part towards me, I can not
-chose but love and favour you, affirming that no prince in the world
-more favoureth his subjects, than I do you, nor no subjects or commons
-more, love and obey, their sovereign lord, than I perceive you do me,
-for whose defence my treasure shall not be hidden, nor yf necessity
-require my person shall not be unadventured; yet although I with you,
-and you with me, be in this perfect love and concord, this friendly
-amity can not continue, except both you my lords temporal, and you my
-lords spiritual, and you my loving subjects, study and take pain to
-amend one thing, which surely is amiss, and far out of order, to the
-which I most heartily require you, which is, that charity and concord
-is not amongst you, but discord and dissention beareth rule in every
-place. S. Paul saith to the Corinthians, in the xiii Chapter, Charity
-is gentle, Charity is not envious, Charity is not proud, and so forth,
-in the said Chapter: Behold then what love and Charity is amongst you,
-when the one calleth the other Heretic and Anabaptist, and he calleth
-him again Papist, Hypocrit and Pharisee. Be these tokens of charity
-amongst you? Are these the signs of fraternal love between you? No,
-no, I assure you, that this lack of charity among yourselves, will be
-the hindrance and assuaging of the fervent love between us, as I said
-before; except this wound be salved, and clearly made whole, I must
-needs judge the fault and occasion of this discord to be partly by
-negligence of you the fathers and preachers of the spirituality. If I
-see a man boast and bragg himself, I cannot but deem him a proud man.
-I see and hear daily that you of the clergy preach one against
-another, teach one contrary to another, inveigh one against another
-without charity or discretion. Some be too stiff in their old
-Mumpsimus, others be too busy and curious in their new Sumpsimus. Thus
-all men almost be in variety and discord, and few or none preach truly
-and sincerely the word of God, according as they ought to do. Shall I
-now judge you charitable persons doing this? No, no, I cannot so do:
-alas, how can the poor souls live in concord when you preachers sow
-amongst them in your sermons debate and discord? Or if they look for
-light, and you bring them to darkness? Amend these crimes I exhort
-you, and set forth God's word, both by true preaching, and good
-example giving, or else I whom God hath appointed his Vicar, and high
-minister here, will see these divisions extinct, and these enormities
-corrected, according to my very duty, or else I am an unprofitable
-servant, and untrue officer.
-
-Although as I say, the spiritual men be in some fault, that charity is
-not kept amongst you, yet you of the temporality be not clean and
-unspotted of malice and envy, for you rail on Bishops, speak
-slanderously of Priests, and rebuke and taunt Preachers, both contrary
-to good order and Christian fraternity. If you know surely that a
-bishop or preacher erreth or teacheth perverse doctrine, come and
-declare it to some of our Council or to us, to whom is committed by
-God the high authority to reform and order such causes and behaviours,
-and be not judges yourselves, of your own phantastical opinions, and
-vain exposicions, for in such high causes ye may lightly err. And all
-though you be permitted to read holy scripture, and to have the word
-of God in your mother tongue, you must understand that it is licensed
-you so to do, only to inform your own conscience, and to instruct your
-children and family, and not to dispute and make scripture a railing
-and a taunting stock, against Priests and Preachers (as many light
-persons do). I am very sorry to know and hear, how unreverently that
-most precious jewel the word of God is disputed, rhymed, sung and
-jangled in every Alehouse and Tavern, contrary to the true meaning and
-doctrine of the same. And yet I am even as much sorry that the readers
-of the same follow it in doing so faintly and coldly; for of this I am
-sure, that Charity was never so faint amongst you, and vertuous and
-Godly living was never less used, nor God himself amongst Christians
-was never less reverenced, honoured or served. Therefore, as I said
-before, be in Charity one with another, like brother and brother,
-love, dread and serve God (to the which I as your supreme head, and
-sovereign lord, exhort and require you) and then I doubt not but that
-love and league that I spake of in the beginning shall never be
-dissolved or broken between us. And the making of laws, which be now
-made and concluded, I exhort, you the makers, to be as diligent in
-putting them in execution, as you were in making and furthering the
-same, or else your labour shall be in vain, and your commonwealth
-nothing relieved. Now to your petition, concerning our royal assent to
-be given to such acts as passed both the houses. They shall be read
-openly, and ye may hear them.
