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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #64437 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/64437)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook, Leaders of the People, by Joseph Clayton
-
-
-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: Leaders of the People
- Studies in Democratic History
-
-
-Author: Joseph Clayton
-
-
-
-Release Date: February 1, 2021 [eBook #64437]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-
-***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEADERS OF THE PEOPLE***
-
-
-E-text prepared by deaurider, Charlie Howard, and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team (http://www.pgdp.net) from page images generously made
-available by Internet Archive (https://archive.org)
-
-
-
-Note: Project Gutenberg also has an HTML version of this
- file which includes the original illustrations.
- See 64437-h.htm or 64437-h.zip:
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/64437/64437-h/64437-h.htm)
- or
- (http://www.gutenberg.org/files/64437/64437-h.zip)
-
-
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/leadersofpeoples00clayiala
-
-
-
-
-
-[Illustration: _John Hampden._
-
-_From a print by J. Houbraken 1740._]
-
-
-LEADERS OF THE PEOPLE
-
-Studies in Democratic History
-
-by
-
-JOSEPH CLAYTON ❦ ❦
-
-With a Frontispiece in Photogravure
-and Numerous Other Illustrations
-
-
-
-
-
-
-New York: Mitchell Kennerley
-Two East Twenty-Ninth Street · MCMXI
-
-
-
-
- To the Memory of
-
- FREDERICK YORK POWELL
-
- Regius Professor of Modern History
- at the University of Oxford
- 1894–1904
-
- “I loved him in life and I love him
- none the less in death: for what
- I loved in him is not dead.”
-
-
-
-
-CONTENTS
-
-
- _Page_
- PREFACE xi
-
- I. ARCHBISHOP ANSELM AND NORMAN AUTOCRACY, 1093–1130 3
-
- II. THOMAS OF CANTERBURY, THE DEFENDER OF THE POOR, 1162–1170 33
-
- III. WILLIAM FITZOSBERT, THE FIRST ENGLISH AGITATOR, 1188–1189 69
-
- IV. STEPHEN LANGTON AND THE GREAT CHARTER, 1207–1215 81
-
- V. BISHOP GROSSETESTE, THE REFORMER, 1235–1253 99
-
- VI. SIMON OF MONTFORT AND THE ENGLISH PARLIAMENT, 1258–1265 117
-
- VII. WAT TYLER AND THE PEASANT REVOLT, 1381 141
-
- VIII. JACK CADE, THE CAPTAIN OF KENT, 1450 173
-
- IX. SIR THOMAS MORE AND FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE, 1529–1535 193
-
- X. ROBERT KET AND THE NORFOLK RISING, 1549 217
-
- XI. ELIOT, HAMPDEN, AND PYM AND THE SUPREMACY OF THE COMMONS,
- 1626–1643 245
-
- XII. JOHN LILBURNE AND THE LEVELLERS, 1647–1653 277
-
- XIII. WINSTANLEY THE DIGGER, 1649–1650 293
-
- XIV. MAJOR CARTWRIGHT, THE FATHER OF REFORM, 1776–1820 307
-
- XV. ERNEST JONES AND CHARTISM, 1838–1868 319
-
- CONCLUSION 335
-
- INDEX 339
-
-
-
-
-LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
-
-
- JOHN HAMPDEN
- _From the Engraving by Jacob Houbraken_ _Frontispiece_
-
- facing p.
- ARCHBISHOP ANSELM
- _From an Old French Engraving in the British Museum_ 3
-
- THOMAS À BECKET
- _From an Engraving after Van Eyck_ 33
-
- KING RICHARD II.
- _From the Panel Painting in the Sanctuary in Westminster Abbey_ 141
-
- SIR THOMAS MORE
- _From the Drawing by Hans Holbein_ 193
-
- SIR JOHN ELIOT
- _From a Steel Engraving by William Holl_ 245
-
- JOHN PYM
- _From the Engraving by Jacob Houbraken_ 257
-
- MAJOR CARTWRIGHT
- _From a Contemporary Drawing_ 307
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
- “_Let us now praise famous men, and our fathers who begat us._”
-
-
-The names of the seventeen men, here named “Leaders of the People,” are
-for the most part familiar in our mouths as household words. Those who
-triumphed, like Anselm and Stephen Langton; or whose cause triumphed,
-like Simon of Montfort, Eliot, Pym and Hampden, are beyond any loss of
-fame. Those who in high place quitted themselves like men and died game
-(if the phrase may be permitted), as did Thomas Becket and Sir Thomas
-More, have, for all time, deservedly their reward. The unsuccessful
-rebels, FitzOsbert (called Longbeard), Wat Tyler, Jack Cade and Robert
-Ket, are hard put to get rid of the obloquy heaped upon them by
-contemporary authority; while the later rebels, equally unsuccessful,
-Lilburne, Winstanley, Major Cartwright and Ernest Jones, relying on
-the pen rather than the sword, escaped the hangman, and in so doing
-narrowly escaped oblivion. Good Bishop Grosseteste, living out his long
-life, thwarted often, but unmartyred, enjoys the reputation commonly
-awarded to conscientious public servants who die in harness.
-
-On the whole, re-perusing the records of these seventeen men, who would
-altogether reverse the verdicts of time? The obloquy may be removed
-when the work of the rebels is fairly seen, and it may be judged that
-they deserved better of the State than appeared when they troubled its
-peace. The rebels of the pen, too, should be worthy of recollection
-in this age, for they wrought manfully with the weapon now at once so
-powerful and so popular. The greater men of our series stand out higher
-as the distance increases. So far readjusted, the awards of history may
-be accepted.
-
-But with all the differences of character, one common quality binds
-these men whose stories are here retold--a resolute hatred of
-oppression. And one common work, successful or unsuccessful, was
-theirs--to labour for the liberties of England and the health of its
-people. The value of each man’s work can only be stated approximately:
-it is difficult to make full allowance for the vastly different parts
-our heroes, statesmen and rebels alike, were called to play. The great
-thing is, that whatever the part, they played it faithfully, as they
-read it, to the end. We may admit the degrees of service given: it is
-impossible to do otherwise. Some of these Leaders shone as great orbs
-of light in their day and generation, lighting not only England, but
-all western Europe--and still their light burns true and clear across
-the centuries. Others were but flickering rush-lights--long extinct
-now. But none were will-o’-the-wisps, for all helped to show the road
-to be travelled by English men and women seeking freedom, and moving
-ever towards democracy. At the least, we--enjoying an inheritance won
-at a great price, and only to be retained on terms no easier--can
-keep the memory green of some few valiant servants of our liberties.
-What is wanted is a real history of the growth of the idea of freedom
-and of popular liberty in this country; and these rough biographical
-sketches may be accepted as a contribution to the materials for such a
-book. “Biography is a department of history, and stands to it as the
-life-history of a plant or an animal does to general biology.”
-
-I have gone back to all the original sources to get once more at the
-lives of these “Leaders of the People,” and to see them as they were
-seen by their contemporaries; but I have also done my best to read
-what the historians of our own day have written concerning them, and
-in mentioning my authorities I have, in each case, given a list of the
-modern books that seem to me valuable.
-
- J. C.
-
-_September, 1910._
-
-
-
-
-Archbishop Anselm and Norman Autocracy
-
-1093–1109
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Eadmer--_Historia Novorum_ and _Life of Anselm_; Orderic
-of St. Evroul; _The English Chronicle_; Florence of Worcester; William
-of Malmesbury; (Rolls Series); Sir Francis Palgrave--_England and
-Normandy_; Freeman--_Norman Conquest_, Vol. V., _Reign of William
-Rufus_; Dean Church--_St. Anselm_.
-
-[Illustration: ARCHBISHOP ANSELM
-
-(_From an old French Engraving in the British Museum._)]
-
-
-
-
-ARCHBISHOP ANSELM AND NORMAN AUTOCRACY
-
-1093–1109.
-
-
-The first real check to the absolutism of Norman rule in England was
-given by Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury.
-
-The turbulent ambition of Norman barons threatened the sovereignity of
-William the Conqueror and of his son, the Red King, often enough, but
-these outbreaks promised no liberty for England. The fires of English
-revolt were stamped out utterly five years after Senlac, and the great
-Conqueror at his death left England crushed; but he left it under the
-discipline of religion, and he left it loyal to the authority of the
-crown, grateful for the one protection against the lawless rule of the
-barons.
-
-The English Chronicler, writing as “one who knew him and once lived at
-his court,” summed up the character of the Conqueror’s life and work in
-words that have been freely quoted through the centuries:--
-
-“King William was wiser and mightier than any of his forerunners. He
-built many minsters, and was gentle to God’s servants, though stern
-beyond all measure to those who withstood his will.... So stark and
-fierce was he that none dared resist his will. Earls that did aught
-against his bidding he put in bonds, and bishops he set off their
-bishoprics, and abbots off their abbacies, and thanes he cast into
-prison. He spared not his own brother, called Odo, who was the chief
-man next to the king, but set him in prison. So just was he that the
-good peace he made in this land cannot be forgotten. For he made it so
-that a man might fare alone over his realm with his bosom full of gold,
-unhurt; and no man durst slay another man whatsoever the evil he hath
-done him; and if any man harmed a woman he was punished accordingly. He
-ruled over England, and surveyed the land with such skill that there
-was not one hide but that he knew who held it, and what it was worth,
-and these things he set in a written book. So mighty was he that he
-held Normandy and Brittany, won England and Maine, brought Scotland and
-Wales to bow to him, and would, had he lived two years longer, have
-won Ireland by his renown, without need of weapons. Yet surely in his
-time men had much travail and very many sorrows; and poor men he made
-to toil hard for the castles he had built. He fell on covetousness, and
-the love of gold; and took by right and by unright many marks of gold
-and more hundred pounds of silver of his people, and for little need.
-He made great deer-parks, and ordered that whoso slew hart or hind, him
-men should blind; and forbade men to slay deer or boar, and made the
-hare go free; he loved the big game as if he were their father. And the
-poor men that were oppressed he recked nought of. All must follow the
-king’s will if they would live, or have land, or even a quiet life.”
-
-But now, in September, 1087, the great King William was dead, with
-his life-work done; and from the tyranny of a strong and just ruler,
-England passed to the despotism of his fearless son, William the Red,
-who was “terrible and mighty over his land and his men and towards all
-his neighbours;” in whose reign “all that was loathsome in the eyes of
-God and righteous men was of common use; wherefore he was loathed by
-well-nigh all his people, and hateful to God as his end showed.”
-
-There was much of the later Puritan in William I. in the steadfastness
-of purpose, the suppression of “malignants,” and determination to have
-justice done, no less than in the sincerity for Church reform, and
-the deep respect for the ordinances of religion. No king of England
-worked more harmoniously with a strong archbishop than William I. with
-Lanfranc--save, perhaps, Charles I. with Laud.
-
-Then on the death of William I., followed less than two years later
-by Lanfranc’s, came the reaction in Church and State from the efforts
-after law, religion, and social decency under the Conqueror’s rule.
-
-The Red King had all his father’s sternness and strength, but was
-without any of that belief in justice, that faith in the Sovereign
-Power of a Living God, that desire for law and order, and that grave
-austerity in morals, which saved the Conqueror from baseness in his
-tyranny.
-
-William II., unmarried, made the wildest and most brutish profligacy
-fashionable at court. To pay for his debaucheries and extravagances
-he plundered all who could pay, in especial the Church, enjoying the
-revenues of all vacant sees and abbeys, and declining to fill up the
-vacancies so that this enjoyment might remain. After Lanfranc, as the
-king’s chief adviser, came Ranulf (nicknamed the Torch, or Firebrand),
-a coarse, unscrupulous bully, with the wit of a criminal lawyer. This
-man was made Bishop of Durham, and Justiciar. For him government
-meant nothing but the art of getting money for his royal master, and
-silencing all opposition.
-
-For over three years there was no Archbishop of Canterbury, and the
-Red King refused to fill up the vacancy caused by Lanfranc’s death,
-preferring to enjoy the revenues and possessions of the see; a thing
-that was shocking to all lovers of religion, and scandalous to those
-who cared for public decency and the good estate of the country.
-
-Eadmer, a contemporary, describes the condition of England in those
-early years of William II.:--
-
-“The king seized the church at Canterbury, the mother of all England,
-Scotland, and Ireland, and the neighbouring isles; he bade his officers
-to make an inventory of all that belonged to it, within and without;
-and after he had fixed an allowance for the support of the monks who
-served God in that place, he ordered the remainder to be disposed of
-at a rent and brought under his domain. So he put up the Church of
-Christ to sale; giving the power of lordship over it to anyone who,
-however hurtful he might be, would bid the highest price. Every year,
-in wretched succession, a new rent was set; for the king would allow no
-bargain to remain settled, and whoever promised more ousted him who was
-paying less, unless the former tenant, giving up his original bargain,
-came up of his own accord to the offer of the later bidder: and every
-day might be seen, besides, the most abandoned of men on their business
-of collecting money for the king, marching about the cloisters of the
-monastery, heedless of the religious rule of God’s servants, and with
-fierce and savage looks giving their orders on all sides; uttering
-threats, lording it over every one, and showing their power to the
-utmost. What scandals and quarrels and irregularities arose from this
-I hate to remember. Some of the monks of the church were dispersed at
-the coming of this misfortune, and sent to other houses, and those who
-remained suffered many tribulations and indignities. What shall I say
-of the church tenants, ground down by such wasting and misery, that one
-might doubt, but that worse followed, whether escaping with bare life
-they could have been more cruelly oppressed. Nor did all this happen
-only at Canterbury. The same savage cruelty raged in all her daughter
-churches in England, which, when bishop or abbot died, at that time
-fell into widowhood. And this king, too, was the first who ordered this
-woeful oppression against the churches of God; he had inherited nothing
-of this sort from his father, but was alone in keeping the vacant
-churches in his own hands. And thus, wherever you looked, there was
-wretchedness before your eyes; and this distress lasted for nearly five
-years over the Church of Canterbury, always increasing, always, as time
-went on, growing more cruel and evil.”
-
-There is no word of exaggeration in this pitiful lament of Eadmer’s.
-England under William II. was at the mercy of a Norman whose notion
-of absolute monarchy was to bleed the land as a subject province.
-Courageous in battle he was, and skilful in arms, but utterly heedless
-of the welfare of the people he ruled. It was enough for the Red King
-if his demands for money were met. There was no one strong enough to
-gainsay his will, or stand before him as the prophets of old stood
-before the kings of Israel, until Anselm came to Canterbury. It is only
-in the utterances of men like Eadmer we learn something of the misery
-of the nation.[1]
-
-The king was with his court at Gloucester at Christmas, 1092, and
-Anselm, then abbot of the famous monastery of Bec in Normandy, was
-in England at that time; partly to comfort his friend, Earl Hugh of
-Chester, who was sick, and partly to attend to the English affairs of
-his monastery.
-
-Anselm was known as the friend of Lanfranc. He had been a welcome guest
-at the court of the Conqueror and in the cloisters at Canterbury. His
-character stood high above all contemporaries in England or Normandy.
-Anselm was surely the right man to be made archbishop, and so put
-an end to a state of things which even to the turbulent barons was
-discreditable to the country.
-
-The Red King bade Anselm come to his court, and received him with great
-display of honour. Then came a private interview, and Anselm at once
-told the king how men spoke ill of his misrule: “Openly or secretly
-things were daily said of him by nearly all the men of his realm which
-were not seemly for the king’s dignity.” They parted, and Anselm was
-busy for some time in England. When the abbot wished to return to Bec
-William refused him leave to quit the country.
-
-At the beginning of Lent, March, 1093, the king was lying sick at
-Gloucester. It was believed the sickness was mortal. Certainly the king
-thought himself dying. Anselm was summoned to minister to him, and on
-his arrival bade the king “make a clean confession of all that he knows
-that he has done against God, and promise that, should he recover, he
-will without pretence amend in all things. The king at once agreed to
-this, and with sorrow of heart engaged to do all that Anselm required,
-and to keep justice and mercy all his life long. To this he pledged his
-faith, and made his bishops witnesses between himself and God, sending
-persons in his stead to promise his word to God on the altar. An Edict
-was written and sealed with the king’s seal that all prisoners should
-be set free in all his dominions, all debts forgiven, all offences
-heretofore committed pardoned and forgotten for ever. Further, good and
-holy laws were promised to the whole people, and the sacred upholding
-of right and such solemn inquest into wrongdoing as may deter others.”
-
-Thus Eadmer.
-
-Florence of Worcester puts the matter more briefly. “When the king
-thought himself about to die he vowed to God, as his barons advised
-him, to amend his life, to sell no more churches nor farm them out,
-but to defend them by his kingly might, and to end all bad laws and to
-establish just laws.”
-
-There was still the vacant archbishopric to be filled, and the king
-named Anselm for Canterbury.
-
-In vain Anselm pleaded that he was an old man--he was then sixty--and
-unfit for so great a responsibility, that he was a monk and had shunned
-the business of the world.
-
-The bishops assembled round the sick king’s bed would not hear the
-refusal. Here was religion well nigh destroyed in England, and evil
-rampant, and the Church of God stricken almost to death, and at such a
-time was Anselm to prefer his own ease and quiet to the call to deliver
-Canterbury from its bondage? By main force they placed a pastoral staff
-within his hands, and while the crowd shouted “Long live the bishop!”
-he was “carried rather than led to a neighbouring church.” The king
-at once ordered that Anselm should be invested with all the temporal
-rights of the see, as Lanfranc had held them, and in September, 1093,
-Anselm was enthroned at Canterbury, and in December he was consecrated.
-
-Anselm warned the bishops and nobles when they forced the archbishopric
-upon him that they were making a mistake. “You have yoked to the plough
-a poor weak sheep with a wild bull,” he said. “This plough is the
-Church of God, and in England it has been drawn by two strong oxen, the
-king and the Archbishop of Canterbury, one to do justice and to hold
-power in the things of this world, the other to teach and govern in the
-things eternal. Now Lanfranc is dead, and with his untamed companion
-you have joined an old and feeble sheep.”
-
-That the king and the archbishop were unevenly yoked was manifest on
-William’s recovery, but it was no poor sheep with whom Rufus had to
-deal, but a man as brave and steadfast as he was gentle and wise.
-
-Trouble began at once when William rose from his sick-bed. Anselm was
-now enthroned and no attempt was made to revoke the appointment. But
-the king’s promises of public amendment were broken without hesitation.
-The pardoned prisoners were seized, the cancelled debts redemanded and
-the proceedings against offenders revived.
-
-“Then was there so great misery and suffering through the whole realm
-that no one can remember to have seen its like in England. All the evil
-which the king had wrought before he was sick seemed good by the side
-of the wrong which he did when he was returned to health.”
-
-The king wanting money for his expedition against his brother, Robert
-of Normandy, tried to persuade Anselm to allow the Church lands,
-bestowed since Lanfranc’s death on vassals of the crown on tenure of
-military service, to remain with their holders. He was answered by
-steady refusal. Had Anselm yielded, he would have been a party to the
-alienation of lands, that, as part of the property of the see, he was
-bound to administer for the common good; he would have been a party not
-only to the spoiling of the Church, but to the robbery of the poor and
-needy, whose claims, in those days, to temporal assistance from Church
-estates were not disputed. Any subsequent restitution of such lands
-was impossible, he foresaw, if it was shown that the archbishop had
-confirmed what the king had done.
-
-Then came the question of a present of money to the king. Anselm
-brought five hundred marks, and, but for his counsellors and men of
-arms, who told him the archbishop ought to have given twice as much,
-William would have taken the gift gladly enough. As it was, to show
-his dissatisfaction, the money was returned. Anselm went boldly to the
-king and warned him that money freely given was better than a forced
-tribute. To this frank rebuke of the extortion practised by the king’s
-servants, William answered that he wanted neither his money, nor his
-preaching, nor his company. Anselm retired not altogether displeased at
-the refusal, for too many of the clergy bought church offices by these
-free gifts after they were instituted. In vain his friends urged him to
-seek the king’s favour by increasing his present, Anselm gave the five
-hundred marks to the poor, and shook his head at the idea of buying the
-king’s favour.
-
-But if Anselm declined to walk in the path of corruption to oblige the
-king, William was equally resolute to make the path of righteousness a
-hard road for the archbishop.
-
-In February, 1094, when the Red King was at Hastings waiting to cross
-to Normandy, Anselm appealed to him to sanction a council of bishops,
-whose decisions approved by the crown should have the authority of law.
-There were two things for such a council to do: (1) stop the open vice
-and profligacy which ravaged the land; (2) find abbots for the many
-monasteries then without heads. In Anselm’s words, the council was “to
-restore the Christian religion which was well-nigh dead in so many.”
-
-William treated the request with angry contempt, and when Anselm sent
-bishops to him asking why the king refused him friendship, an evasive
-answer was returned.
-
-“Give him money,” said the bishops again to Anselm, “if you want peace
-with him. Give him the five hundred marks, and promise him as much
-more, and you will have the royal friendship. This, it seems to us, is
-the only way out of the difficulty.”
-
-But it was not Anselm’s way. He would not even offer what had been
-rejected. “Besides, the greater part of it was spent on the poor.”
-
-William burst out into wrathful speech when he was told of this reply.
-“Never will I hold him as my father and archbishop, and ever shall I
-hate him with bitter hatred. I hated him much yesterday, and to-day I
-hate him still more.”
-
-A year later (March, 1095) at a great council of bishops and nobles,
-held at the castle of Rockingham, the king’s hatred had full vent.
-From the first the Archbishop of Canterbury received from the Pope a
-_pallium_, the white woollen stole with four crosses, which was “the
-badge of his office and dignity,”[2] and Anselm was anxious to journey
-to Rome to obtain his pallium from Pope Urban. William objected to this
-on the ground that there was another claimant to the papacy, and that
-until he had decided who was the rightful pope no one in England had a
-right to do so. In vain Anselm pointed out that he, with all Normandy,
-had acknowledged Urban before he had become archbishop. William
-retorted angrily that Anselm could only keep his faith to the Apostolic
-See by breaking his faith to the king.
-
-The council of Rockingham met to settle the question--not the question
-of the supremacy of Rome in Western Christendom[3]--but the question
-whether, in England, there was any higher authority than the crown.
-William did not pretend to dispute the papal supremacy in the Church.
-His claim was that the king alone must first acknowledge the pope
-before any of his subjects could do so. In reality the king’s one
-desire was “to take from Anselm all authority for maintaining the
-Christian religion. For as long as any one in all the land was said
-to hold any power except through him, even in the things of God, it
-seemed to him that the royal dignity was diminished.” (Eadmer.) William
-acknowledged Pope Urban readily enough, but he would have Archbishop
-Anselm understand that the papacy must be acknowledged by permission
-of the king of England. That was the real ground of contention between
-these two men: was there any power on earth higher in England than the
-English crown? According to William, to appeal to Rome was to dispute
-the absolutism of the crown. Anselm maintained that in all things of
-God he must render obedience to the Chief Shepherd and Prince of the
-Church, to the Vicar of St. Peter; and in matters of earthly dignity
-he must render counsel and service to his lord the king.
-
-The bishops at Rockingham were the king’s men. Many of them had bought
-their bishoprics, all were afraid of the royal displeasure. The stand
-made by Anselm, unsupported though he was, did something to inspire
-a better courage in the ranks of the clergy[4]; but in that Lent of
-1095 there was no sign of support for the archbishop. William only
-wanted to break the will of this resolute old man, the one man in all
-the kingdom who dared to have a mind and utterance of his own, and the
-mitred creatures of the king supported their lord even to the point
-of recommending the forcible deposition of Anselm from his see, or
-at least of depriving him of the staff and ring of office. With one
-consent the bishops accepted the king’s suggestion of renouncing all
-obedience to Anselm.
-
-But the barons were not so craven. To the king’s threat, “No man shall
-be mine, who will be his” (Anselm’s), the nobles said bluntly that not
-having taken any oath of fealty to the archbishop they could not abjure
-it. And Anselm was their archbishop. “It is his work to govern the
-Christian religion in this land, and we who are Christians cannot deny
-his guidance while we live here.”
-
-The three days’ conference at Rockingham ended in disappointment to the
-hopes of William of absolute autocracy, and in general contempt for the
-prelates whose abject servility had availed nothing.
-
-Anselm alone stood higher in the eyes of the men of England, and
-greater was the ill-will of William. For another two years Anselm held
-his ground against the king. The pallium was brought from Rome by
-Walter, Bishop of Albano, and placed on the altar at Canterbury, and
-Anselm was content to take it from the altar. William had written in
-vain to Pope Urban praying for the deposition of Anselm, and promising
-a large annual tribute to Rome if his prayer was granted. The pope, of
-course, declined to do anything of the sort, and William had to make
-the best of the situation. He wanted money for his own purposes, and
-his barons were now against him in his quarrel with the archbishop.
-For a time William adopted a semblance of peace with Anselm, but his
-anger soon blazed out again. The ground of complaint this time was that
-the soldiers whom the archbishop had sent to the king for his military
-expedition against Wales were inadequate--without proper equipment, and
-unfit for service. The archbishop was summoned to appear before the
-King’s Court to “do the king right.”
-
-From the time of his acceptance of the archbishopric, Anselm had been
-hoping against hope that the king would support him, as the Conqueror
-had supported Lanfranc, in the building up of the Christian religion
-in England--this summons to the King’s Court was the death-blow to all
-these hopes. The defendant in the King’s Court was at the mercy of
-the king, who could pronounce whatever judgment he pleased.[5] Anselm
-returned no answer to the summons, but his mind was made up.
-
-“Having knowledge that the king’s word ruled all judgment in the King’s
-Court, where nothing was listened to except what the king willed, it
-seemed to Anselm unbecoming that he should contend, as if disputing, as
-litigants do, about a matter of words, and should submit the justice
-of his cause to the judgment of a court where neither law, nor equity,
-nor reason prevailed. So he held his peace, and gave no answer to the
-messenger.” (Eadmer.)
-
-From the despotism of the Red King Anselm would turn for justice to the
-centre of Christendom. In England he was impotent to stem the evil that
-flowed from the savage absolutism of the throne. All that one man could
-do to resist the royal tyranny Anselm had done, and now this summons to
-the King’s Court was the final answer to all his efforts to restrain
-a lawless king, and to promote the Christian religion in England. He
-would not go through the farce of pleading in the King’s Court, where
-judgment was settled by the unbridled caprice of the king, self-respect
-forbade the archbishop from that; he would appeal to the only court on
-earth higher than the courts of kings--the court whose head, in those
-days, was the head of Christendom.[6]
-
-William dropped the summons to the King’s Court, and for a time refused
-permission to Anselm to leave the country. Bishops and barons now urged
-Anselm not to persist in his appeal to Rome. But the archbishop was
-resolute, and in the autumn of 1097 the king yielded, and Anselm left
-the country.[7]
-
-The first campaign against despotism in England was over--the battle
-was to be renewed when Henry I. wore the crown.
-
-At Rome Pope Urban, with all the goodwill in the world, and with a
-very real affection and regard for Anselm, could do nothing against
-the Red King except rebuke his envoys, and do honour to the much-tried
-archbishop. Anselm himself prevented the excommunication of William
-when it was proposed at the Council of Bari, October, 1098.
-
-But Pope Urban would not allow Anselm to resign his archbishopric, and
-this in spite of all Anselm’s entreaties.
-
-In the spring of 1099 came a General Council at Rome--at which Anselm
-assisted--a council remarkable for its decision against allowing clergy
-to receive investiture of churches from the hands of laymen, and by
-so doing to become the vassals of temporal lords. Excommunication
-was declared to be the penalty for all who gave or received Church
-appointments on such conditions.
-
-It was at the close of this council that an outspoken Bishop of Lucca
-called attention to Anselm’s case. “One sits amongst us in silence and
-meekness who has come from the far ends of the earth. His very silence
-cries aloud. His humility and patience, so gentle and so deep, as they
-rise to God should set us on fire. This one man has come here, wronged
-and afflicted, seeking judgment and justice of the Apostolic See. And
-now this is the second year, and what help has he found?”
-
-Pope Urban answered that attention should be given, but nothing further
-was done.
-
-Anselm left Rome and went to Lyons, remaining in France until the
-death of William in August, 1100. Henry was at once chosen king in his
-room, and crowned at Westminster three days after his brother’s death.
-Six weeks later, at Henry’s earnest request--he prayed him “to come
-back like a father to his son Henry and the English people”--Anselm
-landed at Dover and returned to take up the task allotted to him on his
-consecration as archbishop.
-
-Henry at the outset of his reign promised “God and all the people” that
-the old scandals of selling and farming out the Church lands should
-be stopped, and “to put down all unrighteousness that had been in his
-brother’s time, and to hold the best laws that ever stood in any king’s
-day before him.” That this charter was of value may be taken from the
-verdict on the king by the Chronicler of the time. “Good man he was and
-great awe there was of him. No man durst misdo against another in his
-day. He made peace for man and beast. Whoso carried a burden of gold
-and silver no man durst do him wrong.”
-
-Two evils that pressed very hardly on the mass of hard-working people,
-the devastation that attended the king’s progress through the land[8],
-and the coining of false money, were at Anselm’s instigation checked by
-the king.
-
-But with all Henry’s desire for the restoration of religion and law
-in the land, he was the Conqueror’s son, and for Anselm the struggle
-against absolutism in government was not yet over. Only now the battle
-was not with a fierce, untamed despot like the Red King, but with an
-autocrat of an even more formidable type, a stern man of business, in
-whose person alone must be found the source of all law and order, and
-who would brook no questioning of the royal will.
-
-At the beginning of his reign Henry found the archbishop’s loyalty and
-good sense invaluable. As Lanfranc had stood by the Conqueror in a
-marriage which was objectionable from the point of view of Church law,
-so Anselm stood by his son when he sought the hand of Edith, daughter
-of the sainted Queen Margaret of Scotland. Here the objection to the
-marriage was not on the grounds of affinity or consanguinity, but in
-the fact that Edith was an inmate of the convent at Romsey, and, it
-was alleged, a professed nun. Edith insisted that she had but taken
-refuge in the convent to obtain the protection of her aunt Christina,
-the abbess, and she had worn the habit of a nun as a safeguard against
-the brutal passions of the Red King and his courtiers. The fear of
-violence at the hands of the Normans had driven women to take the veil,
-and Lanfranc had been known to grant release from vows taken under such
-mortal pressure. Anselm was not the man to exalt the letter of the law
-above the spirit of liberty. He was content that a council of the great
-men in Church and State should hold an inquiry, and on their verdict
-declaring Edith free of her vows, the archbishop gave his blessing on
-the marriage.
-
-The same great qualities of loyalty and good sense made Anselm stand
-by the king when the Norman lords, pricked on by Ranulf the Torch, the
-rascally Bishop of Durham (who had escaped from imprisonment in the
-Tower by making his gaolers drunk), and hating Henry for “his English
-ways,” proposed to back up Robert of Normandy in his attempts to seize
-the crown. According to Eadmer, but for Anselm’s faithfulness and
-labours, which turned the scale when so many were wavering, King Henry
-would have lost the sovereignty of the realm of England at that time.
-
-But Anselm’s services to the king are of small account by the side of
-his services to English liberty, and Anselm’s resistance to Henry’s
-demands for an absolute monarchy was of lasting influence in the
-centuries that followed.[9]
-
-The struggle began when Henry called upon Anselm for a new declaration
-of homage to the crown, and required him to receive the archbishopric
-afresh by a new act of investiture. This was a claim that had never
-been made before. “It imported that on the death of the sovereign the
-archbishop’s commission expired, that his office was subordinate and
-derivative, and the dignity therefore reverted to the crown.” (Sir F.
-Palgrave.)
-
-Anselm met the demand with the answer that such a course was
-impossible. Nay, the very ecclesiastical “customs” which for some time
-past had given the appointment of bishops and abbots to the crown, and
-had made the bishops “the king’s men” by obliging them to do homage and
-to receive investiture of their office with ring and staff at the royal
-hands, were now impossible for Anselm. The Council at the Lateran, at
-which Anselm had been present, had forbidden the bishops of the Church
-to become the vassals of the kings of the earth, and Anselm was not the
-man to question this decision. He had seen only too much, under William
-the Red, of the curse of royal supremacy in the Church. He had stood
-up alone against the iniquities of misrule, just because the bishops,
-who should have been pastors and overseers of a Christian people, were
-the sworn creatures of the king. Henceforth it was forbidden by the
-authority that rested in the seat of St. Peter at Rome for a bishop to
-receive consecration as a king’s vassal.
-
-But if Anselm would be no party to what had become an intolerable evil,
-Henry would not give up the rights his father had exercised without
-a contest. He was willing to do his best for the Church, but it must
-be in his own way. “Pledging himself in his own heart and mind not to
-abate a jot of his supremacy over the clergy, he would exercise his
-authority in Church affairs somewhat more decently than his father,
-and a great deal more than his brother; but that was all.” (Sir F.
-Palgrave.)
-
-Both Henry and Anselm recognized the gravity of the issue. Were the
-bishops and abbots to continue to receive investiture from the king
-they were “his men,” and his autocracy was established over all. Stop
-the investiture and the bishops were first and chiefly the servants of
-the Most High, acknowledging a sovereignty higher than that exercised
-by the princes of this world, and preferring loyalty to the Church
-Catholic and its Father at Rome, to blind obedience to the crown.
-
-In brief, the question in dispute really was--Was there, or was there
-not, any power on earth greater than the English crown?--a question
-which no English king before Henry VIII. answered successfully in the
-negative. In contending for the freedom of the bishops of the Church
-from vassalage to the crown, Anselm was contending for the existence
-of an authority to which even kings should pay allegiance. It was
-not the rights of the clergy that were at stake, for the terrors of
-excommunication did not prevent bishops from receiving consecration
-on Henry’s terms, and Anselm stood alone now, as in the days of the
-Red King, in the resistance to despotism. It was the feeling and the
-knowledge, which Anselm shared with the best churchmen of his day, that
-great as the power of the king must be, it was a bad thing for such
-power to exist unchecked, and that it were well for the world that its
-mightiest monarchs should know there was a spiritual dominion given to
-the successor of St. Peter, and to his children, a dominion of divine
-foundation that claimed obedience even from kings.
-
-Anselm put it to the king that the canons of the Church, and the
-decrees of a great council had forbidden the “customs” of investiture
-which the king claimed; and he pleaded that he was an old man, and that
-unless he could work with the king on the acceptance of the Church
-canons, it was no use his remaining in England, “for he could not
-hold communion with those who broke these laws”: Henry, for his part,
-was much disturbed. It was a grave matter to lose the investiture of
-churches, and the homage of prelates; it was a grave matter, too, to
-let Anselm leave the country while he himself was hardly established
-in the kingdom. “On the one side it seemed to him that he should be
-losing, as it were, half of his kingdom; on the other, he feared lest
-Anselm should make his brother Robert King of England,”--for Robert
-might easily be brought to submit to the Apostolic See if he could be
-made king on such terms.
-
-Henry suggested an appeal to the pope on the question of the right
-of the crown to “invest” the bishops, and Anselm, who all along was
-anxious for peace--if peace could be obtained without acknowledgment
-of royal absolutism--at once agreed.
-
-The pope, of course, could not grant Henry’s request. To allow the high
-offices of the Church to be disposed of at the caprice of kings and
-princes, without any recognition of the sacredness of these offices,
-to admit that the chief ministers of religion were first and foremost
-“the king’s men,” seemed to Pope Paschal, as it seemed to Anselm,
-a concession to evil, and the establishment of a principle which
-experience had proved thoroughly vicious and mischievous.
-
-Then for nearly three years a correspondence dragged on between
-Henry and the pope, neither wishing for an open rupture, and in the
-meantime, Henry, backed by most of the bishops and nobles in setting at
-nought the canons which had forbidden investiture, proposed to go on
-appointing and investing new bishops as before.
-
-Finally, the king appealed to Anselm to go to Rome “and try what he
-could do with the pope, lest the king by losing the rights of his
-predecessors should be disgraced.”
-
-Anselm was now (1103) an old man of seventy, but he agreed to go; only
-“he could do nothing to the prejudice of the liberty of the Church or
-his own honour.” What Henry hoped for was that the pope would grant
-some personal dispensation in the matter of the royal “customs,” and
-he had tried to persuade Anselm that such dispensation was sure to be
-granted. Anselm did not believe the dispensation possible or desirable,
-but left the decision with the acknowledged head of Christendom at
-Rome; and though for another three years Henry urged his suit, no
-dispensation could be wrung from the pope. All that the pope would
-grant was that the bishops might do “homage” to the crown for their
-temporal rights.
-
-At last, in April, 1106, Anselm returned to England. The bishops
-themselves, who had sided with the king against him, implored him to
-return, so wretched had become the state of religion in England in his
-absence. They promised to do his commands and to fight with him the
-battle of the Lord.
-
-Henry, fresh from the conquest of Normandy, sent word of his good-will,
-and of his desire for the archbishop’s presence. The long drawn-out
-battle was over, and the king had to be content with “homage,” and to
-resign the claim to investiture.
-
-“On August 1st (1107) an assembly of bishops, abbots, and chief men of
-the realm, was held in London, in the king’s palace, and for three days
-the matter of the investiture of churches was fully discussed between
-the king and the bishops in Anselm’s absence. Then, in the presence of
-Anselm and before the whole multitude, the king granted and decreed
-that henceforth and for ever no one should be invested in England with
-bishopric or abbey by staff and ring, either by the king or the hand
-of any layman; while Anselm allowed that no one chosen for a bishopric
-should be refused consecration for having done homage to the king. This
-having been settled, the king, by the counsel of Anselm and the chief
-men of the realm, appointed priests in nearly all those churches in
-England which had long been widowed of their pastors.” (Eadmer.)
-
-Victory rested with Anselm. The old archbishop had done his best for
-the liberty of religion, and by contending for this liberty he had
-wrought for common freedom.[10] Later ages and struggles were to bring
-out more clearly that some measure of political and social liberty
-must follow the demand for freedom in religion. “Religious forces,
-and religious forces alone, have had sufficient influence to ensure
-practical realisation for political ideas.” (Figgis, _Studies of
-Political Thought_.)
-
-Anselm’s life was nearly over, his work was accomplished, a
-philosophical treatise “Concerning the agreement of Foreknowledge,
-Predestination and the Grace of God with Free Will” was written with
-difficulty in the last years. Then his appetite failed him, and all
-food became loathsome. At last he was persuaded to take to his bed, and
-on April 21st, 1109--the Wednesday of Holy Week--at daybreak Anselm
-passed away.
-
-Anselm’s name has long been enrolled in the calendar of the saints
-of the Church Catholic, no less is it to be cherished by all who
-love liberty. Well may it be said of him, “he was ever a close
-follower of Truth, and walked in noble companionship with Pity and
-Courage.” Anselm’s plain good sense and charity were conspicuous in
-his benediction of the marriage of Henry and Edith, but these great
-qualities were earlier displayed when Lanfranc consulted him as to the
-claims of the English Archbishop Ælphege to be canonised as a martyr.
-Ælphege had been slain by the Danes for refusing to ransom his life at
-the expense of his tenants; and Anselm replied to Lanfranc that he who
-would die rather than oppress his tenants dies for justice’ sake, and
-he who dies for justice dies a martyr for Christ.
-
-His sympathy and humaneness shone out a thousand times. There is the
-story Eadmer tells of an abbot, who came to Anselm at Bec, and deplored
-that he could do no good with the boys at his monastery. “In spite
-of all we do they are perverse and incorrigible,” said the abbot,
-despondently. “We are always beating them, but they only get worse:
-and though we constrain them in every way we can, it’s all of no use.”
-“_Constrain_ them!” answered Anselm. “Tell me, my lord abbot, when
-you plant a tree in your garden, do you so tie it up that it cannot
-stretch forth its branches? And if you did so, what sort of tree would
-it become a few years hence when you released it? But this is just
-what you do with your boys. You cramp them in with terrors and threats
-and blows, so that it is quite impossible for them to grow or enjoy
-any freedom. And kept down in this way their temper is spoilt by evil
-thoughts of hatred and suspicion against you, and they put down all you
-do to ill-nature and dislike. Why are you so harsh with them? Are they
-not human beings of the same nature as yourself? How would you like to
-be treated as you treat them?” The abbot was finally persuaded that
-he had been all wrong. “We have wandered,” he said, “from the way of
-truth, and the light of discretion hath not shone on us.”
-
-There is another story which gives Anselm’s pity and feeling of
-kinship with the whole animal creation. It was when he was archbishop,
-and was riding one day from Windsor to Hayes that a hare chased by the
-dogs of some of his company took refuge under the feet of his horse.
-Anselm at once pulled up and forebade the hare to be molested, and
-when his escort laughed gleefully at the capture, the archbishop said:
-“You may laugh, but it is no laughing matter for this poor unhappy
-creature, which is like the soul of a departing man pursued by evil
-spirits. Mortal enemies attack it, and it flies to us for its life: and
-while it turns to us for safety we laugh.” He rode on, and in a loud
-voice forbade the dogs to touch the hare; which, glad to be at liberty,
-darted off to the fields and woods.
-
-That Anselm never wavered in his tenderness for the weak and oppressed
-may be learnt from the great Church Synod held at Westminster in
-1102--a council summoned on the strong request of the archbishop. The
-slave trade was specially denounced at this council as a “wicked trade
-used hitherto in England, by which men are sold like brute animals,”
-and a canon was drawn up to that effect.
-
-Anselm’s enduring courage and desire for truth are conspicuous all
-his life. He fought single-handed against both William and Henry,
-and no weight of numbers, no world-wise talk from other prelates
-could make him budge. If he withstood the Red King and his court at
-Rockingham, equally firm was he in withstanding the Norman barons who
-were inclined to break away from their sworn allegiance to Henry. No
-Englishman by birth or blood was Anselm, for he was born at Aosta, and
-spent the greater part of his life on the Continent, but he brought
-to England the finest gifts of life, and gave them freely in service
-to England’s liberty. He withstood an absolutism that threatened the
-total enslavement of the nation, and the witness he bore to liberty
-was taken up and renewed in the centuries that followed. “Anselm
-was truly a great man. So good that he was held a saint in his very
-lifetime, so meek that even his enemies honoured him, so wise that he
-was the foremost thinker of his day, and the forerunner of the greatest
-philosophers of ours.” (F. York Powell.)
-
-
-
-
-Thomas of Canterbury
-
-The Defender of the Poor
-
-1162–1170
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Benedict of Peterborough; Garnier; William FitzStephen;
-John of Salisbury; Herbert of Bosham; Alan of Tewkesbury; Edward
-Grim; Roger of Pontigny; William of Canterbury; Robert of
-Cricklade--_Materials for the History of Thomas Becket_, 7 vols.;
-_Thomas Saga_ (Icelandic), translated by Magnusson; Giraldus
-Cambrensis; Gervase of Canterbury; William of Newburgh; Roger of
-Hoveden, III.; Ralph Diceto (Rolls Series); Froude, R. H.--_Remains_,
-Vol. 3; _Life of Becket_, by Canon J. C. Robertson; _Life of St. Thomas
-Becket_, by John Morris, S.J.; Stubbs--_Constitutional History_, Vol.
-I; Freeman--_Historical Essays_, 1st Series; W. H. Hutton--_English
-History by Contemporary Writers_--_St. Thomas of Canterbury_.
-
-[Illustration: THOMAS A BECKET
-
-(_From an old Engraving after Van Eyck._)]
-
-
-
-
-THOMAS OF CANTERBURY THE DEFENDER OF THE POOR
-
-1162–1170
-
-
-Fifty years after the death of Anselm the struggle with absolute
-monarchy had to be renewed in England, and again the Archbishop of
-Canterbury was the antagonist of the crown, standing alone for the most
-part, as Anselm stood, in his resistance to autocracy.
-
-The contrast is great between the upbringing and character of Anselm
-and of Thomas; but both men gave valiant service in the cause of
-liberty in England, and both are placed in the calendar of the saints.
-For Thomas and Anselm alike the choice was between the favour of
-the King of England, the safe broad road of passive obedience, and
-the following of the call of conscience on the craggy way of royal
-displeasure; and to the everlasting honour of these two men, and of the
-religion they professed, they chose the steep and narrow path with no
-faltering step, and followed the gleam, heedless of this world’s glory,
-heedless of life itself.
-
-Thomas was no monk as Anselm was, when the king nominated him for
-the archbishopric of Canterbury. His early life was not spent in the
-cloister but in the employment of a wealthy London sheriff, in the
-office of Archbishop Theobald, at Lambeth, and as Chancellor of England.
-
-The son of gentle parents--his father Gilbert sometime
-sheriff--“London citizens of the middle class, not usurers nor engaged
-in business, but living well on their own income,” according to
-FitzStephen, Thomas was the first Englishman to be made archbishop.
-His gifts marked him out for high office. Theobald had sent him abroad
-to study law at the great school at Bologna, and at the age of 36 made
-him archdeacon of Canterbury, at that time “the dignity in the Church
-of England next after the bishops and abbots, and which brought him an
-hundred pounds of silver.” A year later, 1155, the young newly crowned
-king, Henry II., on the advice of old Archbishop Theobald, made Thomas
-the Chancellor. Theobald, anxious about the present, and apprehensive
-for the future--for the king was very young, and those about him were
-known to be hostile to the freedom of the Church and willing to treat
-England as a conquered land--sought to prevent the evils which seemed
-to be at hand by making Thomas a partner of the King’s counsels. He
-could say, after ten years’ experience, that Thomas was high-principled
-and prudent, wisely zealous for justice, and whole-hearted for the
-freedom of the Church, and he held forth to the king on the wisdom,
-the courage and the faithfulness of his archdeacon, “and the admirable
-sweetness of his manners.”