-
-[Footnote 70: = my fellow Christian.]
-
-
-
-
-
-HUGH LATIMER'S SERMON ON "THE PLOUGHERS" (1549).
-
-+Source.+--Latimer's _Remains and Sermons_, Corria Parker Society
-(1844); "Sermon on the Ploughers."
-
-
-... Now what shall we say of these rich artisans of London? What shall
-I say of them? Shall I call them proud men of London, malicious men of
-London, merciless men of London? No, no, I may not say so, they will
-be offended with me then. Yet must I speak. For there is reigning in
-London as much pride, as much covetousness, as much cruelty, as much
-oppression, as much superstition, as was in Nebo?[71] Yes, I think and
-much more too. Therefore I say, repent O London! repent, repent! Thou
-hearest thy faults told thee; amend them, amend them. And you rulers
-and officers, be wise and circumspect, look to your charge and see you
-do your duties and rather be glad to amend your ill living than to be
-angry when you are warned or told of your fault.... But London cannot
-abide to be rebuked; such is the nature of man. If they be pricked,
-they will kick. If they be rubbed on the gall, they will wince. But
-yet they will not amend their faults, they will not be ill spoken of.
-But how shall I speak well of them? If you could be content to receive
-and follow the word of God and favour good preachers, if you could
-bear to be told of your faults, if you could amend when you hear of
-them: if you would be glad to reform that is amiss: if I might see any
-such inclination in you, that leave to be merciless and begin to be
-charitable, I would then hope well of you, I would then speak well of
-you. But London was never so ill as it is now. In times past men were
-full of pity and compassion, but now there is no pity; for in London
-their brother shall die in the streets for cold, he shall lie sick at
-their door between stock and stock, I cannot tell what to call it, and
-perish there for hunger. In times past when any rich man died in
-London, they were wont to help the poor scholars of the university
-with exhibition. When any man died, they would bequeathe great sums of
-money towards the relief of the poor. When I was a scholar at
-Cambridge myself, I heard very good report of London and knew many
-that had relief of the rich men of London; but now I can hear no such
-good report and yet I enquire of it and hearken for it, but now
-charity is waxed cold, none helpeth the scholar nor yet the poor. And
-in those days what did they when they helped the scholars? Many they
-maintained and gave them livings that were very papists and professed
-the pope's doctrine; and now that the knowledge of God's word is
-brought to light, and many earnestly study and labour to set it forth,
-now almost no man helpeth to maintain them. Oh! London! London!
-repent, repent, for I think God is more displeased with London than
-ever he was with the city of Nebo. Amend therefore; and ye that be
-prelates, look well to your office, for right prelating is busy
-labouring and not lording. Therefore preach and teach and let your
-plough be doing; ye lords, I say, that live like loiterers, look well
-to your office; the plough is your office and charge. If you live idle
-and loiter, you do not your duty, you follow not your vocation; let
-your plough therefore be going and not cease, that true ground may
-bring forth good fruit. But now, me thinketh I hear one say unto me,
-wot you what you say? Is it a work? Is it a labour? How then hath it
-happened that we have had so many hundred years so many unpreaching
-prelates, lording loiterers, and idle ministers? Ye would have me here
-to make answer and to shew the cause thereof. Nay, this land is not
-for me to plough, it is too strong, too thorny, too hard for me to
-plough. They have so many things that make for them, so many things to
-lay for themselves, that it is not for my weak team to plough them.
-They have to lay for themselves long customs and ceremonies and
-authority, placing in parliament, and many things more. And I feare me
-this land is not yet ripe to be ploughed. For, as the saying is, it
-lacketh weathering; at least way it is not for me to plough. For what
-shall I look for among thornes but pricking and scratching? What among
-stones, but stumbling? What (I had almost said) among serpents, but
-stinging? But this much I dare say, that since lording and loitering
-hath come up, preaching hath come down, contrary to the Apostles'
-times. For they preached and lorded not. And now they lord and preach
-not.