-
-The appointment was made, nor could anyone say that it was ill done, or
-that Theobald in his recommendation, or Henry II. in his acceptance, of
-Thomas for the chancellorship could have done better for England.
-
-The chancellor was magnificent, and his dignity was accounted second
-from the king. Nobles sent their children to Thomas to be trained in
-his service. The king commended to him his son, the heir to the throne.
-Barons and knights did homage to him. On his embassy to the French king
-never had been seen such a retinue of followers, and such a lavish
-display of the wealth and grandeur of England. The proud and mighty he
-treated with harshness and violence. Yet it was said, by those who knew
-him intimately, that he was lowly in his own eyes, and gentle and meek
-to those who were humble in heart. And in the courts of kings, where
-chastity is never commonly extolled, or purity of life the fashion,
-Thomas, the chancellor, was known for his cleanness of living and his
-unblemished honour. Many enemies he had, many who hated him for his
-power; but never was breath of scandal uttered against the chancellor’s
-private life, or suggestion made that the carnal lusts and appetites
-which, unbridled, play havoc with men great and small, could claim
-Thomas for their subject.
-
-He might be reproached by a monk for that he, being an archdeacon,
-lived so secular a life, wearing the dress of a courtier, and charging
-on the field with knights in France, but it could not be alleged that
-church or realm suffered neglect from the chancellor. “By divine
-inspiration and the counsel of Thomas, the lord king did not long
-retain vacant bishoprics and abbacies, so that the patrimony of the
-Crucified might be brought into the treasury, as was afterwards
-done, but bestowed them with little delay on honourable persons, and
-according to God’s law.” (W. FitzStephen.)
-
-The close friendship and warm affection of the king for his chancellor
-were known to all. When the day’s business was done “they would play
-together like boys of the same age.” They sat together in church and
-hall and rode out together. “Never in Christian times were there two
-men more of one mind or better friends.” It was natural on the death of
-Archbishop Theobald, in 1161, that people should point to Thomas as his
-successor, though the chancellor shrank, as Anselm had done, from the
-post.
-
-“I know three poor priests in England any one of whom I would rather
-see advanced to the archbishopric than myself,” he declared earnestly,
-when his friend the prior of Leicester (who also remonstrated with him
-for his unclerical dress) told him the rumours of the court. “For as
-for me, if I was appointed, I know the king so through and through that
-I should be forced either to lose his favour or, which God forbid, to
-lay aside the service of God.”
-
-Thomas uttered the same warning to Henry when the king proposed the
-primacy to him. “I know certainly,” he said, “that if God should so
-dispose that this happen, you would soon turn away your love, and the
-favour which is now between us would be changed into bitterest hate. I
-know that you would demand many things in Church matters, for already
-you have demanded them, which I could never bear quietly, and the
-envious would take occasion to provoke an endless strife between us.”
-
-But Henry’s mind was made up. Residing largely in France, he would
-have Thomas, Archbishop of Canterbury and Chancellor, to rule England
-as his vice-regent. Six years had Thomas been the king’s friend and
-chancellor, but the king did not know at all the real character of
-his man, or rather it was inconceivable to the royal mind that
-Thomas, whom the king had raised from a mere nobody, from Archdeacon
-of Canterbury, an important ecclesiastic at best, to the chief man in
-the realm, should ever dare set himself at variance with the king’s
-will. Henry, with his untiring energy, was earnest enough for good
-government in Church and State under an absolute monarchy, and he
-counted on greater co-operation with Thomas in carrying out his plans,
-were the latter archbishop. Hitherto, more than once the chancellor
-had succeeded in moderating the king’s outbursts of wrath against some
-hapless offender, but he had never shown himself a partisan of the
-clergy at the expense of the commonwealth,[11] and his lack of pride in
-his order had even incurred rebuke, so little of the ecclesiastic did
-this statesman appear.
-
-Thomas understood the king better than the king understood his
-chancellor. But his protests were in vain. He was as surely marked for
-the archbishopric as Anselm had been. Bishops of the province approved
-and the monks of Canterbury duly voted for the king’s chancellor in
-common consent, Gilbert Foliot, the Bishop of Hereford, and afterwards
-of London, and the archbishop’s enemy to the end, alone opposing the
-election.
-
-“Then the archbishop-elect was by the king’s authority declared free of
-all debts to the crown and given free to the Church of England, and in
-that freedom he was received by the Church with the customary hymns and
-words of praise.” (Herbert of Bosham.)
-
-On June 2nd, 1162, the Saturday after Whit Sunday, Thomas was
-ordained priest and on the following day consecrated bishop. (The new
-archbishop instituted the festival of Trinity Sunday to commemorate
-his consecration, and some 200 years later the festival was made of
-general observance in the Catholic Church.) The king realised the
-mistake he had made within a year of the consecration. The brilliant
-chancellor was no sooner archbishop than he turned from all the
-gaieties of the world, and while no less a statesman, adopted the life
-of his monks--though never himself a monk--at Canterbury. Henceforth
-Archbishop Thomas was the unflinching champion of the poor and them
-that had no helper, the resolute defender of the liberties of the
-Church against all who would make religion subject to the autocracy of
-the king of England.
-
-Thomas was forty-four years old, in the full strength of his manhood,
-when he was made archbishop, and for eight years he did battle with the
-crown, only laying down his charge at the call of martyrdom.
-
-The first disappointment to Henry was the resignation of the
-chancellor’s seal.[12] It was clear to Thomas that he could no longer
-serve the crown and do the work of a Christian bishop at the same
-time, and he had accepted with full sense of responsibility the see of
-Canterbury. There was no room for the egotism that loves power, the
-vaulting ambition that o’erleaps itself, or even the self-deception
-that persuades a man holding to high position at sacrifice of principle
-that his motive is disinterested, in St. Thomas of Canterbury. More
-than once England was to see in later years men who strove vainly to
-serve with equal respect the Christian religion and the royal will--the
-service always ended in the triumph of the latter. Thomas was far too
-clearly-sighted to imagine such joint service possible, and for him,
-elected and consecrated to the primacy of the English Church, there was
-no longer any choice. As chancellor, keeping his conscience clear, he
-had done the best he could for law and order as the king’s right hand
-man. As Archbishop of Canterbury his duty, first and foremost, was to
-maintain the Christian religion and defend the cause of the poor and
-needy.
-
-But to Henry the resignation of the chancellorship was an act of
-desertion, a declared challenge to the royal supremacy. Henry II.
-was no more the man than his grandfather Henry I. had been to brook
-anything that threatened resistance to the king’s rule.
-
-Courtiers who hated Thomas were always at hand to poison the ears
-of the king by defaming the archbishop, and this, says William
-FitzStephen, was the first cause of the trouble. Another cause was the
-hatred of the king for the clergy of England, hatred provoked by the
-notoriously disreputable lives of more than one clerk in holy orders.
-The battle between Henry and Thomas began on this matter of criminous
-clerks.
-
-William the Conqueror and Lanfranc recognizing that the Church,
-strong and well ordered, made for national well-being, had set up
-ecclesiastical courts wherein all matters affecting church law and
-discipline were to be dealt with by the clergy, to the end that the
-clergy should not be mixed up in lawsuits and should be excluded from
-the lay courts. Henry II. was not satisfied that criminous clerks
-were adequately dealt with in these ecclesiastical courts, where no
-penalty involving bloodshed might be inflicted, and where the savage
-punishments of mutilation had no place. Thomas was as anxious as the
-king for the Church to be purged of abuses, but he was resolved not
-to hand over offenders to the secular arm. The archbishop was an
-ardent reformer. “He plucked up, pulled down, scattered and rooted
-out whatever he found amiss in the vineyard of the Lord,” wrote a
-contemporary; but he would shelter his flock as far as he could by the
-canon law from the hideous cruelties of the King’s Courts.[13] It was
-not for the protection of the clergy alone the archbishop was fighting
-in the councils summoned by the king at Westminster in 1163, and at
-Clarendon in 1164.
-
-“Ecclesiastical privileges were not so exclusively priestly privileges
-as we sometimes fancy. They sheltered not only ordained ministers,
-but all ecclesiastical officers of every kind; the Church Courts also
-claimed jurisdiction in the causes of widows and orphans. In short,
-the privileges for which Thomas contended transferred a large part of
-the people, and that the most helpless part, from the bloody grasp of
-the King’s Courts to the milder jurisdiction of the bishop.” (Freeman,
-_Historical Essay_, First Series.)
-
-Before the climax of the dispute between Henry and Thomas was reached
-at Clarendon, the archbishop had resisted the king in a matter of
-arbitrary taxation--“the earliest recorded instance of resistance to
-the royal will in a matter of taxation”[14]--and had fallen still
-further in the king’s disfavour.
-
-Henry was at Woodstock, on July 1st, 1163, with the archbishop and the
-great men of the land, and among other matters a question was raised
-concerning the payment of a two shillings land tax on every hide of
-land. This was an old tax dating from Saxon times, which William the
-Conqueror had increased. It was paid to the sheriffs, who in return
-undertook the defence of the county, and may be compared with the
-county rates of our own day. The king declared this tax should in
-future be collected for the crown, and added to the royal revenue; and
-no one dared to question this decision until Archbishop Thomas arose
-and told the king to his face that the tax was not to be exacted as
-revenue, but was a voluntary offering to be paid to the sheriffs only
-“so long as they shall serve us fitly and maintain and defend our
-dependants.” It was not a tax that could be enforced by law.
-
-Henry, bursting with anger, swore, “By God’s Eyes” it should be given
-as revenue, and enscrolled as a king’s tax.
-
-The archbishop replied with quiet determination, “aware lest by his
-sufferance a custom should come in to the hurt of his successors,”
-that, “by the reverence of those Eyes,” by which the king had sworn,
-not one penny should be paid from his lands, or from the rights of
-the Church. The king was silenced, no answer was forthcoming to the
-objector, and the tax was paid as before to the sheriffs. But “the
-indignation of the king was not set at rest,” and in October came the
-Council of Westminster.
-
-The king at once demanded that criminous clerks should not only
-be punished in the Church Courts by the sentence of deprivation,
-but should further be handed over to the King’s Courts for greater
-penalties, alleging that those who were not restrained from crime by
-the remembrance of their holy orders would care little for the loss of
-such orders.
-
-The archbishop replied quietly that this proposed new discipline was
-contrary to the religious liberty of the land, and that he would never
-agree to it. The Church was the one sanctuary against the barbarities
-of the law, and Thomas to the end would maintain the security it
-offered. More important it seemed to him that clerical offenders should
-escape the king’s justice, than that all petty felons who could claim
-the protection of the Church should be given over to mutilation by the
-king’s officers. The bishops silently supported the primate in this
-matter, though they told him plainly, “Better the liberties of the
-Church perish than that we perish ourselves. Much must be yielded to
-the malice of the times.”
-
-Thomas answered this pitiful plea by admitting the times were bad.
-“But,” he added, “are we to heap sin upon sin? It is when the Church is
-in trouble, and not merely when the times are peaceful, that a bishop
-must cleave to the right. No greater merit was there to the bishops of
-old who gave their blood for the Church than there is now to those who
-die in defence of her liberties.”
-
-But the bishops were wavering, fearful of defying the king’s will. And
-when Henry, defeated for the moment by the archbishop’s stand, angrily
-called upon them to take an oath to observe in future “the royal
-customs” of the realm as settled by his grandfather, Henry I., they all
-agreed to do so, adding the clause “saving the rights of their order.”
-The king objected, calling for the promise to be made “absolutely and
-without qualifications,” until Thomas reminded him that the fealty the
-bishops swore to give the crown “in life and limb and earthly honour”
-was sworn “_salvo ordine suo_,” and that the “earthly honour” promise,
-which included all the royal “customs” of Henry I., was not to be given
-by bishops in any other way.
-
-It was now late at night, and the king broke up the council in anger,
-leaving the bishops to retire as they would.
-
-Henry was resolved to abolish the Church Courts and destroy the
-protection they afforded. He would have all brought under the severity
-of his law, in spite of the archbishop. He knew the bishops were
-wavering and were fearful of the royal displeasure. Thomas Becket, and
-Thomas Becket alone, was the obstruction to the king’s schemes, and
-firm as Becket might stand, the king would break down his opposition.
-
-The very day after Westminster the king demanded the resignation of all
-the fortresses and honours Thomas had held under the crown since he had
-been made chancellor, and these were surrendered at once.
-
-Then Henry tried a personal appeal, and once more the two met together
-in a field near Northampton. Henry began by reminding Thomas of all he
-had done for him.
-
-“Have I not raised you from a mean and lowly state to height of honour
-and dignity? How is it after so many benefits and so many proofs of my
-affection, which all have seen, you have forgotten these things, and
-are now not only ungrateful, but my opponent in everything?”
-
-The archbishop answered: “Far be it from me, my lord. I am not
-forgetful of the favours which God has conferred upon me at your
-hands. Far be it from me to be so ungrateful as to resist your will
-in anything so long as it is in accord with God’s will.” St. Thomas,
-enlarging on the necessity of obedience to God rather than to men,
-should the will of man clash with the will of God, the king at last
-interrupted him impatiently with the intimation that he did not want a
-sermon just then.
-
-“Are you not my man, the son of one of my servants?”
-
-“In truth,” the archbishop answered, “I am not sprung from a race of
-kings. Neither was blessed Peter, the prince of the apostles, to whom
-was committed the leadership of the Church.”
-
-“And in truth Peter died for his Lord,” said the king.
-
-“I too will die for my Lord when the time comes,” replied the
-archbishop.
-
-“You trust too much to the ladder you have mounted by,” said the king.
-
-But the archbishop answered: “I trust in God, for cursed is the man
-that putteth his trust in man.” Then the archbishop went on to remind
-Henry of the proofs he had given of his fidelity in the years when he
-was chancellor, and warned him that he would have done well to have
-taken counsel with his archbishop concerning spiritual things than with
-those who had kindled the flame of envy and vengeance against one who
-had done them no wrong.
-
-The only reply the king gave was to urge that the Archbishop should
-drop the words “saving their order” in promising to obey the royal
-customs.
-
-The archbishop refused to yield, and so they parted.[15]
-
-At the close of the year the archbishop’s difficulties had been
-increased by appeals on all sides to yield to the king. The bishops
-were for peace at any price, and the Pope, Alexander III., threatened
-by an anti-pope, and anxious for the good will of the king of England,
-sent an abbot to Thomas urging him to give way, on the ground that
-Henry only wanted a formal assent to the “customs” for the sake of his
-dignity, and had no intention of doing anything harmful to the Church.
-
-Under these circumstances Thomas decided to yield. He went to the king
-at Woodstock and declared that the obnoxious phrase, “saving our
-order,” should be omitted from the promise to observe the “customs.”
-
-Without delay the king ordered his justiciar, Richard of Lucy, and his
-clerk, Jocelin of Balliol, to draw up a list of the old “customs” and
-liberties of his grandfather Henry I., and on the 29th of January,
-1164, a great council was held at Clarendon to ratify the agreement
-between the bishops and the king.
-
-Sixteen constitutions or articles were drawn up, and Thomas,
-over-persuaded by the prayers of the bishops and the desire for peace,
-gave his promise unconditionally to observe them. But no sooner had he
-done so, and the articles were placed before him in black and white,
-than he repented.
-
-The very first article declared that all disputes about Church
-patronage were to be tried in the King’s Court, and was intolerable,
-because while the State held it was a question of the rights of
-property, the Church view was that the main point was the care of
-souls, a spiritual matter for churchmen, not lawyers, to decide.
-
-The other articles which Thomas objected to, and which the pope
-subsequently refused to ratify, decreed: (1) That clerks were to be
-tried in the King’s Courts for offences of common law. (2) That neither
-archbishops, bishops, nor beneficed clerks were to leave the kingdom
-without the king’s license. (This, said St. Thomas, would stop all
-pilgrimages and attendance at councils at Rome, and turn England into a
-vast prison. “It was right enough to apply for the king’s leave before
-the departure, but to bind one’s-self by an oath not to go without it
-was against religion and was evil.”) (3) That no member of the king’s
-household was to be excommunicated without the king’s permission.
-(4) That no appeals should be taken beyond the archbishop’s court,
-except to be brought before the king. (This was a definite attempt to
-prohibit appeals to Rome, and Thomas pointed out that the archbishop on
-receiving the pallium swore expressly not to hinder such appeals. The
-acceptance of this article left the king absolute master.)
-
-The last article, declaring that serfs or sons of villeins were not to
-be ordained without the consent of the lord on whose land they were
-born, was not opposed by the pope, and the only contemporary objection
-seems to have been raised by Garnier, a French monk and a biographer of
-Thomas Becket.[16]
-
-Thomas had promised obedience to these constitutions, but he would not
-put his seal to them. It seemed to him that it was not only the old
-“customs” that had been drawn up, but rather a new interpretation of
-these customs. The great Council of Clarendon was over. Thomas received
-a copy of the constitutions and rode off, and the king had to be
-content for the time with the promises delivered.
-
-In abject remorse Thomas wrote to the pope confessing his assent to
-the Constitutions of Clarendon, and for forty days he abstained from
-celebrating the mass. The pope, still anxious to prevent any open
-rupture between the king and the archbishop, wrote in reply that
-“Almighty God watches not the deed, but considers rather the intention
-and judges the will,” and that Thomas was absolved by apostolic
-authority. All the same, Pope Alexander III., without in any way
-censuring Thomas, throughout the long struggle with Henry never stands
-up roundly for the archbishop.
-
-Neither Henry nor Thomas could rest satisfied with Clarendon. The
-archbishop had compromised for the sake of peace, but his quick
-revulsion had provoked a keener hostility in the king. To Henry
-it seemed the time had come to drive Thomas out of public life by
-compelling him to resign the see of Canterbury. With Thomas out of the
-way Henry could carry out his plans for a strong central government,
-for bringing all under the pitiless arm of the law. Thomas was the
-one man in the kingdom who dared offer resistance, and if Thomas was
-no longer archbishop and some supple creature of the king was in his
-place, the royal power would be absolute, for there seemed no fear of
-any interference from Pope Alexander III.
-
-There were plenty of the archbishop’s enemies among the nobles at the
-court ready to fan the king’s anger against Thomas, and by October,
-1164, Henry was ready to crush the primate.
-
-Another council was summoned to meet at Northampton, and now Archbishop
-Thomas was to learn the full significance of the Constitutions of
-Clarendon.
-
-The first charge against Thomas was that he had refused justice to
-John, the Treasurer-Marshal, who had taken up some land under the see
-of Canterbury. John had taken his suit to the King’s Court, and Thomas
-was further charged with contempt of the majesty of the crown for not
-putting in a personal appearance at this court. The king now pressed
-for judgment against the archbishop for this contempt, and the council
-ordered that he should be condemned to the loss of all his moveable
-property, and 500 pounds of silver was accepted as an equivalent fine.
-
-“It seemed to all that, considering the reverence due to the king
-and by the obligation of the oath of homage, which the archbishop
-had taken, and by the fealty to the king’s earthly honour which he
-had sworn, he was in no way to be excused, because when summoned by
-the king he had neither come himself, nor pleaded infirmity, or the
-necessary work of his ecclesiastical office.” (W. FitzStephen).
-
-It was not easy to get the sentence pronounced against Thomas. Barons
-and bishops were willing enough to stand well with the king, and they
-agreed without contradiction to the fine. But the barons declined to
-act as judge on a spiritual peer, and insisted that one of the bishops
-must do this business. Henry, Bishop of Winchester, at last, on the
-king’s order, pronounced the sentence.
-
-Thomas protested. “If I were silent at such a sentence posterity would
-not be. This is a new form of sentence, no doubt in accordance with
-the new laws of Clarendon. Never has it been heard before in England
-that an Archbishop of Canterbury has been tried in the King’s Court
-for such a cause. The dignity of the Church, the authority of his
-person, the fact that he is the spiritual father of the king and of
-all his subjects, require that he should be reverenced by all.” For
-an archbishop to be judged by his suffragans was, he declared, for a
-father to be judged by his sons.
-
-The bishops implored him to bow to the decree of the council, and
-Thomas yielded, “not being willing that a mere matter of money should
-cause strife between the king and himself.”
-
-The next day, Friday, October 9th, the king pressed Thomas more
-fiercely, calling upon him to give account for large sums spent during
-his chancellorship, and for various revenues of vacant churches during
-that period. The total amount was 30,000 marks.
-
-In vain the archbishop urged that this demand was totally unexpected;
-that he had not been summoned to Northampton to render such an account;
-and that the justiciar, Richard, had declared that he was free of
-all claims when he laid down the chancellorship. The king demanded
-sureties, “and from that day barons and knights kept away from the
-archbishop’s house--for they understood the mind of the king.”
-
-All Saturday Thomas was in consultation with the bishops, most of whom
-expressed themselves strongly on the king’s side. Henry of Winchester
-suggested the present of 2,000 marks to the king as a peace-offering,
-and this was done. But the king would not have it. Hilary, of
-Chichester, said, addressing the archbishop, “You ought to know the
-king better than we do, for you lived with him in close companionship
-and friendship when you were chancellor. Who is there who could be
-your surety for all this money? The king has declared, so it is said,
-that he and you cannot both remain in England as king and archbishop.
-It would be much safer to resign everything and submit to his mercy.
-God forbid lest he arrest you over these moneys of the chancellorship,
-or lay hands on you.” One or two less craven urged the archbishop to
-stand firm, as his predecessors had done, in the face of persecution.
-
-“Oh, that you were no longer archbishop and were only Thomas,” said
-Hilary, putting the matter briefly.
-
-All Sunday was spent in consultations. On Monday the archbishop was
-too ill to attend the council, but on Tuesday his mind was made up,
-and when he entered the council it was with the full dignity of an
-archbishop, carrying the cross of the archbishop in his hand.
-
-The bishops were in despair. There were all sorts of rumours in the
-air. It was known the king was full of anger, and it was said that the
-archbishop’s life was in danger. The bishops implored him to resign,
-or else to promise complete submission to the councils of Clarendon.
-They said he would certainly be tried and condemned for high treason
-for disobedience to the king, and asked him what was the use of being
-archbishop when he had the king’s hatred.
-
-Gilbert Foliot, Bishop of London, declared contemptuously of Thomas,
-when someone asked him why he did not carry the archbishop’s cross for
-him, “He always was a fool, and always will be.”
-
-Thomas had now only one answer to the bishops. He forbad them to take
-any part in the proceedings against him, announced that he had appealed
-to “our Mother, the Church of Rome, refuge of all the oppressed,” to
-prevent any of them taking part, and ordered them to excommunicate any
-who should dare lay secular hands upon the primate.