-
-But now for the fault of unpreaching prelates, me thinke, I could
-guess, what might be said for excusing of them: They are so troubled
-with lordly living, they be so placed in palaces, couched in courts,
-ruffling in their rents, dancing in their dominions, and burdened with
-ambassages, pampering of their paunches like a monk that maketh his
-jubilee, munching in their mangers and moiling in their gay manors and
-mansions, and so troubled with loitering in their Lordships: that they
-cannot attend it. They are otherwise occupied, some in the king's
-matters, some are ambassadors, some of the Privy Council, some to
-furnish the court, some are Lords of Parliament, some are presidents
-and some are comptrollers of mints. Is this their duty? Is this their
-office? Should we have ministers of the Church to be comptrollers of
-the mints? Is this a meet office for a prieste that hath the cure of
-Souls? Is this his charge? I would here ask one question? I would fain
-know who controlleth the devil at home at his parish while he
-comptrolleth the mint? If the Apostles might not leave the office of
-preaching to be deacons, shall one leave it for minting?
-
-And now I would ask a strange question? Who is the most diligent
-bishop and prelate in all England, that passeth all the rest in doing
-his office? I can tell, for I know him, who it is; I know him well.
-But now I think I see you listing and hearkening, that I should name
-him. There is one that passeth all the other, and is the most diligent
-prelate and preacher in all England. And will ye know who it is? I
-will tell you. It is the Devil. He is the most diligent preacher of
-all other, he is never out of his diocese, he is never from his cure,
-ye shall never find him unoccupied, he is ever in his parish, he
-keepeth residence at all times, ye shall never find him out of the
-way; call for him when you will, he is ever at home, the diligentest
-preacher in all the Realm; he is ever at his plough, no lording or
-loitering can hinder him; he is ever applying his business, ye shall
-never find him idle, I warrant you. And his office is, to hinder
-religion, to maintain superstition, to set up idolatry, to teach all
-kind of popery; he is ready as can be wished to set forth his plough,
-to devise as many ways as can be, to deface and obscure God's glory.
-Where the Devil is resident and hath his plough going: there away with
-books, and up with candles, yea, at noon-days. Where the Devil is
-resident, that he may prevail, up with all superstition and idolatry,
-sensing, painting of images, candles, palms, ashes, holy water and new
-service of men's inventing, as though man could invent a better way to
-honour God with than God himself hath appointed. Down with Christ's
-Crosse, up with Purgatory pick-purse, up with him, the popish
-purgatory, I mean. Away with clothing the naked, the poor and
-impotent, up with decking of images and gay garnishing of stocks and
-stones, up with man's traditions and his laws, down with God's
-tradition and his most holy word. Down with the old honour due to God,
-and up with the new God's honour, let all things be done in Latin.
-There must be nothing but Latin, not as much as "Memento, homo, quod
-cinis es, et in cineres reverteris"--Remember, man, that thou arte
-ashes and into ashes thou shalt return. Which be the words that the
-minister speaketh, to the ignorant people, when he giveth them ashes
-upon Ash Wednesday, but it must be spoken in Latin. God's word may in
-no wise be translated into English. Oh, that our prelates would be as
-diligent to sow the corn of good doctrine, as Satan is to sow cockel
-and darnel! And this is the devilish ploughing, the which worketh to
-have things in Latin and letteth the fruitful edification.
-
-[Footnote 71: A Moabite town; see Jeremiah xlviii.]
-
-
-
-
-THE ORDINANCES, STATUTES AND RULES MADE BY JOHN LORD TIPTOLFE, EARL OF
-WORCESTER, CONSTABLE OF ENGLAND, BY THE KING'S COMMANDMENT, AT WINDSOR
-ON THE 29TH OF MARCH (CIRCA 1590).
-
-+Source.+--From Sir J. Harrington's _Nugae Antiquae_, Vol. III.,
-p. 234, 1792.