-
-Then, holding his cross, the archbishop took his usual place in the
-council-chamber, while the king sat in an inner room.
-
-In the face of personal danger all the strength and courage of Thomas
-Becket were aroused. He had yielded at Clarendon for the sake of peace,
-and no good had come of it. He had submitted to be fined rather than be
-involved in a miserable dispute about money, and now he was threatened
-with demands for money which were beyond his resources. There was
-nothing to prevent the king piling up greater and greater sums against
-him, till hopeless ruin had been reached. He was powerless to withstand
-such an onslaught. To Rome, “the refuge of all the oppressed,” would
-Thomas appeal, and then, if it seemed well to the pope, he would retire
-from Canterbury. But he would not surrender his post, however great
-the wrath of the king, unless it were for the welfare of the Christian
-Church.
-
-In the council-chamber Thomas sat alone, with one or two clergy
-attending him, including Herbert of Bosham and William FitzStephen,
-while the bishops went in to the king’s chamber. Among the nobles the
-cry was going up that the archbishop was a perjurer and a traitor,
-because, after signing at Clarendon, he now, in violation of those
-constitutions, forbad bishops to give judgment in a case that did not
-involve bloodshed, and had further made appeal to Rome.
-
-Then the king sent to know whether the archbishop refused to be bound
-by the Constitutions of Clarendon, and whether he would find sureties
-to abide by the sentence of the court regarding the accounts of his
-chancellorship.
-
-Thomas again pointed out that he had not been called there to give
-an account of his chancellorship, that on his appointment to the
-archbishopric he had been declared by the king free of all secular
-claims, and that he had forbidden the bishops to take part in any
-judgment against him, and had appealed to Rome, “placing his person and
-the church of Canterbury under the protection of God and the pope.”
-
-At the end of this speech the barons returned in silence to the king,
-pondering the archbishop’s words.
-
-But hostile murmuring soon broke the silence, and Thomas could overhear
-the barons grumbling that, “King William, who conquered England, knew
-how to tame his clerks. He had put his own brother Odo in prison, and
-thrown Stigand, Archbishop of Canterbury, into a dungeon.”
-
-The bishops renewed their pitiful chorus. Thomas had placed them
-between the hammer and the anvil by his prohibition: of disobedience to
-Canterbury on the one hand, and of the king’s anger on the other. They
-had given their word at Clarendon, and now they were being forced to
-go against the promises they had made. They, too, would appeal to Rome
-against his prohibition, “lest you injure us still more.”
-
-All that Thomas could say was that the Constitutions of Clarendon had
-been sent to the pope for confirmation, and had been returned, rather
-condemned than approved. “This example has been given for our learning,
-that we should do likewise, and be ready to receive what he receives
-at Rome, and reject what he rejects. If we fell at Clarendon, through
-weakness of the flesh, the more ought we to take courage now, and in
-the might of the Holy Ghost contend against the old enemy of man.”[17]
-
-So bishops and nobles came and went between the king and the
-archbishop, and the day drew on. Henry allowed the bishops to stand
-apart from the judgment, and demanded sentence from the barons, and
-Earl Robert of Leicester advanced as the spokesman of the council
-to where the archbishop was sitting. The earl began to speak of the
-judgment of the court, when Thomas rose and refused to hear him.
-
-“What is this you would do?” he cried. “Would you pass sentence on
-me? Neither law nor reason permit children to pass sentence on their
-father. You are nobles of the palace, and I am your spiritual father.
-I will not hear this sentence of the king, or any judgment of yours.
-For, under God, I will be judged by the pope alone, to whom before you
-all here I appeal, placing the church of Canterbury with all thereto
-belonging under God’s protection and the protection of the pope.” Then
-he turned to the bishops. “And you, my brethren, who have served man
-rather than God, I summon to the presence of the pope; and now, guarded
-by the authority of the Catholic Church and the Holy See, I go hence.”
-
-So he passed out of the hall, no one gainsaying his passage, though
-some plucked rushes from the floor and threw at him. There were shouts
-of anger, and again the cries of “traitor” and “perjurer” were raised.
-The archbishop turned on Earl Hamelin, the king’s brother, and Randulf
-of Brok, who were calling “traitor,” and said sternly: “If I were not
-a priest, my own arms should quickly prove your lie. And you, Randulf,
-look at home (his cousin had lately been hanged for felony) before you
-accuse the guiltless!”
-
-His horses were at the gate, and a great crowd that were afraid lest
-the archbishop had been killed. St. Thomas mounted, and accompanied by
-Herbert of Bosham, rode back to the monastery of St. Andrew, where he
-had been lodging. The crowd thronged him and prayed for his blessing
-all the way until the monastery was reached, and then he would have
-the multitude come in to the refectory and dine with him. Of his own
-retinue of forty who had come with him to Northampton, scarce six
-remained; and so the places of those who had thought it safer to desert
-their lord were filled by the hungry multitude. It was the archbishop’s
-farewell banquet, and he, the constant champion of the poor, had those
-whom he loved for his guests that day.
-
-At nightfall, after compline had been sung and the monks dispersed to
-their cells, the archbishop, with three other men in the dress of lay
-brothers, rode out from Northampton by the north gate, and at dawn were
-at Grantham. Three weeks later Thomas had reached Flanders, and the
-exile had begun which was only to end six years later when death was at
-hand.
-
-It was useless to remain in England, hopeless as Thomas was of any
-support from the bishops. He could but appeal, as Anselm had appealed,
-to the one court that alone was recognised as owning a higher authority
-than that of the kings of this world, the court of Rome.
-
-But Pope Alexander, still harassed by an anti-pope set up by the
-Emperor Frederick, could do as little for Thomas as his predecessor
-had done for Anselm, though he refused to allow him to resign the
-archbishopric. Unlike Anselm, Thomas vigorously carried on his contest
-with the king from the friendly shelter of King Louis of France, and
-Henry retaliated without hesitation, driving out of England all the
-friends and kinsmen of Thomas, to the number of four hundred, and
-threatening a like banishment to the Cistercian monks, because Thomas
-had taken refuge in their monastery at Pontigny.
-
-The fear that the pope would allow the archbishop to pronounce an
-interdict against England, and a sentence of personal excommunication
-against its king, drove Henry in 1166 to appeal himself to the pope.
-“Thus by a strange fate it happened that the king, while striving for
-those ‘ancient customs,’ by which he endeavoured to prevent any right
-of appeal (to the pope), was doomed to confirm the right of appeal for
-his own safety.” (John of Salisbury.)
-
-Months and years passed in correspondence. More than once Henry and
-Thomas met at the court of Louis, but neither would yield. The pope,
-without blaming the archbishop, and without sanctioning any extreme
-step against Henry, did what he could to make peace between them.
-
-At last, in the summer of 1170, the king really was disturbed by the
-fear of an interdict, for his last act against Archbishop Thomas had
-been to have his son crowned by the Archbishop of York, in defiance of
-all the rights and privileges of the see of Canterbury. Besides this,
-Louis was threatening war because his daughter, who was married to the
-young King Henry, had not been crowned with her husband. Henry hastened
-over to France and made friends with Thomas, and the reconciliation
-took place at Freteral. The king solemnly promised that the archbishop
-should enjoy all the possessions and rights of which he had been
-deprived in his exile, and that his friends and kinsmen should all be
-allowed to return home. He even apologised for the coronation of his
-son. It seemed as if the old friendship had been revived. “We conversed
-together until the evening as familiarly as in the days of our ancient
-friendship. And it was agreed I should arrange my affairs and then make
-some stay with the king before embarking for England; that the world
-might know how thoroughly we are restored to his favour and intimacy.
-We are not afraid that the king will not fulfil his promises, unless
-he is misled by evil counsellors.” So Thomas wrote to the pope in
-July, 1170. Yet there were many--including King Louis--who doubted the
-sincerity of the reconciliation, for Henry was not willing to give the
-kiss of peace to his archbishop.
-
-On December 1st Thomas landed at Sandwich, and went at once to
-Canterbury. The townspeople and the poor of the land welcomed him with
-enthusiastic devotion. “Small and great, old and young, ran together,
-some throwing themselves in his way, others crying and exclaiming,
-‘Blessed is he that cometh in the name of the Lord.’ In the same manner
-the clergy and their parishioners met him in procession, saluting
-their father and begging his blessing.... And when all things in the
-cathedral was solemnly ended, the archbishop went to his palace, and so
-ended that joyful and solemn day.” (Herbert of Bosham.)
-
-But against the affection and goodwill of his own people at Canterbury,
-and a similar demonstration of rejoicing by multitudes of clergy
-and people in London, Thomas had to face the fact that the bishops
-generally hated his return, that the young Prince Henry, recently
-crowned, who had been his pupil, refused to see him and ordered his
-return to Canterbury, and that the nobles openly spoke of him as a
-traitor to the king. “This is a peace for us which is no peace, but
-rather war,” said the archbishop bitterly.
-
-The end was not far off. Thomas, as zealous for good discipline in the
-Church as Henry was for strong authority in the State, was no sooner
-returned than he was asked to withdraw the sentence of excommunication
-against the Archbishop of York and the Bishops of London and Salisbury.
-He promised to do this if the bishops on their part would promise to
-submit to the decision of the pope on the matter. London and Salisbury
-were moved to receive absolution on these terms, but Roger, of York,
-who had always been against Becket, dissuaded them, urging them to
-throw themselves on the protection of the king, and threatening Thomas
-“with marvellous and terrible things at the hands of the king” unless
-he relented. Naturally, these threats left the archbishop undisturbed,
-and Roger of York, with Gilbert Foliot of London and Jocelin of
-Salisbury, at once hastened over to France to lay their case before the
-king.
-
-These bishops were not the only men who troubled Thomas in these last
-days. Randulf de Broc, with others of his family, and certain knights,
-all known as strong “king’s men,” “sought every means to entangle him
-in a quarrel,” and did not stop from robbing a ship belonging to the
-archbishop and from seizing a number of horses, and mutilating one of
-them. Thomas replied by excommunicating Randulf and Robert de Broc, the
-boldest of these offenders.
-
-At Christmas more than one of the archbishop’s followers warned him
-that his life was in danger, and Thomas seems to have realised that his
-position was hazardous. But he would not fly.
-
-Already his murderers were at hand.
-
-The excommunicated bishops had reached the king at Bur, near Bayeux,
-had told their story, and had coloured it with a fanciful description
-of Thomas making a circuit of England at the head of a large body of
-men.[18] Someone had said, “My lord, as long as Thomas lives, you will
-have neither peace nor quiet in your kingdom, nor will you ever see
-good days;” and at this Henry had burst out into a terrible rage of
-bitterness and passion, for such fits at times took possession of him,
-“Here is a man,” he cried out, “who came to my court a sorry clerk,
-who owes all he has to me, and insults my kingdom and lifts his heel
-against me. And not one of the cowardly sluggish knaves, whom I feed
-and pay so well, but suffers this, nor has the heart to avenge me!”
-
-The words were spoken, and four of the king’s knights--Reginald
-FitzUrse, William of Tracy, Hugh of Morville, and Richard the
-Breton--hearing what was said, and that Roger of York had declared “as
-soon as Thomas is dead all this trouble will be ended, and not before,”
-at once departed. They sailed from different ports and met together at
-Saltwood, the castle of the Brocs, on December 28th. The following day
-they rode on to Canterbury, taking with them twelve of Randulf’s men
-and Hugh of Horsea, who was called the Evil Deacon.
-
-The king, on finding the four knights had left the court, gave
-orders to have them stopped, but it was too late. They were then at
-Canterbury, and entering the hospitable doors of the palace had made
-direct for the archbishop’s private chamber.
-
-It was four o’clock. Dinner had been at three, and Thomas was sitting
-on his bed talking to John of Salisbury, Edward Grim, and a few other
-friends. When the knights entered, Thomas recognized Reginald, William,
-and Hugh, for they had served under him years before, and waited for
-them to speak.
-
-Reginald FitzUrse was the spokesman. He declared they had come from
-the king, that Thomas must take an oath of fealty to the newly-crowned
-prince, and must absolve the excommunicated bishops. Thomas answered
-that the bishops might have been absolved on their willingness to obey
-the judgments of the Church, and that the king had sanctioned what had
-been done at their reconciliation.
-
-Reginald denied there had been any reconciliation, and swore that
-Thomas was imputing treachery to the king in saying such a thing.
-
-The archbishop pointed out that the reconciliation had taken place in
-public, and that Reginald himself had been present.
-
-Reginald swore he had never been there, and had not heard of it. And
-at this the other knights broke in, swearing again and again, by God’s
-wounds, that they had borne with him far too long already.
-
-Then Thomas reminded them of the insults and losses he had endured,
-especially at the hands of the De Brocs, since his return.
-
-Hugh of Morville answered him that he had his remedy in the King’s
-Courts, and ought not to excommunicate men on his own authority.
-
-“I shall wait for no man’s leave to do justice on any that wrong the
-Church and will not give satisfaction,” Thomas replied.
-
-“What do you threaten us! Threats are too much!” cried Reginald
-FitzUrse.
-
-Then the knights bit their gloves and angrily defied the archbishop.
-
-Thomas told them that they could not intimidate him. “Once I went away
-like a timid priest; now I have returned, and I will never leave again.
-If I may do my office in peace, it is well: if I may not, God’s will be
-done.” Then he turned to remind them they had once sworn fealty to him
-when he was chancellor.
-
-“We are the king’s men,” they shouted out, “and owe fealty to no one
-against the king!”
-
-Bidding his servants keep the archbishop within the precincts on peril
-of their lives, the knights withdrew.
-
-“It is easy to keep me,” said Thomas, “for I shall not go away. I will
-not fly for the king or for any living man.”
-
-“Why did you not take counsel with us and give milder answer to your
-enemies?” said John of Salisbury. “You are ready to die, but we are
-not. Think of our peril!”
-
-“We must all die,” the archbishop answered, “and the fear of death must
-not turn us from doing justice.”
-
-Word was quickly brought in that the knights were putting on their
-armour in the courtyard, and the monks, frightened at the sight of
-these men with drawn swords entering the orchard to the west of the
-cathedral, rushed to the archbishop and implored him to fly to the
-cathedral. Thomas smiled at their terror, saying, “All you monks are
-too cowardly, it seems to me.” And not till vespers had begun would he
-leave for the minster. The knights broke into the cloisters after him,
-and reaching St. Benet’s chapel began to hammer at the door, which for
-safety the monks had barred behind them.
-
-Thomas at once ordered the door to be unbolted, saying, “God’s house
-shall not be made a fortress on my account.” He slipped back the iron
-bar himself, and the angry knights rushed in with cries of “Where is
-the traitor? Where is the archbishop?”
-
-It was five o’clock and a dark winter’s night. Had Thomas chosen, he
-could easily have escaped death by concealing himself in the crypt or
-in one of the many hiding places in the cathedral. But he felt his
-hour had come and met it without faltering. John of Salisbury and the
-rest of the monks and clerks vanished away and hid themselves, leaving
-only Edward Grim, Robert of Merton and William FitzStephen with the
-archbishop. Soon only Grim was left, when the archbishop came out
-boldly, and standing by a great pillar near the altar of St. Benedict,
-answered his accusers. “Here I am: no traitor, Reginald, but your
-archbishop.”
-
-They tried to drag him from the church, but he clung to the great
-pillar, with Edward Grim by his side. For the last time Reginald called
-on him to come out of the church. “I am ready to die, but let my people
-go, and do not hurt them,” was the archbishop’s answer. William Tracy
-seized hold of him, but Thomas hurled him back. Upon that FitzUrse
-shouted, “Strike! strike!” And Tracy cut savagely at the head of the
-archbishop. Grim sprang forward and the blow fell on his arm, and he
-fell back badly wounded.
-
-Then Thomas commended his cause and that of the Church to St. Denis and
-the patron saints of the cathedral, and his soul to God, and without
-flinching bowed his head to his murderers. FitzUrse, Tracy and Richard
-the Breton struck the archbishop down, and Hugh the Evil Deacon mangled
-in brutal fashion the head of St. Thomas before calling out to the
-others: “Let us go now; he will never rise again!”
-
-Then they all rushed from the church, and shouting, “King’s knights!
-King’s knights!” proceeded to plunder the palace. They fled north that
-night to the castle of Hugh of Morville at Knaresborough, where for
-a time they lived in close retirement. Tracy subsequently went on a
-pilgrimage to Rome and Palestine, but all four “within two years of the
-murder were living at court on familiar terms with the king.”[19]
-
-Henry and all his court were horrified when the news was brought
-of the archbishop’s martyrdom, for all the people proclaimed the
-murdered prelate a saint and a martyr, and “a martyr he clearly
-was, not merely to the privileges of the Church or to the rights of
-the see of Canterbury, but to the general cause of law and order as
-opposed to violence.”[20] Had St. Thomas yielded in the matter of the
-excommunicated bishops, and sought favour with the king at the expense
-of the liberties and discipline of the Church, and had he given way
-to the savage, lawless turbulence of the king’s knights, he would not
-only have escaped a violent death, but might have lived long in the
-sunshine of the royal pleasure. He chose the rougher, steeper road,
-daring all to save the Church and the mass of the English people from
-being brought under the iron heel of a king’s absolute rule, and he
-paid the penalty, pouring out his blood on the stones of the minster at
-Canterbury to seal the vows he had taken when he first entered the city
-as archbishop.
-
-In his dying St. Thomas was even stronger than in his life. Henry
-hastened to beg the forgiveness of Rome for his rash words that had
-provoked the murder, and in the presence of the pope’s legates in
-Normandy promised to give up the Constitutions of Clarendon and to
-stand by the papacy against the emperor. Nor did he make any further
-attempt in his reign to bring the Church under the subjection of the
-crown, but built up a great system of legal administration, which in
-substance exists to-day.
-
-St. Thomas was canonised four years after his death. “There was no
-shadow of doubt in men’s minds that here was one who was a martyr as
-fully as any martyr of the catacombs and the Roman persecutions.” (R.
-H. Benson, _St. Thomas of Canterbury_.) Countless miracles were alleged
-to prove the sanctity of the dead hero, and pilgrims from all parts
-made their way to the shrine of the “blessful martyr” at Canterbury.
-Not only in England, but in France and Flanders, and particularly in
-Ireland was there an outburst of devotion to St. Thomas.
-
-The shrine at Canterbury was destroyed by Henry VIII., who after a mock
-trial of the archbishop slain more than 300 years earlier, declared
-that “Thomas, sometime Archbishop of Canterbury, had been guilty of
-contumacy, treason and rebellion,” and “was no saint, but rather a
-rebel and traitor to his prince.”
-
-But though Thomas, canonised by the pope on the prayers of the people
-of England, could be struck out of the calendar of the Church of
-England by the arbitrary will of King Henry VIII., as an enemy of
-princes, and his shrine destroyed, it is beyond the power of a king
-to reverse the sentence of history or to blast for ever the fame of
-a great and courageous champion of the poor of this land. Time makes
-little of the insults of Henry VIII. Thomas of Canterbury died for the
-religion that in his day protected the people against the despotism of
-the crown. “He was always a hater of liars and slanderers and a kind
-friend to dumb beasts (hence his rage with De Broc for mutilating a
-horse) and all poor and helpless folk.” (F. York Powell.)
-
-That Henry II. strove to make law predominant in the spirit of a great
-statesman is as true as that Thomas strove to mitigate the harshness of
-the law. As a writer of the twelfth century put it: “Nothing is more
-certain than that both strove earnestly to do the will of God, one for
-the sake of his realm, the other on behalf of his Church. But whether
-of the two was zealous in wisdom is not plain to man, who is so easily
-mistaken, but to the Lord, who will judge between them at the last
-day.”
-
-
-
-
-William FitzOsbert, called Longbeard
-
-The First English Agitator
-
-1196
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Roger of Hoveden; William of Newburgh; Gervase of
-Canterbury; Matthew Paris; Ralph Diceto; (Rolls Series); _Rotuli Curiæ
-Regis_ (Sir F. Palgrave. Vol. I.).
-
-
-
-
-WILLIAM FITZOSBERT CALLED LONGBEARD, THE FIRST ENGLISH AGITATOR
-
-1196
-
-
-When Richard I., on his accession, picked out Hubert Walter, Bishop
-of Salisbury, to be Archbishop of Canterbury, he chose a prelate whom
-he could rely upon as his representative. Hubert had been a crusader;
-he was the nephew of Ralph Glanville--who sold the justiciarship to
-William Longchamp, Bishop of Ely, for £3,000, and followed Richard to
-Palestine, dying of the plague at Acre in 1191--and though a man of
-little learning he was a capital lawyer, a strong administrator and
-expert at raising money for the king.[21] Hubert was no champion of
-the poor as St. Thomas had been, no preacher of righteousness like St.
-Anselm, no stickler for the rights of the Church or the liberties of
-the people; he was “the king’s man,” and “forasmuch as he was neither
-gifted with a knowledge of letters nor endued with the grace of lively
-religion, so in his days the Church of England was stifled under the
-yoke of bondage.” (Geraldus Cambrensis.)
-
-Richard Cœur de Lion, occupied with the crusades, had no mind for the
-personal government of England. He depended on his ministers for money
-to pay for his military expeditions to Palestine. England was to him
-nothing more than a subject province to be bled by taxation. Both
-William Longchamp and Hubert Walter--to whom Richard committed the
-realm when he left England for good in 1194--did all that could be done
-to meet the king’s demands. Government offices, earldoms and bishoprics
-were sold to the highest bidder.[22] Judges bought their seats on the
-bench and cities bought their charters. Crown lands already granted to
-tenants were again taken up by the king’s authority, and the occupier
-compelled to pay for readmission to his holding. Tournaments were
-revived, because everyone taking part was obliged to take a royal
-license. Even the great seal was broken by the justiciar’s authority,
-and all documents signed by it had to be reissued, with the payment
-of the usual fees (or stamp duties) for new contracts. “By these and
-similar inquisitions England was reduced to poverty from one sea to the
-other,” for more than £1,000,000 was sent to Richard by Hubert in the
-first two years of his justiciarship.
-
-The only protest against the general distress came from London, and not
-from the aldermen or burghers, but from the voteless labouring people
-upon whom the whole burden of raising the city’s taxes had been thrown.
-Against this monstrous injustice William Longbeard FitzOsbert stood
-out as the spokesman of the poor of London, and died a martyr for
-their cause.
-
-London’s political importance had been seen in the struggles against
-King Cnut and William the Conqueror. Its remarkable influence in
-national politics (an influence that endured to the middle of the
-nineteenth century) was manifest when London acclaimed Stephen as King
-of England in 1135. At the close of the twelfth century, London, with
-the civic charter it had just obtained from Richard, with its thirteen
-convent churches and more than a hundred parish churches within its
-boundaries, with its great cattle market at Smithfield and its growing
-riverside trade, was already prosperous and overcrowded. “The city was
-blessed with the healthiness of the air and the nature of its site, in
-the Christian religion, in the strength of its towers, the honour of
-its citizens and the purity of its women; it was happy in its sports
-and fruitful of high spirited men.” It had its darker side, but at that
-time “the only plagues were the intemperate drinking of foolish people
-and the frequent fires.”
-
-Richard’s charter left to the citizens the business of assessing their
-own taxes, and in 1196 there was trouble over this matter; for in
-that year the city fathers decided that the large sums required by
-Archbishop Hubert for the king’s needs should be paid in full by the
-poorer craftsmen and labourers, who had no say in the matter.[23]
-
-“And when the aldermen assembled according to usage in full hustings
-for the purpose of assessing the taxes, the rulers endeavoured to spare
-their own purses and to levy the whole from the poor.” (Roger of
-Hoveden.)
-
-Whereupon up rose William Longbeard, the son of Osbert, and made his
-memorable protest against these rascally proceedings, to go down to
-history as the first popular agitator in England.
-
-An exceptional man was this Longbeard, a man of commanding stature and
-great strength, ready witted, something of an orator and a lawyer, who
-“burning with zeal for righteousness and fair play made himself the
-champion of the poor,” holding that every man, rich or poor, should pay
-his share of the city’s burdens according to his means.
-
-Longbeard was not of the labouring people himself. He was a member of
-the city council, though by no means a rich man. He had distinguished
-himself as a crusader in 1190, making the journey to Portugal against
-the Moors; and a vision of St. Thomas Becket had appeared to him and
-his fellow Londoners when their ship was beset by storms off the coast
-of Spain.
-
-Longbeard was known to the king, and he was already hateful to the
-ruling class because he had declared that Richard was being defrauded
-by financial corruption of the money raised for the crown. He had also
-accused his brother of treason in 1194, but the case was not proved.
-
-Richard was in Normandy in 1196, and Longbeard having banded together
-15,000 men in London, under an oath that they would stick by him and
-each other, went to the king and laid their grievances before him.
-Richard heard the appeal sympathetically enough, for after all, as
-long as the money was forthcoming, he had no particular desire that
-the pockets of rich burghers should be spared at the expense of the
-poor, but left matters in the hands of Archbishop Hubert the justiciar.
-Longbeard returned to London, and with his 15,000[24] workmen in
-revolt, bid an open defiance to the justiciar.
-
-Only a fragment of one of Longbeard’s speeches has been preserved, a
-solitary specimen of popular oratory in the twelfth century.[25]
-
-Taking a passage from the prophet Isaiah for his text: “Therefore with
-joy shall ye draw water from the wells of the Saviour” (Isaiah xii, 3),
-the agitator delivers his message.
-
-“I am,” he saith, “the saviour of the poor. You the poor, who have
-endured the hard hands of the rich, draw ye from my wells the waters of
-sound doctrine, and this with joy, for the time of your visitation is
-at hand. For I will divide the waters from the waters, and the People
-are the waters. I will divide the humble and faithful from such as are
-proud and froward. I will divide the just from the unjust, even as
-light from darkness.”
-
-For a time Longbeard was too strong for the justiciar. Archbishop
-Hubert had no force at his disposal for the invasion of London, for a
-battle with Longbeard and his league.
-
-At a great gathering of citizens, held in St. Paul’s Churchyard, the
-justiciar’s men sent to arrest Longbeard had been driven out of the
-city with violence. All that Hubert could do was to give orders for
-the arrest of any lesser citizens found outside London, and two small
-traders from the city actually were taken into custody at the town of
-Stamford on Mid-Lent Sunday, 1196, under this authority.
-
-But the aldermen grew more and more frightened at Longbeard’s bold
-speeches and his big public meetings, and weakness and cowardice began
-to demoralise the league. The people, who had risen for “liberty and
-freedom,” fell away from their leader, and FitzOsbert was left with a
-comparatively small band to face the anger of the justiciar.
-
-Backed up by the city fathers, Hubert’s officers again attempted to
-seize the agitator. Longbeard, hardly pressed, snatched an axe from
-one of his assailants--a citizen named Godfrey--and slew him; and then
-retreated, overwhelmed by numbers, to take refuge in the church of
-St. Mary-le-Bow in Cheapside. There was a right of sanctuary in this
-church, a right not to be denied to the commonest felon.
-
-But what were rights of sanctuary to the justiciar--bent on hunting his
-prey to the death? He commanded Longbeard “to come out and abide by the
-law,” and gave orders to his men that, failing instant obedience, he
-was to be dragged out.
-
-Longbeard’s answer was to climb up into the church tower, and thereupon
-Hubert ordered the tower to be set on fire, and this was done. And now
-the only chance of life for William Longbeard and his followers was to
-cut their way through the host of their enemies and make a bold rush
-for safety. It was a remote chance at the best, but sooner that than to
-perish in the burning tower.
-
-At the very church door Longbeard was struck down--some say by
-Godfrey’s son--and his little company were quickly slain or taken
-prisoners. Loaded with chains, the once bold advocate of the poor of
-London, now badly hurt, was at once haled off to the Tower. Sentence
-was pronounced without delay of the law, William, the son of Osbert,
-was to be dragged to the elms at Tyburn and there hanged in chains.
-
-A few days later--it was just before Easter--the wounded man was
-stripped naked, tried to the tail of a horse and dragged over the rough
-stones of the streets of London. He was dead before Tyburn was reached,
-but the poor broken body, on whom the full vengeance of the rich and
-mighty had been wreaked, was strung up in chains beneath the gallows
-elm all the same. Bravely had Longbeard withstood the rulers of the
-land in the day of his strength; now, when life had passed from him,
-his body was swinging in common contempt. And with him were nine of his
-followers hanged.
-
-So died William, called Longbeard, son of Osbert, “for asserting the
-truth and maintaining the cause of the poor.” And since it is held that
-to be faithful to such a cause makes a man a martyr, people thought he
-deserved to be ranked with the martyrs. For a time multitudes--the very
-folk who had fallen away from their champion in the hour of battle and
-need--flocked to pay reverence to the ghastly, bloodstained corpse that
-hung at Tyburn, and pieces of the gibbet and of the bloodstained earth
-beneath were carried off and counted as sacred relics. All the great,
-heroic qualities of the man were recalled. He was accounted a saint.
-Miracles were alleged to take place when his relics were touched.
-
-Then the dead man’s enemies were aroused, an alleged death-bed
-confession was published, wherein Longbeard was made out to be a sorry
-criminal. Not the least of the offences laid to his charge was that a
-woman, who was not his wife, had stood faithfully by the rebel, even
-when the church was on fire.
-
-The times were rough. It is probable that Longbeard, crusader and
-fighting man, had sins enough to confess before death took him. But
-his traducers were silent as to these sins in the man’s lifetime. They
-waited until no answer could be given before uttering their miserable
-libels against the one courageous champion of the poor.
-
-Longbeard had roused the common working people to make a stand against
-obvious oppression and injustice--there was the head and front of his
-offending, there was his crime; earning for him not only a felon’s
-death, but the loss of character, and the branding for all time with
-the contemptuous title “Demagogue.”
-
-Yet in the slow building up of English liberties William FitzOsbert
-played his part, and laid down his life in the age-long struggle for
-freedom, as many a better has done.
-
-In 1198, two years after the death of Longbeard, Hubert was compelled
-to resign the justiciarship. His monks at Canterbury, to whom the
-Church of St. Mary, in Cheapside, belonged, and who had no love for
-their archbishop,[26] indignant at the violation of sanctuary and the
-burning of their church, appealed to the king and to the pope, Innocent
-III. to make Hubert give up his political activities and confine
-himself to the work of an archbishop. In the same year a great council
-of the nation, led by St. Hugh of Lincoln, flatly refused a royal
-demand for money made by Hubert.
-
-Innocent III. was against him, the great barons were against him, and
-Hubert resigned. But he held the archbishopric till 1205.
-
-
-
-
-Stephen Langton and the Great Charter
-
-1207–1228
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Roger of Wendover and Matthew Paris; Walter of Coventry;
-Ralph of Coggeshall (Rolls Series); _Letters of Innocent III._; Rymer’s
-_Fœdera_; K. Norgate--_John Lackland_; Stubbs--_Select Charters_;
-Mark Pattison--_Stephen Langton_ (Lives of the English Saints); C. E.
-Maurice--_Stephen Langton_.
-
-
-
-
-STEPHEN LANGTON AND THE GREAT CHARTER
-
-1207–1228
-
-
-When Hubert Walter, Archbishop of Canterbury--the old Justiciar of
-Richard I.--ended his long life of public service on July 12th, A.D.
-1205, King John exclaimed, with frank satisfaction, “Now for the first
-time I am King of England!” As long as Hubert was alive there was one
-man strong enough to restrain the king, and the primate and William
-the Marshall together had done something to guard England against the
-foulest and most ruthless tyranny of all its kings. To the end William
-the Marshall was a brave and patriotic statesman, but he served the
-crown rather than the people.
-
-On Hubert’s death John meant to have for archbishop a creature of
-his will, and he was defeated by Pope Innocent III., who, dismissing
-the appeal of the monks of Canterbury for Reginald, their subprior,
-and John’s appeal for his nominee, John de Gray, Bishop of Norwich,
-proposed the English-born Cardinal, Stephen Langton, “than whom there
-was no man greater in the Roman court, nor was there any equal to
-him in character and in learning.” The monks consented to Stephen’s
-appointment, but John’s reply was a flat refusal, and when on June
-7th, 1207, Pope Innocent proceeded to consecrate Stephen Langton
-Archbishop of Canterbury, the king’s rage broke out. Innocent’s wise
-judgment gave England one of its noblest and greatest archbishops, and
-the service wrought by Langton for the liberties of England’s people
-was of deep and lasting value. But the immediate price to be paid for
-later profit was heavy.
-
-John met Langton’s consecration by seizing the estates of Canterbury,
-driving the chapter into exile, and proclaiming that anyone who
-acknowledged Stephen as archbishop should be accounted a public enemy.
-The remonstrances and warnings of the pope were disregarded, and in
-March, 1208, all England was laid under an interdict, and there was
-an end to the public ministrations of religion in the country for six
-years--to the bitter distress of the common people.
-
-Immediately the interdict came into force, John declared all the
-property of the clergy, secular or monastic, to be confiscated, and
-there was no one to stay his hand from speedy spoliation. For the
-barons were willing enough to see the clergy robbed and the king’s
-treasury filled at the expense of the Church, and of the bishops only
-two were left in England--Peter des Roches, of Winchester, and John
-de Gray, of Norwich--and both these were willing tools of the king.
-Never did John enjoy his royal will and pleasure with such unhindered
-ferocity as in that year 1209. Had the barons stood by the Church they
-might have saved England unspeakable miseries, and as it was the laity
-were soon in as sorry a plight as the clergy, “and it seemed as though
-the king was courting the hatred of every class of his subjects, so
-burdensome was he to both rich and poor.”[27]
-
-In 1211 came Pandulf from Pope Innocent with suggestions for peace. Let
-the king restore the property of the clergy, and receive Archbishop
-Langton, with his kinsmen and friends, and the other exiled bishops
-“fairly and in peace” and the interdict should be withdrawn. John
-declined to receive Langton as archbishop, and Pandulf, in the presence
-of the whole council, pronounced the papal sentence of excommunication
-on the king, absolving all his subjects from allegiance, and commanding
-their obedience to whomsoever should be sent as John’s successor.
-
-John treated the excommunication with cheerful contempt, and pursued
-the evil tenour of his way. But his position was precarious, for the
-barons--especially the northern barons--were plotting his overthrow,
-and the pope had decided that Philip of France should depose John and
-reign in his stead. John was driven to capitulate to the pope at the
-end of 1212, and in May, 1213, Pandulf arrived, and the invasion by
-Philip was stopped, to the exceeding annoyance of the French king.
-
-John met the papal legate at Ewell, near Dover, and in the presence
-of “the great men of the realm,” swore to carry out all Innocent’s
-demands, promising that Stephen should be received and recompense paid
-to the clergy for their losses. Then the King of England formally
-surrendered “to God and to the Holy Mother Church of Rome, and to Pope
-Innocent and his Catholic successors,” the whole realm of England and
-Ireland, “with all rights thereunto appertaining, to receive them back
-and hold them thenceforth as a feudatory of God and the Roman Church.”
-He swore fealty to the pope for both realms, and added that he would
-send a yearly tribute of 1,000 marks. At the same time John declared
-that the act of homage was voluntary, done, “not at the driving of
-force nor the compulsion of fear, but of our own good free will and by
-the common counsel of our barons.”
-
-There is no evidence that the pope asked for this abject submission,
-but there are good reasons why John desired that political protection
-of the papacy which he obtained by the act of homage.[28] (Matthew
-Paris has a story that John was willing to pay homage and tribute to
-the Mohammedan Emir of Morocco in order to effect an alliance with some
-foreign power.)
-
-The barons themselves appealed to the pope two years later to take
-their part against John, on the ground that it was only by their
-compulsion the king had been brought to pay homage to Rome, and
-though they were then to curse the papal overlordship they had helped
-procure, and England was to come to regard John’s surrender to the
-pope as “a thing to be detested for all time,” in that year 1213 the
-protection of the pope was invaluable to John and, as some thought, to
-the country. “For matters were in such a strait, and so great was the
-fear on all sides, that there was no more ready way of avoiding the
-imminent peril--perhaps no other way at all. For when once he had put
-himself under apostolical protection and made his realms a part of the
-patrimony of St. Peter, there was not in the Roman world a sovereign
-who durst attack him or would invade his lands, in such awe was Pope
-Innocent held above all his predecessors for many years past.” (Walter
-of Coventry.)
-
-The long war being at an end Stephen Langton and four of the exiled
-bishops landed in June, and Stephen was now to do the work of
-archbishop, the work he had been solemnly consecrated to six years
-before.
-
-John met the primate at Winchester, and swore on the gospels in
-the cathedral “that he would cherish, defend and maintain the holy
-Church and her ordained ministers; that he would restore the good
-laws of his forefathers, especially St. Edward’s, rendering to all
-men their rights; and that before the next Easter he would make full
-restitution of all property which had been taken away in connection
-with the interdict.” Then Stephen formally absolved the king from
-excommunication and gave him the kiss of peace, to the general
-rejoicing.
-
-And now England was to see what sort of archbishop it was Pope Innocent
-had sent to Canterbury. With a king as cruel as he was vigorous, and
-as astute as he was unscrupulous, with barons who knew neither loyalty
-nor patriotism. Archbishop Stephen, out of such materials, was to win
-for his native land the Great Charter, and to have it written in black
-and white that all who would might read the several duties of king and
-people. In August Langton, in St. Paul’s Cathedral, read to the barons
-the old coronation charter of Henry I., and reminded them that the
-liberties promised in that document were to be recovered. “With very
-great joy the barons swore they would fight for these liberties, even
-unto death if it were needful, and the archbishop promised that he
-would help with all his might.” Thus within three months of his setting
-foot in England Langton had started the movement for the Great Charter.
-
-But not with king and barons only had the archbishop to deal. There
-were endless difficulties with the clergy concerning the restitution
-of their property, and the payment of compensation to be settled. And
-above all there was Nicholas, the papal legate, in England, usurping
-the primate’s functions, filling up vacant bishoprics and churches,
-regardless of the rights of the Church and of the archbishop. Nicholas
-was recalled to Rome when the interdict was finally removed, and
-in November, 1214, John made a public proclamation that free and
-undisturbed election to all the churches in his realm should be allowed
-henceforth. This was an attempt on the king’s part to have the Church
-on his side against the barons, for the battle was beginning between
-John and the barons which was to be fought to a bitter end.
-
-John’s last campaign to recover the lost Angevine provinces for the
-English crown ended in disaster, and he returned to England in 1214
-to face the full discontent of the barons whom he had harassed and
-insulted from the day he came to the throne, and of a country suffering
-from “the evil customs which the king’s father and brother had raised
-up for the oppression of the Church and realm, together with the abuses
-which the king himself had added thereto.”
-
-The national grievances were enormous and intolerable. The whole
-administration of justice was corrupt, and no one could be sure how
-the arbitrary decisions of the king’s officers would be carried out.
-Liberty of the person was a farce when free men could be arrested,
-evicted from their lands, exiled and outlawed without legal warrant
-or a fair trial. “In a word, the entire system of government and
-administration set up under the Norman kings, and developed under Henry
-and Richard, had been converted by the ingenuity of John into a most
-subtle and effective engine of royal extortion, oppression and tyranny
-over all classes of the nation, from earl to villein.”[29]
-
-Here and there the barons had struck against some act of personal
-injury, and the northern barons had been conspicuous in their
-resentment, refusing to follow John as their liege lord in his
-expeditions to France. But there was neither cohesion nor any sense
-of national injury amongst the barons until Stephen Langton, with a
-full sense of the responsibility laid on the successor of Lanfranc
-and Anselm, of Theobald and Thomas, took the lead, and by strong,
-courageous effort sought to end for all time in England such tyranny as
-the country had endured under John’s rule. To Langton this was no mere
-struggle between a despotic king and a set of turbulent nobles. It was
-a struggle to win recognition of law for _all_ men, and to restore some
-measure of justice and the enjoyment of fair liberty throughout the
-land. The people had neither spokesman nor champion, and no man heeded
-their wrongs save Langton. More than 150 years were to pass before
-John Ball and Wat Tyler would appear at the head of a peasant army in
-revolt. In the reign of John, yeomen, peasant and artizan were dumb. It
-was Langton who saw that the barons fighting for their own rights could
-be made to fight for all England.
-
-In November the barons came together at St. Edmundsbury, and in the
-abbey church “they swore on the high altar that if the king sought to
-evade their demand for the laws and liberties of the charter of King
-Henry I., they would make war upon him and withdraw from fealty to him
-till he should by a charter furnished with his seal confirm to them all
-that they demanded. They also agreed that after Christmas they would
-go all together to the king and ask him for a confirmation of these
-liberties, and that meanwhile they would so provide themselves with
-horses and arms that if the king should seek to break his oath, they
-might, by seizing his castles, compel him to make satisfaction. And
-when these things were done every man returned to his own home.” (Roger
-of Wendover.)
-
-John kept Christmas at Worcester, but his court was very small, and he
-realised that he stood alone. All through the years of the interdict
-the pope’s ban had not kept the nobles from attendance on the king; it
-was now when he stood reconciled to the Church that John found himself
-deserted. He moved to London at the new year, and there on the Epiphany
-came the confederate barons, making display of arms, and praying that
-the laws and liberties of Edward the Confessor written in the charter
-of Henry I. might be confirmed. John urged that the question was
-too big and too difficult to be settled off hand, and asked that it
-should be put off till Easter. This was agreed to on condition that
-the king pledged himself by three sureties to fulfil his promises.
-Archbishop Stephen, William the Marshall and the Bishop of Ely were
-accepted as sureties, and in accepting the post Langton proved his
-great statesmanship. There was no question of going over to the king’s
-side. The barons knew the archbishop as their chief ally, but John knew
-that Langton was to be trusted as implicitly as he trusted William
-the Marshall. Langton’s one desire was to see the written enactment
-granting constitutional liberties, and ending the worst of the royal
-abuses.
-
-John did not waste the time allotted to him, but worked his hardest to
-gain friends and supporters against the barons, and to break up the
-confederacy. It was all to no purpose. His commissioners to the County
-Courts--in the southern and midland shires, sent to explain the king’s
-cause--met with no success. Nobles and churchmen alike stood aloof,
-and all John could do was to write to the knights at Poitou to send
-him mercenaries, and to appeal to his liege lord, the pope, against
-his rebellious subjects. Finally, he took the cross, hoping for the
-favours awarded to a crusader. These efforts were all of no avail. The
-mercenaries were inadequate. The pope’s letters of rebuke to the barons
-for their conspiracies and conjurations were unheeded, and at Easter,
-John (whom the pope had warned to harken to “just petitions”) was
-driven to send the primate and the Marshall for a definite statement of
-the laws and liberties demanded.
-
-The barons, who were assembled at Brackley, presented “a certain
-schedule,” probably compiled with Langton’s assistance, and this was
-read to the king by the primate. “They might as well ask for my kingdom
-at once,” was John’s reply to the various items, and he swore he
-would never grant liberties that would mean his own enslavement. Both
-Langton and the Marshall strove to persuade the king to yield, but to
-no purpose; and all that remained was to return to the barons and to
-state that the king refused their demands. Then the barons, on hearing
-this, flew to arms, formally renounced their homage and fealty to the
-king, and chose a military leader for themselves--Robert Fitz-Walter.
-London welcomed the insurgents on May 24th, and John, with a handful
-of mercenaries, had the whole baronage against him. Capitulation was
-inevitable. From Windsor John sent envoys to the barons in London,
-promising, for the sake of peace and for the welfare and honour of his
-realm, to concede the laws and liberties demanded, and advising the
-appointment of time and place for a meeting for “the settlement of all
-these things.” The barons at once fixed the meeting for June 15th, in
-a meadow called Runnymead, between Staines and Windsor, and there, in
-the presence of well-nigh all the baronage of England, of Archbishop
-Stephen, and seven bishops, and “a multitude of most illustrious
-knights,” the Great Charter was signed. It was the work of Langton.[30]
-It was he who had inspired the movement, had framed the articles, and
-had brought the struggle to a successful issue.
-
-“One copy of the Great Charter still remains in the British Museum,
-injured by age and fire, but with the royal seal still hanging from the
-brown, shrivelled parchment. It is impossible to gaze without reverence
-on the earliest monument of English freedom which we can see with our
-own eyes and touch with our own hands, the Great Charter to which from
-age to age patriots have looked back as the basis of English liberty.”
-(J. R. Green.)
-
-Yet the Charter itself was in the main but the old charter of Henry I.
-writ large. It set up no new rights and conferred no new privileges.
-It sanctioned no constitutional changes, and proclaimed no new
-liberties. Its real importance is in the fact that it was a _written_
-document--“this great table of laws, won by the people of England from
-a tyrannous king, was the first great act which laid down in black and
-white the main points of the constitution and the several rights and
-duties of king and people.” (F. York Powell.)
-
-“The bonds of unwritten custom, which the older grants did little
-more than recognize, had proved too weak to hold Angevins; and the
-baronage now threw them aside for the restraints of written law. It is
-in this way that the Great Charter marks the transition from the age
-of traditional rights, preserved in the nation’s memory and officially
-declared by the primate, to the age of written legislation, of
-parliaments and statutes, which was soon to come.” (J. R. Green.)
-
-The first article of the Charter guaranteed the freedom of the English
-Church, and, in especial, the freedom of elections, “which was reputed
-most requisite.”
-
-By the Great Charter the feudal rights of the king over his vassals
-were defined and settled, and the tenants of the barons were protected
-in similar way from the lawless exactions of their lords.