-
-
-Reserving always to the Queen and to the Lord President, the
-attribution and gift of the prizes, after the manner and form
-accustomed. For their demerits according to the articles ensuing:
-
-
-_How many ways the prize is won._
-
-First, whoso breaketh most spears, as they ought to be broken, shall
-have the prize.
-
-Item, whoso breaketh three times, in the sight of the helm, shall have
-the prize.
-
-Item, whoso meeteth two times, coronal[72] to coronal, shall have the
-prize.
-
-Item, whoso beareth a man doun with stroke of spear shall have the
-prize.
-
-
-_How many ways the prize shall be lost._
-
-First, whoso striketh a horse shall have no prize.
-
-Item, who striketh a man, his back turned, or disarmed of his spear,
-shall have no prize.
-
-Item, whoso hitteth the toile[73] three times shall have no prize.
-
-Item, whoso unhelms himself two times shall have no prize, unless his
-horse do fail him.
-
-
-_How broken spears shall be allowed._
-
-First, whoso breaketh a spear between the saddle and the coronal[74]
-of the helm shall be allowed for one.
-
-Item, whoso breaketh a spear from the coronal upwards shall be allowed
-for two.
-
-Item, whoso breaketh a spear, so that he striketh his adversary doun,
-or put him out of his saddle, or disarms him in such wise as he may
-not run the next course after, or breaketh his spear coronal to
-coronal shall be allowed as three spears broken.
-
-
-_How spears broken shall be disallowed._
-
-First, whoso breaketh on the saddle shall be disallowed for
-spear-breaking.
-
-Item, whoso hitteth the toile once shall be disallowed for two.
-
-Item, whoso hitteth the toil shall, for that blow the second time be
-disallowed three.
-
-Item, whoso breaketh a spear, within a foot to the coronal, shall be
-adjudged as no spear broken, but a faint attaint.[75]
-
-
-_For the Prize to be given and who shall be preferred._
-
-First, whoso beareth a man doun out of the saddle, or putteth him to
-the earth, horse and man, shall have the prize before him that
-striketh coronal to coronal two times.
-
-Item, he that strikes coronal to coronal two times, shall have the
-prize before him that strikes the sight three times.
-
-Item, he that strikes the sight three times shall have the prize
-before him that breaketh more spears.
-
-Item, if there be any man that furnisheth in this wise, which shall be
-deemed to have bidden longest in the field helmed, and to have run the
-fairest course, and to have given the greatest strokes, and to have
-holpen himself best with his spear he shall have the prize.
-
- JOHN WORCESTER.
-
-
-_At Tourney._
-
-Two blows at the passage, and ten at the joining, more or less as they
-make it. All gripings, shocks and foul play forbidden.
-
-
-_How Prizes and Tourney and barrier are to be lost._
-
-He that giveth a stroke with a pike from the girdle downwards, or
-under the barrier, shall win no prize.
-
-He that shall have a close gauntlet, or anything to fasten his sword
-to his hand, shall have no prize.
-
-He whose sword falleth out of his hand shall win no prize.
-
-He that stayeth his hands in fight or the barrier shall win no prize.
-
-He whosoever shall fight and doth not shew his sword to the judges
-before, shall win no prize.
-
-Yet it is to be understood that the Challengers may win all these
-prizes against the Defendants.
-
-The Maintainers may take aid or assistance of the noblemen, of such as
-they shall like best.
-
-[Footnote 72: Coronal = (_a_) The head of a tilting lance of iron,
-furnished with two, three, or four blunt points, which give a good
-hold on shield or helmet when striking but do not penetrate; (_b_) the
-ornamentation on the helmet, to which the plume or crest was usually
-attached.]
-
-[Footnote 73: The barrier separating the two competitors.]
-
-[Footnote 74: See note on previous page.]
-
-[Footnote 75: Attaint was the technical term for a hit.]
-
-
-
-
-A LITTLE PROHEME TO THE BOOK CALLED _GRAMMATICA RUDIMENTA_, BY DEAN
-COLET (1527).
-
-APPENDIX IX. NUM. XIII.