-
-No scutage or aid was to be levied by the crown, “save by the common
-council of the realm”--except the three customary feudal aids for
-the ransoming of the king, the knighting of his eldest son, and the
-marriage of his eldest daughter. This common council, consisting of
-bishops, abbots, earls, and greater barons, was to be summoned by
-special writ. The free rights of London and the other chartered towns
-were fully admitted.
-
-The Court of Common Pleas (cases between subjects) was to sit at
-Westminster (and not to follow the king in his wanderings), and judges
-of assize were to go on circuit four times a year.
-
-No free man was to be seized, imprisoned, ousted of his land, outlawed,
-banished, or in any way brought to ruin, save by the legal judgment of
-his peers or by the law of the land.
-
-To no man was justice to be sold, denied, or postponed by the king.
-
-The free right of Englishmen and foreigners to pass in and out of the
-country in time of peace was granted.
-
-The king’s mercenaries, “all the gang that came with horses and arms to
-the hurt of the realm,” were to be sent out of England.
-
-Finally, by a supplementary document, the barons present at Runnymead
-were to choose out of the whole baronage twenty-five sworn guardians of
-the Charter, who, in the event of any violation of its articles, were
-not to hesitate from making war on the king till the matter had been
-put right.
-
-Well might John exclaim, in a wild burst of rage, when the Charter was
-signed, and he was alone with his foreign troops, “They have given me
-five-and-twenty over-kings!”
-
-The twenty-five were to ensure the king’s obedience to the Charter,
-but who was to ensure the obedience of the twenty-five?--all of whom
-were of the party of revolt against the king. A safeguard was obviously
-necessary, and a second court of barons, thirty-eight in number, was
-chosen--(which included William the Marshall)--and these first swore
-obedience to the twenty-five, and then a second oath to enforce on king
-and barons mutual respect.[31]
-
-The Great Charter was signed, and within a week it was published
-throughout all England. But the “sort of peace” patched up between John
-and the barons was not to last. None of the barons believed that the
-king would abide by the oaths he had sworn, and they, for their part,
-prepared for war.[32]
-
-To the Continent John looked for aid, “seeking to be revenged upon
-his enemies by two swords, the sword of the spirit and the sword of
-the flesh, so that if one failed he could count upon the other for
-success.” He had appealed to the pope in May, and Innocent’s reply had
-been a general condemnation of all disturbers of the peace. Pandulf,
-the papal legate, was at Runnymead, and in August, when the barons
-were openly making ready for hostilities, he and Peter des Roches, of
-Winchester, called on Stephen Langton to enforce the papal sentence
-of excommunication against certain of the barons. Langton, who was
-about to set out to Rome for a general council, declined to do this
-until he had seen the pope and discussed the whole question with
-him. He believed the sentence had been drawn up by the pope under a
-misunderstanding. Thereupon Pandulf and Peter des Roches, by virtue of
-their authority, declared Stephen disobedient to the papal mandate, and
-pronounced his suspension from his office of archbishop.
-
-Langton made no protest against the sentence but went to Rome, and
-was present at the general council in November. His chiefest work for
-England was done when the Charter was signed at Runnymead. With the
-king and the barons at civil war, the country ravaged by John’s foreign
-bands of merciless savages, and the barons praying Louis, the son of
-Philip of France, to take the English crown, what could Archbishop
-Stephen accomplish? Pope Innocent had declared the Charter annulled on
-the ground that both king and barons had made the pope the over-lord
-of England, and that in consequence nothing in the government and
-constitution of the country could be altered without his knowledge and
-sanction. But as the legate, the primate, and the bishops had all left
-for Rome, the pope’s disallowing of the Charter never got published in
-England at all, though it was known that he had sent letters.
-
-The sentence of suspension was removed from Langton in February, 1216.
-A few months later the great pope, Innocent III., passed away, and in
-October John was dead.
-
-In 1217 Stephen Langton was back again at Canterbury, to remain for
-eleven more years the primate of England. With William the Marshall and
-Hubert de Burgh, Stephen worked for the preservation of public peace
-during those early years of Henry III. We find him in 1223 demanding
-a fresh confirmation of the Charter in the council at Oxford, and two
-years later its solemn proclamation is required by the archbishop
-and the barons as the price of a new subsidy. Equally resolute is
-Archbishop Stephen for public order, threatening with all the pains
-and penalties of excommunication the barons, who (in spite of Hubert
-de Burgh’s letters from the pope declaring Henry to be of age) were
-anxious to keep the royal castles in their own hands. “At a time when
-constitutional freedom was hardly known, when insurrection seemed the
-only possible means of checking despotism, he (Langton) organized and
-established a movement for freedom which by every act and word of his
-life he showed to be in opposition to mere anarchy.” (C. E. Maurice.)
-
-Stephen Langton was never canonized, though application was made to
-Rome to that end shortly after his death in 1228. His learning had made
-him famous in Paris before Pope Innocent summoned him to Rome to become
-cardinal priest of St. Chrysogonus. His wise statesmanship was proved
-by the victory he won for England’s liberties over so energetic and
-ruthless a despot as John, and with such material as the barons. His
-strength of character and disinterested patriotism were impaired by no
-taint of baseness or self seeking. If Stephen Langton is not numbered
-with the saints, he ranks high in the great list of England’s primates,
-serving religion as faithfully as he served justice and social order,
-and his name is resplendent for all time in the charters of English
-liberty.
-
-
-
-
-Bishop Grosseteste, the Reformer
-
-1235–1253
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: _Letters of Robert Grosseteste_, edited by Luard;
-_Monumenta Franciscana_; _Letters of Adam of March and Eccleston on the
-coming of the Friars_, edited by Brewer; _Annales Monastici_--Burton
-and Dunstable; Matthew Paris (Rolls’ Series); Samuel Pegge--_Life
-of Robert Grosseteste_, 1793; F. S. Stevenson, M.P.--_Robert
-Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln_; M. M. C. Calthrop--_Victoria County
-History--Lincolnshire_; Gasquet--_Henry III. and the Church_.
-
-
-
-
-BISHOP GROSSETESTE THE REFORMER
-
-1235–1253
-
-
-The story of Robert Grosseteste’s bishophood is the record of eighteen
-years’ unflinching battle with abuses in Church and State. From his
-enthronement as Bishop of Lincoln in 1235 till his death in 1253
-Grosseteste is conspicuous as a reformer. Now it is the slackness of
-the clergy he is combatting, enforcing discipline on men and women
-who, vowed to religion, preferred an easier way of life. At another
-time he is maintaining the laws and liberties of the nation against
-Henry III., who with all his piety knew neither honesty nor truth in
-his sovereignty. Right on till the last year of his life Grosseteste
-is as vigorous in resisting papal encroachments on the English Church
-as he is in dealing with his clergy or with the king. As a reformer
-his work is threefold:--(1) The correction of current abuses in the
-Church. (2) Maintenance of justice under the misrule of Henry III. (3)
-Resistance to the aggressive claims of the papacy. With all this work,
-fighting enemies of England at home and abroad, Grosseteste is busy
-administering his enormous diocese of Lincoln--then the largest in
-the country, including as it did the counties of Lincoln, Leicester,
-Buckingham, Huntingdon, Northampton, Oxford and Bedford (Oxford and
-Peterborough were afterwards carved out of Lincoln)--and is found
-writing to and advising all manner of men, kings, nobles and peasants.
-
-Here is the character of Bishop Grosseteste as his contemporary,
-Matthew Paris, saw it, and Matthew was a monk, and the champion of the
-monks, and hated Grosseteste’s stern interference with monastic life:--
-
-“He was an open confuter of both pope and king, the corrector of monks,
-the director of priests, the instructor of clerks, the support of
-scholars, a preacher to the people, a persecutor of the incontinent,
-the tireless student of the Scriptures, the hammer and despiser of the
-Romans. At the table of bodily refreshment he was hospitable, eloquent,
-courteous, pleasant and affable. At the spiritual table devout, tearful
-and contrite. In his episcopal office he was sedulous, venerable and
-indefatigable.”
-
-Six hundred years later the whirligig of time leaves this verdict
-of old Matthew Paris unreversed, and finds Grosseteste’s reputation
-enhanced.
-
-“There is scarcely a character in English history whose fame has been
-more constant, both during and after his life, than Robert Grosseteste,
-Bishop of Lincoln from 1235 to 1253. As we find his advice sought
-universally during his lifetime, and his example spoken of as that
-which almost all the other prelates of his day followed, so was it
-also after his death. If threats from Rome and excommunications from
-Canterbury fell harmlessly upon him while alive, his example nerved
-others in subsequent years--as in the case of Sewal, Archbishop of
-York--to bear even worse attacks without giving way. And probably no
-one has had a greater influence upon English thought and English
-literature for the two centuries which followed his time; few books
-will be found that do not contain some quotations from Lincolniensis,
-‘the great clerk, Grostest.’”[33]
-
-A Suffolk man was Grosseteste, and born of humble parents. Sent to
-Oxford by his friends he becomes master of the schools and chancellor
-of the university--the foremost scholar of his day--receives various
-ecclesiastical preferments, and at the age of sixty is freely elected
-by the chapter of Lincoln as their bishop. If the canons of Lincoln
-believed that Grosseteste’s age would ensure comparative quiet for
-the diocese and a continuance of the loose order of his immediate
-predecessors, they were speedily undeceived.
-
-Grosseteste brought into Lincoln an energy for religion that disturbed
-the easy-going monks, with their comfortable common-room life, and
-altogether upset the secular clergy with their illegal marriages
-and their parochial revellings. In the first year of his authority
-Grosseteste’s letter to his archdeacons, followed by his diocesan
-constitutions, shows the hand of the reformer. He calls attention to
-the neglect of the canonical hours of prayer--certain clergy “fearing
-not God nor regarding man, either do not say the canonical hours or
-say them in mutilated fashion, and that without any sign of devotion,
-or at an hour more suitable to their own desires than convenient to
-their parishioners”--to the private marriages of many priests, to the
-strife and bloodshed and desecration caused by the miracle plays in
-churchyards, and to the drunkenness and gluttony attendant on funeral
-feasts. Grosseteste also complains that the parochial clergy oppose
-the preaching friars, “maliciously hindering the people from hearing
-the sermons of the friars, and permitting those to preach who make
-a trade of it, and who only preach such things as may draw money.”
-Incidentally, and with a curiously modern touch, Grosseteste urges
-his archdeacons to warn mothers and nurses against overlaying their
-children at night, for it seems many infants were suffocated in this
-way.
-
-Grosseteste relied on the friars, Franciscan and Dominican, to revive
-religion in his diocese. From their first coming to England he had
-befriended the little brothers of St. Francis and St. Dominic’s order
-of preachers, and at Oxford had been conspicuously their rector. He
-writes to Pope Gregory IX. in the highest praise of the Franciscans:
-“Inestimable benefits have been wrought in my diocese by the friars.
-They enlighten our whole land with the bright light of their preaching
-and learning.”
-
-The secular clergy and the monks generally by no means shared
-Grosseteste’s appreciation of the preachers of poverty, and when the
-Bishop of Lincoln began to rout up the monasteries in his diocese
-with visitations and enquiries the dismay was considerable. The
-Benedictine monks in England were good, easy men in the thirteenth
-century--Grosseteste finds no grave faults against morality to rebuke
-in them--fond of their pleasant social life, and enjoying the comfort
-of an existence that had few temporal cares beyond finding money for
-pope and king. At the worst their sloth was culpable. Grosseteste
-charged upon them with his preaching friars, calling for amendment and
-the fulfilment of duties, attacking old abuses sanctioned by custom,
-and showing no tolerant sympathy for the infirmities and shortcomings
-of middle-aged clerks.[34] Respect him they must, for the learning
-and high character of the bishop were conspicuous in the land, but
-the dislike of all this strenuous exhortation was not concealed. The
-very chapter of Lincoln, which had elected him bishop, refused to
-admit Grosseteste as their visitor, or to acknowledge his jurisdiction
-over their proceedings, and only after six years of controversy and
-litigation was the case finally decided at Rome (1245) wholly in the
-bishop’s favour. A sentence of excommunication pronounced upon him by
-the monks at Canterbury during the vacancy of the see was of course
-entirely ignored by Grosseteste. If the clergy resented Grosseteste’s
-call to arms, it is to be remembered that they had suffered
-considerably from the tyranny of the times, and had been reduced under
-the general oppression to a feeble and sluggish timidity. The old “Song
-of the Church”[35] tells how low they had fallen:
-
- Free and held in high esteem the clergy used to be,
- None were better cherished: or loved more heartily.
- Slaves are they now: despised, brought low,
- Betrayed (as all deplore)
- By those from whom: their help should come;
- I can no more.
-
- King and pope alike in this: to one purpose hold.
- How to make the clergy yield their silver and their gold.
- Truth to say: the pope gives way,
- Far too much to the king
- Our tithes he grants: for the crown’s wants
- To his liking.
-
-To check the rapacity of the king, and to stop the seizure of Church
-revenues for Italian clerics, and thereby to raise the English clergy
-from their state of sluggish despondency was Grosseteste’s work for
-England. We find him conspicuous at the council summoned by the king
-to meet at Westminster in 1244. In vain Henry III. appealed for
-money, bishops and nobles reminded him that the money so frequently
-granted had done no good either to the king or the country, and that
-a justiciar and chancellor must be appointed for the strengthening of
-the state. Henry demurred, tried postponements and delays, and these
-failing, summoned the bishops alone, and confronted them with a letter
-from Pope Innocent IV. exhorting them to give liberally to the king.
-Even this failed to move the prelates. After much discussion, however,
-some were for “a mild answer,” for many of the prelates “fearing the
-king’s instability and the pusillanimity of the royal counsellors,”
-were unwilling to deny the pope’s request. Grosseteste clinched the
-matter by declaring they must all stand together with the barons:[36]
-“We may not be divided from the common counsel. For it is written if we
-be divided we shall all perish forthwith,” The next day Henry tried to
-get at each of the bishops separately--an old device. “But they with
-wary heed would not be so entrapped, and by departing early in the
-morning escaped the net in which they had once been caught; and so the
-council broke up to the king’s discontent.” (Matthew Paris.)
-
-Again in 1252 Henry summoned the bishops, and tried to coerce them into
-giving him money by producing a papal mandate, authorising the payment
-of a full tithe of all Church revenues to the king for the space of
-three years. To make matters worse, “payment was not to be made on the
-old assessment, but on a new assessment conducted with strict inquiry,
-at the will and judgment of the royal agents and extortioners, who
-would seek their own profit before the king’s.” The excuse was that the
-king was about to start on a pilgrimage. Grosseteste was then an old
-man, but he blazed out at this monstrous demand, especially when the
-king’s messengers went on to explain that the tithe for two years might
-be paid at once, and that the third year’s tithe could also be raised
-before the king actually started. “By our Lady,” said the sturdy bishop
-of Lincoln, “what does all this mean? You assume that we shall agree to
-this damnable levy, and go on arguing from premises that have not been
-admitted. God forbid that we should thus bend our knee to Baal.”
-
-The king’s half-brother, Ethelmar, bishop-elect of Winchester,
-deprecated resistance to the will of pope and king, and urged that the
-French had consented to pay a similar demand. “Yes,” said the Bishop
-of Ely, “and it brought their king no good.” “For the very reason the
-French have yielded must we resist,” replied Grosseteste. “To do a
-thing twice makes it a custom, and if we pay too, we shall have no
-peace. For my own part, I say plainly that I will not pay this evil
-demand, lest the king himself as well as us should incur the heavy
-wrath of God.” The other bishops followed Grosseteste’s lead, and the
-old man went on to advise them to pray the king to think of his eternal
-salvation, and to restrain his rash impulses. Henry naturally declined
-to send an independent remonstrance to the pope against the mandate,
-and the bishops decided they could do nothing in the way of granting
-this special tithe. But they were hard put to it, “between the pulling
-of the king and the pushing of the pope.”
-
-All Grosseteste’s dealings with the king show the same firm resolution
-to stop the royal extortion, and to insist on the fulfilment of the
-charters of liberties obtained from the crown. He carries on the work
-of Stephen Langton, always backing up the unsuccessful efforts of the
-good St. Edmund Rich (Archbishop of Canterbury, 1234–1240) to keep
-Henry faithful to his word, and prepares the way for the great campaign
-of his friend Simon of Montfort.[37] The very worst period of Henry’s
-long reign is covered by Grosseteste’s episcopal life. Hubert de
-Burgh’s wise rule was over by 1232, and Peter des Roches and the horde
-of aliens were fleecing the country for the next twenty years. It is
-not till after Grosseteste’s death that the barons dealt with Henry’s
-misrule to any purpose.
-
-At the great council held in London in 1248, at which Grosseteste was
-present, a full list of the national grievances is given: the lavish
-waste of the wealth of the country on foreigners, the ruin of trade by
-the arbitrary seizure of goods by the king and his agents, the robbery
-of poor fishermen by royal authority, “so that they think it safer to
-trust themselves to the stormy waves and seek a further shore,” and the
-keeping bishoprics and abbacies vacant so that the crown may enjoy the
-revenues therefrom, are the chief causes of complaint. They were not
-new grievances, for the most part, and they were not to die with Henry
-III., all charters and royal promises notwithstanding.
-
-Added to the common wrongs of Henry’s wretched misrule were the papal
-extortions, directly encouraged by the king. In return for papal
-mandates directing churchmen to supply the king with money, what could
-Henry--himself the most devoted servant of the papacy--do but help
-the pope to get what he could out of England? The wealth of England
-was held to be of fabulous amount at Rome, and popes beset by fierce
-ungodly emperors naturally turned to it in their need as to a treasury.
-
-But the thing was intolerable to Grosseteste. He had studied in Paris,
-he welcomed Dominican and Franciscan friars from the continent as no
-other prelate did, and had no objection to foreigners _per se_. But
-the pope claimed the revenues of church livings for boys and presented
-illiterates to benefices--to the obvious degradation of the Church in
-England. Grosseteste was always willing enough to raise what money he
-could for the holy see, but appoint unworthy and incompetent clerks to
-livings in his diocese, that he would not do--not for any pope.
-
-The country groaned under the biting avarice of the Roman see, as it
-bled under the vampire politics of Peter des Roches and his needy,
-greedy crew of Bretons and Poitevins.
-
-What it all meant to England Matthew Paris has told us in his
-description of things in 1237:
-
-“Now was simony practised without shame and usurers on various pleas
-openly extorted money from the common people and lesser folk; charity
-expired, the liberty of the Church withered away, religion was trampled
-to the dust. Daily did illiterate persons of the lowest class, armed
-with bulls from Rome, burst forth into threats; and, in spite of the
-privileges handed down to us from good men of old, they feared not
-to plunder the revenues consecrated by our holy forefathers for the
-service of religion, the support of the poor, and the nourishment of
-strangers, but thundering out their excommunications they quickly and
-violently carried off what they demanded. And if those who were wronged
-and robbed sought refuge by appealing or pleading their privileges,
-they were at once suspended and excommunicated by a papal writ. Thus
-mourning and lamentation were heard on all sides, and many exclaimed
-with heart-rending sobs, ‘It were better to die than to behold the
-sufferings of our country and its saints. Woe to England, once the
-chief of provinces, the mistress of nations, the mirror of the Church,
-the exemplar of religion, and now brought under tribute,--trampled on
-by worthless men, and the prey of men of low degree.’”
-
-The arrival of Otho, in 1237, a papal legate (on the request of Henry),
-far from remedying, increased the contemporary distress. For though
-Otho was a discreet man, he was more eager to get money for Rome than
-to deal with the oppression that plagued England, and when he did give
-advice it was spurned by those who saw his grasping hands. Archbishop
-Edmund was particularly vexed at having a papal legate set over him,
-and what with one disappointment and another finally gave up in despair
-the task of guiding the English Church, and in 1240 went to die at
-Pontigny, where his predecessors Anselm and Thomas had lived in exile.
-
-Grosseteste stuck to his post, and the Franciscans and Dominicans,
-whom he aided, poured in oil and wine on the wounds of the Church folk,
-and revived religion in the country.
-
-Grosseteste fought the extortionate papal demands for Church revenues
-all the time. In 1239, with his fellow bishops, he tells Otho plainly
-that the Church is drained dry by the grasping importunity of Rome.
-Otho left in 1241, and that same year saw Boniface of Savoy, a
-handsome, soldierly man appointed to Canterbury as St. Edmund’s
-successor. The following year came a new extortioner from Rome, named
-Martin, an altogether inferior person to Otho, but with all the
-legate’s powers of suspension and excommunication. His confiscations
-and rapacity provoked a remonstrance to the pope even from Henry.
-Martin at last, in 1245, had to fly for his life from England, and
-when Grosseteste subsequently had a calculation made of the English
-Church revenues enjoyed by foreigners, it was found that the incomes
-of foreign clerks appointed by Pope Innocent IV. amounted to more than
-70,000 marks--more than treble the king’s income. And all this was done
-in spite of refusals by Grosseteste to appoint illiterates or allow
-boys to hold benefices.
-
-The barons sided with the Church against Martin, and drew up a long
-protest which they sent to the pope at the council of Lyons in 1245. In
-this they complained:--That the pope, not content with Peter’s Pence,
-which had been paid cheerfully from old times, wrung money from the
-Church against the law of the realm, without the king’s permission; and
-that the pope wrongfully put ignorant, covetous, or absentee Italians
-into English livings notwithstanding his own promises, the rights of
-patrons, and the privileges of the English clergy. A year later the
-protest was repeated with another item objecting to the pope’s claim to
-recall former charters.
-
-Innocent IV.’s answer to this was to threaten to dethrone Henry as
-he had dethroned his brother-in-law, the Emperor Frederick. The king
-weakly said no more, the barons, without a leader, were equally silent,
-and the Church continued “to sate the greed of Rome.”
-
-But in Grosseteste there was no spirit of surrender. In 1253, the
-very last year of his life, he was called upon by the pope to
-provide a nephew of his with a canonry at Lincoln, and the bishop’s
-letter of refusal is, perhaps, the only well remembered thing of all
-Grosseteste’s writings. This letter was not, as commonly stated, sent
-to the pope but to his representative who was also named Innocent.[38]
-“The pope has power to build up,” wrote Grosseteste, “but not to pull
-down. These appointments tend to destruction, not edification, being of
-man’s device and not according to the words of the Apostles or the will
-of Christ. By my very love and obedience to the Holy See I must refuse
-obedience in things altogether opposed to the sanctity of the Apostolic
-See and contrary to Catholic unity. As a son and a servant I decline to
-obey, and this refusal must not be taken as rebellion, for it is done
-in reverence to divine commands.”
-
-(This letter is quoted by Matthew Paris and in the _Burton Annals_. It
-can be read in full in the _Epistles_, No. 128.)
-
-When the pope heard of this answer he talked angrily of “the old
-madman” who dared to sit in judgment on him, and blustered about the
-king of England being his vassal. The cardinals, however, said frankly
-that Grosseteste had spoken the truth, and that he was far too good a
-man to be condemned. “He is Catholic,” they declared, “and of deepest
-holiness. More religious, and more saintly than we are, and of better
-life. They say that among all the bishops there is no one his equal,
-still less his superior. All the clergy of France and England know
-this. Besides, he is considered a great philosopher, thoroughly learned
-in Latin and Greek; and he is zealous for justice, and a man who deals
-in theology, a preacher to the people, a lover of chastity, and a
-persecutor of those who practise simony.” So they extolled him. And it
-is to the everlasting credit of the cardinals of the Roman See in that
-year 1253 that they could discern the sincerity and the great qualities
-of the brave old bishop who defied the pope’s unrighteous commands.
-There was no question at Rome of any disloyalty on Grosseteste’s part
-to the Holy See, no suggestion of any failing as a good Catholic.[39]
-And Pope Innocent IV. wisely let the matter drop, when the cardinals
-assured him it would never do to interfere with Grosseteste.
-
-Before he died Grosseteste made a last appeal “to the nobles of
-England, the citizens of London and the community of the whole realm”
-on behalf of the Rights of the English Church, making a careful list of
-the ills to be redressed. He also solemnly charged his friend Simon of
-Montfort, never, as he valued his immortal soul, to forsake the cause
-of the English people, but to stand up even to the death, if needs be,
-for a true and just government, and with prophetic foresight spoke of
-the heavier troubles coming on the land.
-
-On October 9th, 1253, the long life and the magnificent battling with
-odds were over, and the great bishop passed away. He was buried in
-Lincoln Cathedral, and in 1307, King Edward I. and the dean and chapter
-of St. Paul’s made application for his canonization, but without
-success. Fifty years later and Edward III.’s Statutes of Provisors,
-1351, and Praemunire, 1353, by their prohibition of papal bulls and of
-the appointment of papal nominees to English benefices, may be accepted
-as the real acknowledgment of Grosseteste’s political work.
-
-“I confidently assert (wrote Matthew Paris) that his virtues pleased
-God more than his failings displeased Him.”
-
-
-
-
-Simon of Montfort and the English Parliament
-
-1258–1265
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Matthew Paris; William of Rishanger; Thomas of Wykes;
-Adam of Marsh--_Monumenta Frascescana_, _Burton Annals_, _Annales
-Monastici_; Robert of Gloucester--_Royal letters of Henry III._
-(Rolls Series); _Political Songs_ (Camden Society, 1839); _Chronicle
-of Melrose_; Stubbs--_Constitutional History_, vol. ii; and _Select
-Charters_; W. H. Blaauw--_The Barons’ War_; Dr. Pauli--_Simon of
-Montfort_ (translated by Una M. Goodwin); G. W. Prothero--_Simon of
-Montfort_; Dr. Shirley in _Quarterly Review_, cxix. 57.
-
-
-
-
-SIMON OF MONTFORT AND THE ENGLISH PARLIAMENT
-
-1258–1265
-
-
-“In the year of our Lord 1238, which was the twenty-second of his
-reign, King Henry held his court in London at Westminster, and there
-on the day after Epiphany, which was a Thursday, Simon de Montfort
-solemnly espoused Eleanor, daughter of King John, sister of Henry III.,
-and widow of William Marshall, Earl of Pembroke. The king himself gave
-away the bride to the said Simon, Earl of Leicester, who received her
-gratefully by reason of his disinterested love for her, her own beauty,
-the rich honours that were attached to her, and the distinguished and
-royal descent of the lady, for she was the legitimate daughter of a
-king and queen, and furthermore was sister of a king, of an empress
-(the wife of Frederic II.), and of a queen (Joan, wife of Alexander II.
-of Scotland). Our lord the pope, too, gave him a dispensation to marry
-this noble lady.”
-
-Thus Matthew Paris, when Earl Simon, then a man about thirty-seven,
-and “tall and handsome,” enjoyed the royal favour and stood godfather
-to the infant Prince Edward. Simon had only done homage as Earl of
-Leicester in 1232; his boyhood was passed in France, and his father was
-the great soldier who led the French crusade against the Albigenses.
-Earl Richard of Cornwall, Henry’s brother--soon to become King of the
-Romans--objected to the marriage, regarding it as one more victory for
-the foreigners whom Henry nourished at the expense of England. But
-Simon was no real alien. His grandmother had been sister and heiress of
-the Earl of Leicester, and Simon’s French training no more made him a
-stranger in England than did Stephen Langton’s years of study in Paris
-and Rome unfit him for the primacy of the English Church.
-
-Henry’s favour was short-lived. Earl Simon made friends with Earl
-Richard and left for the crusades, disgusted with the king’s want of
-honesty. So much wisdom did he show in Palestine, and so great was his
-prowess, that Simon might have stayed in the east as regent for the
-young King of Jerusalem. But he had work to do in England, and came
-home with Richard in 1242.
-
-Here against all the disorder of misrule and the royal and papal
-extortions Simon laboured with his friend Bishop Grosseteste, and he is
-conspicuous at the Parliament of Westminster in 1244, and in drawing up
-the great protest to the pope a year later.
-
-Then for five years (1248–53) Simon was in Gascony contending with
-a body of nobles whom neither Henry II. nor Richard I. had been
-able to make good subjects, and whose only object in making formal
-acknowledgment of Henry III. was to escape the rule of Louis of France.
-Henry gave Simon neither men nor money, and lent a willing ear to all
-the complaints of Simon’s enemies in Gascony and in England.[40] At
-his own expense the Earl of Leicester saved Gascony for the English
-crown, and brought peace and law and trade to that province. Henry’s
-return was to make Simon answer trumped-up charges of robbery, cruelty
-and treason brought by Gascons in 1252. The charges were not proved,
-although Henry sent his own commissioner to Gascony to make enquiry.
-Earl Richard and other nobles who knew the country were convinced
-of Simon’s justice, and Simon, who was in England trying to raise
-supplies, turned sharply on the king, reminding him of unfulfilled
-promises. “Keep thy agreement with me,” he went on, “or pay me the
-money I have spent in thy service; for it is well known I have
-impoverished my earldom beyond recovery for the honour of the king.”
-“There is no shame in breaking my word to a traitor,” the king answered
-angrily. At this Simon in open wrath declared the king a liar, only
-saved by the shelter of royalty from the penalty of his speech. “Call
-thyself a Christian?” said the earl. “Dost thou ever confess thy sins?”
-“Yes,” said the king, “I do.” “Thy confession is useless without
-repentance and atonement.” said the earl. The king, more angry than
-ever, retorted, “I repent of one thing, and that is that I made thee an
-earl in England, to wax fat and kick against me. Get thee to Gascony,
-thou who lovest strife, and take thy fill there and meet thy father’s
-fate.” “I go willingly, my lord,” came the answer. “And, ungrateful as
-thou art, I will not return till I have made these rebels thy subjects
-and thy enemies thy footstool.”
-
-Simon returned to Gascony, and though Henry again undermined his
-authority, he kept his word, only giving up his command when the work
-was done.
-
-Adam of Marsh, a Franciscan friar, the friend and correspondent of
-Grosseteste, often writes to Simon in those days, encouraging and
-advising him. “Better is patience in a man than force,” says Adam,
-“and better he who rules his own passions than he who storms a city.”
-He prays this strong upright soldier-statesman to find comfort in
-the frequent reading of the Holy Scriptures, “breaking through as
-far as you can the cares and distractions of storm and trouble,”
-and recommends the 29th, 30th and 31st chapters of the book of Job,
-“together with the delightful commentaries of St. Gregory.”
-
-Once more back in England, the time soon came when Simon was the
-recognised leader of the barons in their struggle with the king. And
-this leadership gave England its first representative parliament.
-
-Henry was in greater financial difficulties than ever in 1257. The
-mad scheme of accepting the crown of Sicily for his second son Edmund
-from the pope, on condition that the cost of driving out Manfred, the
-Emperor Frederick’s son, undertaken by the pope, was to be paid for
-by England, had been adopted by Henry in spite of the opposition of
-bishops and nobles. Henry pledged his kingdom with the pope as security
-for the expenditure in Sicily,[41] and at last in the parliament of
-1257 had to confess his indebtedness. Fourteen thousand marks were
-owing to Pope Alexander, and this wretched debt, in addition to the
-general contempt for law and justice by the king’s judges, sheriffs and
-foreign favourites, drove matters to a climax. The wet summer of 1257,
-followed by a failure at harvest, brought famine in the winter.
-
-The barons insisted that the time had come for constitutional
-amendment. “The king’s mistakes call for special treatment,” said
-Richard, Earl of Gloucester, at a parliament early in 1258, and Simon,
-closely related to the royal house as he was, agreed. The swarm of
-royal parasites from Poitou raised objections to any interference
-with Henry’s prerogative, but were swept aside. “If the king can’t do
-without us in war he must listen to us in peace. And what sort of peace
-is this when the king is led astray by bad counsellors and the land is
-filled with foreign tyrants who grind down native-born Englishmen?” So
-the barons argued.[42]
-
-To Henry’s threat, “I will send reapers and reap your fields for you,”
-Hugh Bigod of Norfolk had retorted briskly, “And I will send you back
-the heads of your reapers.”
-
-Parliament met again in June that year at Oxford--the “Mad Parliament”
-it was called--and the barons came fully armed, for civil war seemed
-imminent. But the barons led by Richard of Gloucester and Earl Simon
-carried all before them and the war was postponed for five years.
-
-The work of this parliament, well known as the Provisions of Oxford,
-was one more attempt to get the Great Charter honestly observed. Under
-this constitution:--
-
-The king was to have a standing council of fifteen, by whose advice he
-was to act, and to whom the justiciar, chancellor and treasurer were to
-be accountable.
-
-Parliament was to meet three times a year--February, June and
-October. Four knights were to be chosen by the king’s lesser freehold
-tenant-knights in each county.
-
-To save expense twelve commissioners were to be chosen to represent
-the baronage--“and the commonalty shall hold as established that which
-these twelve shall do.”[43] The fifteen counsellors consisted of six
-of the king’s party, and nine of the barons’--the most conspicuous of
-the latter were Simon of Montfort, Richard of Gloucester, and Bishop
-Cantilupe, of Worcester.
-
-Then the oath was taken, “that neither for life nor death, for hatred
-or love, or for any cause whatever, would they be bent or weakened in
-their purpose to regain praiseworthy laws, and to cleanse the kingdom
-from foreigners.”
-
-Henry and Prince Edward, his eldest son, took the oath willingly
-enough--though the latter soon began “to draw back from it so far as he
-could.” The king’s half-brothers and the rest of the aliens not only
-refused the oath, but swore that as long as they had breath they would
-never surrender their castles, revenues, or wardships.[44] Simon, who
-on the ground of his foreign birth had at once yielded his castles
-of Kenilworth and Odiham, without recompense, turned to William de
-Valence--who was blustering more than the rest--and said sharply, “To a
-certainty you shall either surrender your castles or lose your head.”
-The barons made it plain that they were in agreement with this, and
-then were the Poitevins afraid, not knowing what to do; “for if they
-hid themselves in their castles they would be starved out; for all
-the people would besiege them and utterly destroy their castles.” The
-aliens fled to the continent, and the new constitution was proclaimed
-in every county--in Latin, French, and English.[45]
-
-Twenty years had passed since Henry had blessed Simon’s marriage with
-his sister Eleanor, and Simon had stood godfather to Prince Edward,
-and now after the Parliament at Oxford, meeting the Earl of Leicester
-in the Bishop of Durham’s palace on the Thames bank, the king cannot
-conceal his fear of the one man who held up the good cause--“like
-a pillar that cannot be moved.” The king had taken refuge from a
-thunderstorm, and to Simon’s assurance that the storm was passing,
-and was no longer to be feared, answered grimly, “I fear thunder and
-lightning a good deal, Lord Simon, but by the Head of God, I fear you
-more than all the thunder and lightning in the world.”
-
-“Everyone suspected that these astounding words broke from the king
-because the Earl of Leicester manfully and boldly persevered in
-carrying out the provisions, compelling the king and all the enemies of
-these provisions to assent to them, and utterly banishing his brothers,
-who were corrupting the whole kingdom.” (Matthew Paris.)
-
-Manfully as the great earl might strive, he could not accomplish the
-carrying out of the Provisions of Oxford. Henry was quickly at his
-old work, obtaining from Rome a dispensation from his old promises on
-the ground they had been obtained by compulsion, and bringing back
-his foreign supporters. The barons neither held together nor made any
-serious effort to promote good government.
-
-Richard of Gloucester, jealous of Simon, fell away from the national
-cause before his death in 1262.[46]
-
-Prince Edward stood by his oath, but did nothing to prevent the
-break-up of the provisional government, and soon openly supported his
-father.
-
-In spite of all this the Provisions, modified at Westminster in 1259,
-endured for five years, and then it seemed as if nothing could save
-the country from civil war. As a last resource appeal was made by both
-sides to King Louis of France to arbitrate concerning the fulfilment of
-the Provisions, and at Amiens, in January, 1264, the award was given.
-Louis solemnly gave sentence for the king against the barons, entirely
-annulling the Statutes and Provisions of Oxford, and in particular
-declaring the king free to appoint his own ministers, councils, and
-sheriffs, and to employ aliens. But by the award--the mise--of Amiens
-the earlier charters given by the crown were to remain, and all
-disputes arising out of the Parliament of Oxford were to be suppressed.
-Louis gave as a reason for annulling the provisions that the pope had
-already annulled them.
-
-The appellants had turned to Louis hoping for peace. The award was the
-signal for war. Many of the bishops and barons at once withdrew from
-Simon, who answered the deserters by declaring, “Though all should
-forsake us, I and my four sons will fight to the death in the righteous
-cause I have sworn to uphold, to the honour of the Church and the good
-of the realm. Many lands have I travelled, heathen and Christian, but
-nowhere have I seen such bad faith and falsehood as in England.”
-
-London was enthusiastic in its support of the barons, and the Cinque
-Ports, the scholars of Oxford, and the Dominican and Franciscan friars
-were all on the side of reform. Chief among Simon’s supporters were
-Bishop Cantilupe, of Worcester, Gilbert, the young Earl of Gloucester,
-Hugh le Despenser, the justiciar, and Roger Bigod.
-
-War began in March, when Prince Edward captured Gloucester, joined
-Henry at Oxford, and then seized Nottingham and Northampton, while
-Simon and the citizens of London attacked Rochester. Henry turned
-south, and encamped in full force near Lewes.
-
-Again Simon laboured for peace, and in his own name and the name of
-Gilbert of Gloucester, the Bishops of Worcester and London went as
-ambassadors to Henry. Simon offered £30,000 to the king if he would
-make peace and keep to the Provisions of Oxford, and assured him that
-he had taken up arms not against Henry but against those who were “not
-only our enemies, but yours, and those of the whole kingdom.”
-
-The king treated the proposal with scorn, and Prince Edward added an
-additional message of contempt.
-
-On the 14th of May the battle of Lewes was fought and won by Simon,
-“through a singular conjunction of skill and craft on the one side, and
-rashness and panic on the other.”[47]
-
-The Earl of Leicester went into the battle fighting for his country and
-his oath, and with the exhortation to his men “to pray God, if this our
-undertaking be pleasing in His sight, to give us might to fulfil the
-same, serving Him as good knights.”
-
-The stout old Bishop of Worcester blessed the troops, “who had among
-them all but one faith, one will in all things, one love towards God
-and their neighbour, so that they feared neither to offend the king
-nor even to die for the sake of justice, rather than violate their
-oaths.” (Matthew of Westminster.)
-
-At the end of the day the defeat of the royalists was complete, and the
-king, Prince Edward and his kinsmen were prisoners.
-
-Then peace was made, Henry once more swearing to keep the charters
-and articles of Oxford, to employ no aliens, to submit the Provisions
-to arbitration again, to live thriftily till his debts were paid,
-and to give his son Edward and his nephew Henry as hostages for good
-behaviour till a permanent reform in the constitution was made. Early
-in June these terms of peace were proclaimed in London, to the general
-satisfaction, and on all sides the people shouted their thankfulness to
-Simon.
-
- God’s blessing on Earl Simon, his sons and followers light!
- Who put their lives in jeopardy and fought a desperate fight,
- Because their hearts were moved to hear their English brethren groan
- Beneath the hard taskmasters’ rods, making a grievous moan,
- Like Israel under Pharaoh’s yoke, in thraldom and in dread,
- Their freedom gone, their lives scarce spared, so evilly they sped.
- But at the last the Lord looked down and saw His people’s pain,
- And sent a second Mattathias to break their bonds in twain;
- Who with his sons so full of zeal for the law and for the right,
- Will never flinch a single inch before the tyrant’s might.
- To Simon’s faith and faithfulness alone our peace we owe,
- He raised the weak and hopeless and made the proud to bow,
- He set the realm at one again and brought the mighty low.[48]
-
-And now in the summer of 1264 Earl Simon was to show what he could do
-for England, for the victory of Lewes had placed power in his hands,
-and he stood indisputably the foremost man in the realm. For one short
-year his counsel was to guide the destinies of England and to make that
-year memorable for all time by the creation of the first representative
-Parliament.
-
-A new scheme of government was at once drawn up. Three electors chosen
-by the barons were to appoint a council of nine for the guidance of
-the king, and Simon of Montfort, Gilbert of Gloucester, and Stephen
-Berksted, Bishop of Chichester, were speedily chosen as the three
-electors. Hugh le Despenser remained justiciar, and Thomas Cantilupe,
-the bishop’s nephew, became chancellor. (This Thomas subsequently
-became Bishop of Hereford, died in Italy, and was canonized.)
-
-Then in December came the issue of writs for Simon of Montfort’s
-famous Full Parliament of 1265. Two knights are to be returned
-from each shire, and for the first time from each city and borough
-the burgesses are to send two representatives. Hitherto Parliament
-had consisted of barons and clergy, and knights sent by the king’s
-tenants, and the representation of the townspeople was unknown.
-Simon’s earlier policy at Oxford had done nothing to extend the basis
-of government or create a national responsibility for the laws. “The
-provisions of 1258 restricted, the constitutions of 1264 extended the
-limits of parliament.... Either Simon’s views of a constitution had
-rapidly developed, or the influence which had checked them in 1258
-were removed. Anyhow, he had had genius to interpret the mind of the
-nation and to anticipate the line which was taken by later progress.”
-(Stubbs.)
-
-This development of Simon’s views may fairly be traced to his close
-and intimate connection with the Dominican friars.[49] Simon’s father,
-the warrior of the Albigensian wars, had been the warm friend of St.
-Dominic. Simon himself was equally the friend of Bishop Grosseteste,
-the champion of the friars. As far back as 1245 Simon had founded a
-Dominican priory at Leicester. In 1263 he had been present at a General
-Chapter of the Dominican Order in Holborn, London, and the Parliament
-of Oxford had met in a Dominican priory in that city. All along the
-friars had supported the popular movement.[50]
-
-Now the peculiarity of the Dominican Order of Friars is its
-representative form of government. Each priory sends two
-representatives to its provincial chapter, and each province sends two
-representatives to the general chapter of the order.
-
-Simon of Montfort, when the opportunity came to him for striking out
-a reform in the English Parliament, adopted the plan which he had
-studied and seen at work amongst the Preaching Friars. “The idea of
-representative government had ripened in his hand,” and his genius
-interpreted the mind of the nation. In spite of all the scorn that
-has been poured on popular elections and the Houses of Parliament,
-in spite of all the imperfections that necessarily are attached to
-any constitutional system devised by the wit of man, the idea of
-representative government has become the inspiration of the nations
-of the world. The failings of democracy are obvious, the weak spots
-in popular electoral systems glaring; but mankind, once grasping the
-idea of freedom in politics, clamours eagerly for responsibility in
-law-making and the administration of justice, and refuses to rest
-satisfied under any despotism or bureaucracy, benevolent or malevolent.
-Suppressed by dictators, perverted by demagogues, abused by the
-unscrupulous in power, there still seems nothing better in politics
-for mankind than self-government. “Better is he who rules his own
-temper than he who storms a city,” wrote Friar Adam of Marsh to Simon
-of Montfort. “Better self-government for a people than world-wide
-conquest,” the average man declares, and the opinion slowly moulds
-the destinies of nations, till “patriotism” becomes the word for good
-service in politics.
-
-The verse of the thirteenth century chronicler:--
-
- The king that tries without advice to seek his people’s will,
- Must often fail, he cannot know the woes and wants they feel,
-
-gets re-expression in the nineteenth century in Abraham Lincoln’s:
-“Government of the people, by the people, for the people.” Always
-threatened by the personal ambition of man, often overthrown when
-ambition held the sword of power, contemptible to the wise and prudent
-because of the simplicity and innocence of “the people,” denounced as
-dangerous by the professional expert in bureaucracy because of the
-ignorance of “the people,” its inadequacy the common theme of the
-disappointed--representative government survives its enemies, defies
-its critics, and with its blemishes unconcealed, finds the company of
-its lovers ever increasing and recruiting in its behalf. For since
-that first Full Parliament of Earl Simon’s in 1265 it has never been
-possible to get rid of the notion that representative government was
-a key to the portals of freedom; and though the wider the freedom the
-greater the responsibility, to the credit of the race at all times men
-and women have pressed forward, not rejecting responsibility.
-
-Simon’s parliament sat from January to March. Its chief business was
-the confirmation of the treaty of peace at Lewes, and Henry swore as
-usual to maintain the new constitution, the charters and provisions.
-The government was short-lived. Danger from France, where the queen
-and Archbishop Boniface of Canterbury and all Henry’s alien courtiers
-planned invasion with an army collected in Holland, had passed away
-at the close of the previous summer. There had been a great muster of
-troops for national defence near Dover, bad weather had incapacitated
-the queen’s fleet, and Louis of France agreed to negotiations in place
-of war. The Cinque Ports mariners refused a landing to the pope’s
-legate, who was ready to excommunicate the new government, and flung
-his papal bull in the sea.[51]
-
-Not from abroad but from within came the foes who overthrew Simon’s
-government and murdered the great statesman. Earl Gilbert, of
-Gloucester, like his father, grew jealous of Simon’s leadership, and
-disputed his authority as to the ransom of some of the prisoners of
-Lewes, and Simon’s sons added fuel to the flame by their pride and
-overbearing insolence. Roger Mortimer and some of the nobles of the
-Welsh marches rose for King Henry in the spring of 1265, and Gilbert
-deserted the barons for the king.[52] William of Valence landed in
-South Wales with a body of crossbowmen in May, and when Simon reached
-Hereford to put down the rebellion, Prince Edward, who, with the king,
-had been in Simon’s custody, made his escape to Mortimer and the
-marches.