-
-+Source.+--Knight's _Life of Colet_.
-
-
-Albeit many have written, and have made certain introductions into
-Latin Speech, called Donates and Accidence in Latin tongue and in
-English, in such plenty that it should seem to suffice; yet
-nevertheless for the love and zeal that I have to the new School of
-Powles, and to the children of the same, somewhat I have also compiled
-of the matter, and of the viii parts of grammar have made this little
-book, not thinking that I could say anything that had been said better
-before, but I took this business having great pleasure to shew the
-testimony of my good mind unto that school.
-
-In which little work if any new things be of me, it is alonely that I
-have put these parts in a more clear order, and have made them a
-little more easy to young wits, than (me thinketh) they were before.
-Judging that nothing may be too soft, nor too familiar for little
-children, especially learning a tongue unto them all strange. In which
-little book I have left many things out of purposes, considering the
-tenderness and small capacity of little minds. And that I have spoken
-also I have affirmed it none otherwise, but as it happeneth most
-commonly in the Latin Tongue. For many be the exceptions, and hard it
-is anything generally to assure in a speech so various. I pray God all
-may be to his honour, and to the erudition and profit of children, and
-my countrymen Londoners especially, whom digesting this little work I
-had alway before mine eyen, considering more, what was for them, than
-to shew any great cunning, willing to speak the things often before
-spoken, in such manner as gladly young beginners and tender wits might
-take and conceive. Wherefore I pray you all little babes, all little
-children learn gladly this little treatise, and commend it diligently
-unto your memories, trusting of this beginning that ye shall proceed
-and grow to perfect literature, and come at the last to be great
-clerks. And lift up your little white hands for me, which prayeth for
-you to God, to whom be all honour and imperial majesty and glory, AMEN.
-
-
-
-
-GLASGOW: PRINTED AT THE UNIVERSITY PRESS BY ROBERT MACLEHOSE AND CO. LTD.
-
-
-
-
-BELL'S ENGLISH HISTORY SOURCE BOOKS.
-
-
-_Volumes now Ready. 1s. net each._
-
-+449-1066. The Welding of the Race.+ Edited by the Rev. JOHN WALLIS, M.A.
-
-+1066-1154. The Normans in England.+ Edited by A. E. BLAND, B.A.
-
-+1154-1216. The Angevins and the Charter.+ Edited by S. M. TOYNE, M.A.
-
-+1216-1307. The Growth of Parliament, and the War with Scotland.+
-Edited by W. D. ROBIESON, M.A.
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-+1307-1399. War and Misrule.+ Edited by A. A. LOCKE.
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-+1399-1485. York and Lancaster.+ Edited by W. GARMON JONES, M.A.
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-BEWSHER, B.A.
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-+1603-1660. Puritanism and Liberty.+ Edited by KENNETH BELL, M.A.
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-+1660-1714. A Constitution in Making.+ Edited by G. B. PERRETT, M.A.
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-+1714-1760. Walpole and Chatham.+ Edited by K. A. ESDAILE.
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-+1760-1801. American Independence and the French Revolution.+ Edited
-by S. E. WINBOLT, M.A.
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-+1801-1815. England and Napoleon.+ Edited by S. E. WINBOLT, M.A.
-
-+1815-1837. Peace and Reform.+ Edited by A. C. W. EDWARDS, M.A.,
-Christ's Hospital.
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-+1876-1887. Imperialism and Mr. Gladstone.+ Edited by R. H. GRETTON, M.A.
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-University.
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-BELL'S SCOTTISH HISTORY SOURCE BOOKS.
-
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-+1637-1688. The Scottish Covenanters.+ Edited by J. PRINGLE THOMSON, M.A.
-
-+1689-1746. The Jacobite Rebellions.+ Edited by J. PRINGLE THOMSON, M.A.
-
-
-
-
-LONDON: G. BELL AND SONS, LTD.
-
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-Transcriber's note:
-
-Apparent typographical errors have been corrected. The use of hyphens
-has been rationalised.
-
-Notices of other books in the series have been moved to the end of the
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