-
-Edward quickly raised troops, and joined Gilbert at Ludlow, where he
-took an oath to obey the laws and charters of the realm. Simon, in some
-danger of being cut off by this movement on his rear, sent word to his
-second son--Simon--to go to Kenilworth and join him at Evesham, and
-then turned back from Wales.
-
-The younger Simon was surprised at Kenilworth by a sudden raid by
-Edward. His camp was broken up, his banners taken, and he was driven
-back into the castle. Edward, fully aware that Earl Simon had only a
-small force with him, hurried off to Evesham to attack him, before
-young Simon could rally his scattered troops and come to his father’s
-help.
-
-On the morning of August 4th Earl Simon halted at Evesham, and at
-the king’s request, for Henry was still his captive, heard mass and
-dined. His son’s army, now on its way, halted for the same purpose at
-Alcester. “He was now only ten miles distant and the junction of father
-and son seemed secure.”[53] But Prince Edward was already between them.
-“As the morning broke his army lay across the road that led northward
-from Evesham to Alcester. Ere three hours had passed the corpse of the
-great earl lay mangled amid a ring of faithful knights, and the ‘murder
-of Evesham, for battle none it was,’ was over.”
-
-At first Simon thought the advancing army was his son’s, for Edward
-displayed the captured banners of Kenilworth, but when he saw the
-standards of the prince and of Gloucester, and the well-known banner of
-Mortimer, the truth was clear.
-
-“By the arm of St. James,” cried the earl, “they come on skilfully, for
-they have turned my lessons against me. God have mercy on our souls,
-for our bodies are theirs! Though if Simon were to come up we might
-hope yet.” He turned to his eldest son, and pointing to the banner of
-Gloucester said, “See, Henry, what your pride has done.”
-
-In vain Henry urged his father to fly while escape was possible. “I
-had as lief die here in a good cause as in the Holy Land,” said the
-earl, and the barons and knights standing round were equally resolute
-to fight to the end--though they had but two men to every seven of
-the enemy. The good Bishop of Worcester blessed the little army as he
-had done at Lewes, and then the battle began. The Welsh footsoldiers
-quickly lost heart and fled from Simon and the field, and the barons
-were soon hemmed in. One by one they fell--Henry of Montfort, Hugh le
-Despenser, the wise and upright justiciar, and Simon himself, wounded
-and unhorsed, “fought on to the last like a giant for the liberties of
-England.” A soldier stabbed him in the back under the mail he wore, and
-then he was borne down and slain, overwhelmed by numbers rather than
-conquered. “So a death full of honour ended the chivalry and prowess,
-ennobled by so many deeds in so many lands.” “Thus lamentably fell
-the flower of knighthood, leaving to others an example of steadfast
-courage. Who can prevent the treachery of friends? Those who had eaten
-his bread had raised their heels against him. Those who had spoken
-words of love to him with their lips lied in their throats, for their
-hearts were not right with him, and they betrayed him in his hour of
-need.” (W. Rishanger.)
-
-For nearly three hours the unequal battle was fought, in the midst of
-storm and darkness. So dark was it that King Henry, who had been forced
-to remain with Simon’s knights, had difficulty in saving his life, and
-was actually wounded by a javelin before he was recognized by Edward’s
-soldiers.
-
-The monks of Evesham carried the bodies of some of the barons into the
-abbey for burial, and after horrible mutilations by the victors the
-remains of the great earl were reverently interred by the side of Hugh
-le Despenser, before the high altar.
-
-“Those who knew Simon praise his piety, admire his learning, and extol
-his prowess as a knight and skill as a general. They tell of his simple
-fare and plain russet dress, bearing witness to his kindly speech and
-firm friendship to all good men, describe his angry scorn for liars and
-unjust men, and marvel at his zeal for truth and right, which was such
-that neither pleasure nor threats nor promises could turn him aside
-from keeping the oath he swore at Oxford; for he held up the good cause
-‘like a pillar that cannot be moved, and like a second Josiah esteemed
-righteousness the very healing of his soul.’ As a statesman he wished
-to bind the king to rule according to law, and to make the king’s
-ministers responsible to a full Parliament; and though he did not live
-to see the success of his policy, he had pointed out the way by which
-future statesmen might bring it about.” (F. York Powell.)
-
-The news of Simon’s death was received with general mourning as it
-spread over the land. He was acclaimed by the people as a saint and
-martyr, and miracles were said to be worked by his relics.[54] The
-Franciscan friars drew up a service in his honour--“consisting of
-lessons, responses, verses, hymns, and other matter appertaining to
-the honour and respect due to a martyr.”[55] But the pope who had
-excommunicated Simon was not likely to hear of canonization, and “as
-long as Edward lives the service compiled in Simon’s honour cannot gain
-acceptance to be chanted within the church of God, which was hoped
-for.”[56]
-
-The “Lament of Earl Simon,”[57] compared the mighty statesman with
-Thomas of Canterbury:
-
- For by his death Earl Simon hath
- In sooth the victory won,
- Like Canterbury’s martyr he
- There to the death was done.
- Thomas the good, that never would
- Let holy church be tried;
- Like him he fought, and flinching not,
- The good earl like him died.
-
- _Refrain:_
-
- Now low there lies the flower of price
- That knew so much of war;
- The Earl Montfort, whose luckless sort,
- The land shall long deplore.
-
- Death did they face to keep in place
- Both righteousness and peace;
- Wherefore the saint from sin and taint
- Shall give their souls release.
- They faced the grave that they might save
- The people of this land;
- For so his will they did fulfill
- As we do understand.
-
- _Refrain._
-
- Sir Simon now, that knight so true,
- With all his company,
- Are gone above to joy and love
- In life that cannot die;
- But may our Lord that died on rood
- And God send succour yet
- To them that lie in misery,
- Fast in hard prison set.
-
- _Refrain._
-
-The good cause for which Simon had fought might well have seemed lost,
-when Edward’s knights were hacking the dead body of the great earl to
-pieces at Evesham. But it was not exactly a “Royalist victory,” for the
-very men who stood victors over the mangled corpse of Earl Simon were
-men as resolute as he was to enforce the Great Charter and its results
-against the king.[58]
-
-In the hour of triumph Henry struck hard, and a mad reaction of terror
-ensued. But the movement Simon had led could not be turned back, and
-the very savage extravagance of the royalist party defeated its own
-ends. A general sentence of disinheritance against all who had fought
-with Simon drove the disinherited barons to keep up the fight. The
-siege of Kenilworth, where Sir Henry of Hastings defied the whole
-royal army, lasted from June to December, 1266, and was only ended by
-Parliament insisting on the king appointing a board of twelve, who made
-a just award concerning the disinherited. By this award, called the Ban
-of Kenilworth:--
-
-The royal obligation to keep the charters was required.
-
-The acts of Simon were annulled, and the full prerogatives of the crown
-declared.
-
-The freedom of the Church was demanded.
-
-Justice was to be done according to the laws and customs of the realm.
-
-The adherents of Simon were to be punished by fine and not by
-disinheritance, so that the king could repay those who had served him
-faithfully without giving occasion for fresh war.
-
-Simon was not to be proclaimed a saint (seeing he died under the
-excommunication of the Church), and those who spread idle tales of
-miracles done at his tomb were to be punished.
-
-A complete indemnity was promised to all who accepted the ban within
-forty days.
-
-For a time the ban was rejected, and it was not till the summer of 1267
-that the struggle was finally over. Peace was assured by the Parliament
-of Marlborough in November, 1267, which re-enacted the Provisions of
-Westminster (1259) as a statute.
-
-The lasting value of Simon’s work was seen in 1295, when Edward I.
-summoned his great representative parliament on the professed principle
-that “that which touches all shall be approved by all.” This assembly,
-by that very principle, served as “a pattern for all future assemblies
-of the nation.” (Stubbs.)
-
-Had Simon of Montfort received canonization by the Church he would
-surely have been the patron saint of all workers in the world of
-politics, and of all who honestly and courageously engage in public
-work.
-
-
-
-
-Wat Tyler and the Peasant Revolt
-
-1381
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Walsingham; Knyghton--(Rolls Series); Wright’s _Political
-Songs_--(Rolls Series); Froissart; Professor Oman--_Great Revolt of
-1381_, containing translation of a chronicle of the rising in the
-Stow MSS., first published in _English Historical Review_, 1895;
-André Réville--_Le Soulèvement des Travailleurs_ (1898); Dr. G.
-Kriehn--_American Review_, 1902; Edgar Powell--_Rising of 1381 in East
-Anglia_; Dr. James Gairdner--_Lollardy and the Reformation_; G. M.
-Trevelyan--_England in the Age of Wycliff_; J. Clayton--_Wat Tyler and
-the Great Uprising_.
-
-[Illustration: KING RICHARD II.
-
-(_From the Panel Painting in the Sanctuary at Westminster Abbey._)]
-
-
-
-
-WAT TYLER AND THE PEASANT REVOLT
-
-1381
-
-
-The Peasant Revolt of 1381, led by Wat Tyler, was not only the first
-great national movement towards democracy, it was the first uprising
-of the English people in opposition to all their hitherto recognised
-rulers in Church and State, and it was the first outburst in this land
-against social injustice.[59]
-
-The Black Death in 1349 and the pestilence that ravaged the country
-in 1361 and 1369 upset the old feudal order. The land was in many
-places utterly bereft of labour, and neither king nor parliament could
-restore the former state of things. Landowners, driven by the scarcity
-of labour, went in for sheep farming in place of agriculture, and were
-compelled to offer an increase of wages in spite of the Statutes of
-Labourers (1351–1353) which expressly forbade the same:--
-
-“Every man or woman of whatsoever condition, free or bond, able in
-body, and within the age of three-score years, and not having of his
-own whereof he may live, nor land of his own about the tillage of which
-he may occupy himself, and not serving any other, shall be bound to
-serve the employer who shall require him to do so, and take only the
-wages which were accustomed to be taken in the neighbourhood two years
-before the pestilence.”
-
-This act remained the law until the fifth year of Elizabeth.
-
-“Free” labourers, landless men but not serfs, wandered away to the
-towns or turned outlaws in the forests. Serfs--only a small number of
-the population, for the Church had always recommended their liberation,
-even while abbots and priors retained them on Church estates, and
-Edward III. had encouraged granting freedom in return for payment in
-money--escaped to those incorporated towns that promised freedom after
-eighteen months’ residence. Villeins and lesser tenants commuted the
-service due from them to their landlords by money payments, and so
-began the leasehold system of land tenure.
-
-For thirty years preceding the Peasant Revolt the social changes had
-bred discontent, and discontent rather than misery is always the parent
-of revolt.
-
-An early statute of Richard II., framed for the perpetual bondage of
-the serfs, heightened the discontent.
-
-“No bondman or bondwoman shall place their children at school, as has
-been done, so as to advance their children in the world by their going
-into the Church.”
-
-This same act made equal prohibition against apprenticeship in the town.
-
-The free labourer had his grievance against the Statute of Labourers.
-Villeins and cottar tenants had no sure protection against being
-compelled to give labour service to their lords; and they, with the
-freehold yeomen and the town workmen and shopkeepers, hated the heavy
-taxation, the oppressive market tolls and the general misgovernment.
-
-To unite all these forces of social discontent into one great army,
-which should destroy the oppression and establish freedom and
-brotherhood, was the work John Ball--an itinerant priest who came at
-first from St. Mary’s at York, and then made Colchester the centre of
-his journeyings--devoted himself to for twenty years.
-
-Ball preached a social revolution, and his gospel was that all men
-were brothers, and that serfdom and lordship were incompatible with
-brotherhood. In our times such teaching is common enough, but in the
-fourteenth century, with its sumptuary laws and its feudal ranks,
-only in religion was this principle accepted.[60] John Ball became
-the moving spirit in the agitation set on foot by his teaching. He
-had his colleagues and lieutenants, John Wraw in Suffolk and Jack
-Straw in Essex--both priests like himself--William Grindcobbe in
-Hertford and Geoffrey Litster in Norfolk. The peasants were organised
-into clubs, and letters were sent by Ball far and wide to stir up
-revolt. In Kent and the eastern counties lay the main strength of the
-revolutionaries--it was in Kent that Ball was particularly active just
-before the rising--but Sussex, Hampshire, Lincolnshire, Warwickshire,
-Yorkshire and Somerset were all affected, so grave and so general was
-the dissatisfaction, and so hopeful to the labouring people was the
-message delivered by John Ball.
-
-Of course Ball did not escape censure and the penalty of law during his
-missionary years. He was excommunicated and cast into prison by three
-Archbishops of Canterbury, Islip, Simon Langham, and Simon Sudbury, for
-teaching “errors, schisms, and scandals against the popes, archbishops,
-bishops, and clergy,” and he was only released from prison, from
-Archbishop Sudbury’s gaol at Maidstone, by the rough hands of the men
-of Kent when the rising had begun. The “errors” of John Ball were
-civil and social rather than theological. The notion that Ball and his
-fellow socialists of the fourteenth century were mixed up with Wycliff
-and the Lollards has really no foundation in fact.[61] Wycliff’s
-unorthodox views on the sacraments and his attacks on the habits of
-the clergy were of no interest to the social revolutionists, and John
-of Gaunt, the steady friend of Wycliff, was hated above all other men
-in the realm by the leaders of the revolt. Wycliff expressed as little
-sympathy with the Peasant Revolt of his day as Luther later in Germany
-did with the Peasant War, or Cranmer with the Norfolk rising under Ket
-in 1549.
-
-John Ball’s sermons were all on one text--“In the beginning of the
-world there were no bondmen, all men were created equal. Servitude of
-man to man is contrary to God’s will.” He declared that “things will
-never go well in England so long as goods are not kept in common, and
-so long as there are villeins and gentlefolks.” He harped on the
-social inequalities of his age, quoting freely from Langland’s _Piers
-the Plowman_, and enlarging on the famous couplet:
-
- When Adam delved and Eve span,
- Who was then the gentleman?
-
-As years went by and the time grew ripe for revolt, there is a definite
-call to rise in Ball’s letters and speeches. “Let us go to the king,
-and remonstrate with him,” he declares, “telling him we must have it
-otherwise, or we ourselves shall find the remedy.”
-
-Richard II. was but eleven when he came to the throne in 1377. “He is
-young. If we wait on him in a body, all those who come under the name
-of serf or are held in bondage will follow us, in the hope of being
-free. When the king shall see us we shall obtain a favourable answer,
-or we must then ourselves seek to amend our condition.”
-
-Some of the rhymed letters Ball sent out, bidding his hearers “stand
-together manfully in the truth,” urge preparation for the coming
-conflict:
-
- John Ball greeteth you all,
- And doth to understand he hath rung your bell.
- Now with right and might, will and skill,
- God speed every dell.
-
- John the miller asketh help to turn his mill right:
- He hath ground small, small,
- The King’s Son of Heaven will pay for it all,
- Look thy mill go right, with its four sails dight.
-
- With right and with might, with skill and with will,
- And let the post stand in steadfastness,
- Let right help might, and skill go before will,
- Then shall our mill go aright.
- But if might go before right, and will go before skill,
- This is our mill mis-a-dight.
-
- Beware ere ye be woe,
- Know your friend from your foe,
- Take enough and cry ‘Ho!’
- And do well and better and flee from sin,
- And seek out peace and dwell therein,
- So biddeth John Trueman and all his fellows.
-
-In other letters he greets John Nameless, John the Miller, and John
-Carter, and bids them stand together in God’s name; and bids Piers
-Plowman “go to his work and chastise well Hob the Robber (Sir Robert
-Hales, the king’s treasurer); and take with you John Trueman and all
-his fellows, and look that you choose one head and no more.”
-
-These letters and the preaching did their work; the peasants were
-organised; men of marked courage and ability were found in various
-counties; and “the one head and no more” was ready in Kent to lead the
-army of revolt to the king when the signal should be given. Litster,
-Grindcobbe, and Wraw were at their posts. In every county from Somerset
-to York the peasants flocked together, “some armed with clubs, rusty
-swords, axes, with old bows reddened by the smoke of the chimney
-corner, and odd arrows with only one feather.”
-
-John Ball had rung his bell, and at Whitsuntide, at the end of May,
-1381, came the great uprising, the “Hurling-Time of the Peasants.” The
-fire was all ready to be kindled, and a poll-tax, badly ordered, set
-the country ablaze.
-
-The poll-tax was first levied, in 1377, on all over fourteen years of
-age. Two years later it was graduated, from 4d. on every man and woman
-of the working class to £6 13s. 4d. on a duke or archbishop. Even this
-with a further tax on wool was found insufficient.
-
-So early in 1381 John of Gaunt called the parliament together at
-Northampton, and declared that £160,000 must be raised. Parliament
-refused to find more than £100,000, and the clergy, owning at that
-time one-third of the land, promised £60,000. Again a poll-tax was
-demanded. This time everybody over fifteen was required to pay 1s., but
-in districts where wealthy folks lived it was held sufficient that the
-amount collected in every parish averaged 1s. per head; only the rich
-were not to pay less than £1 per household, nor the poor less than 8d.
-In parishes where all were needy the full shilling was demanded without
-exception. It soon appeared that the money was not to be raised. In
-many parts the returns as to the population liable to the tax were
-not even filled in with any attempt at accuracy, and numbers avoided
-liability by leaving their homes--to escape a tribute, which to the
-struggling peasant meant ruin. Of the £100,000 required only £22,000
-was forthcoming.
-
-Then one John Legge undertook to supply the deficit, if he had the
-authority of the crown to act as special commissioner to collect the
-tax. The appointment was made, with the result that the methods of
-the tax-collectors provoked revolt, and Legge lost his life over the
-business.
-
-The rising began in Essex, when the villagers of Fobbing, Corringham,
-and Stanford-le-Hope were summoned to meet the tax-commissioner at
-Brentwood. Unable to pay, they fell upon the collectors and killed
-them. The government met this assault by sending down Chief Justice
-Belknap to punish the offenders. But as the judge merely had for escort
-a certain number of legal functionaries, and as the blood of the
-people was up, Belknap was received with open contempt, and, forced to
-swear on the Bible that he would hold no other session in the place,
-was glad to escape from the town without injury. And with this defiance
-and overpowering of the king’s officers the signal was given, the
-beacon of revolt well lighted.
-
-It was June 2nd, Whit Sunday, when the Chief Justice was driven out of
-Brentwood; two days later Kent had risen at Gravesend and Dartford.
-
-At Gravesend Sir Simon Burley, the friend of Richard II., seized a
-workman in the town, claiming him as a bondsman of his estate, and
-clapped him in Rochester Castle, refusing to hear of release unless
-£300 was paid.
-
-At the same time word went about that the tax-collector at Dartford was
-insulting the women, and that, in especial, the wife and daughter of
-one John Tyler had been abused with gross indecency.
-
-Whereupon this John Tyler, “being at work in the same town tyling of an
-house, when he heard thereof, caught his lathing staff in his hand, and
-ran reaking home; where, reasoning with the collector, who made him so
-bold, the collector answered with stout words, and strake at the tyler;
-whereupon the tyler, avoiding the blow, smote the collector with his
-lathing staff, so that the brains flew out of his head. Wherethrough
-great noise arose in the streets, and the poor people being glad,
-everyone prepared to support the said John Tyler.”[62]
-
-Robert Cave, a master baker of Dartford, led the people straight off
-to Rochester; and the castle having been stormed, and all its prisoners
-released, Sir John Newton, the governor of the castle, was retained in
-safe custody.
-
-And now the time had come for good generalship and discipline in
-the ranks, if the fire of revolt was to burn aright. Accordingly at
-Maidstone, on June 7th, Wat Tyler is chosen captain of the host; and
-proof is quickly given that the rising is not for mob rule or general
-anarchy, but to redress positive and intolerable wrongs. (Five Tylers
-are mentioned in the records of the Peasant Revolt: Wat Tyler, of
-Maidstone; John Tyler, of Dartford, who slays the tax-collector, and is
-not heard of again; Walter Tyler, of Essex; and two Tylers of the City
-of London--William, of Stone Street, and Simon, of Cripplegate.)
-
-In every respect was this Wat Tyler a man of remarkable gifts. Chosen
-as leader by the voice of his neighbours in Kent, his authority is at
-once obeyed without dispute, and his influence is seen to extend beyond
-the borders of his own county. Jack Straw acts as his lieutenant; John
-Wraw, of Suffolk, and William Grindcobbe, of St. Albans, come to him
-for advice; and it is not till Tyler moves on London with his army that
-the rising becomes national. He is plainly marked out as a great leader
-of masses of men. Skilful, courageous, humane, Wat Tyler is proved to
-be; firm, clear-headed, downright in manner, and yet large-hearted,
-jovial and brotherly--equally at home with king or beggar. There is
-nothing of the fanatical doctrinaire about this first great leader of
-the English people. He could order the execution of “traitors,” but
-he is not the man for bloodshed in England if the revolution he and
-John Ball aimed at can be accomplished by peaceful means. After more
-than 500 years the reputation of Wat Tyler stands out untarnished and
-unshaken.[63]
-
-Yet for eight days--and eight days only--does history allow us to
-follow the career of this remarkable man. On June 7th Wat Tyler was
-chosen by the men of Kent to lead the revolt; on June 15th he was
-dead. Of his antecedents we know nothing. Parentage, birth-place, age,
-height, and personal appearance, are all unrecorded. His trade alone we
-can infer, and we know that his contemporaries trusted him to the full:
-for no suggestion has been made of any kind of rivalry or jealousy
-amongst the leaders, or of criticism or grumbling amongst the rank and
-file.
-
-Wat Tyler emerges from the obscurity of history to become a strong
-democratic leader. For eight days he commands a vast army of men;
-he confronts the king as an equal; orders the execution of the
-chief ministers of the crown; and wrests from the king promises of
-fundamental social importance. Then, in the very hour of victory, an
-unexpected blow from an enemy strikes him down, and death follows.
-Surely to few men is it awarded to achieve an immortal reputation in so
-brief a public life.
-
-No sooner is Tyler acclaimed as leader at Maidstone than the commons
-of Kent are flocking to the standard of revolt. The cry is for “King
-Richard and the Commons,” and it goes hard with any who refuse to take
-the oath. John of Gaunt is the enemy. John of Gaunt is held to be
-responsible for all the mischief wrought on the coast towns of Kent by
-the privateer fleets of the Scots and the French, for the raiding of
-Rye and Winchelsea. (Only in the previous year these fleets had invaded
-the Thames as far as Gravesend.) John of Gaunt is the head and front
-of the misrule that bled the land with poll-taxes. John of Gaunt is
-the incarnation of the landlord rule that would keep the labourer in
-bondage for ever. So bitter is the feeling against John of Gaunt, and
-so acute the fear that he is aiming at the crown, that a vow is taken
-by the men of Kent that no man named “John” shall be King of England.
-
-John of Gaunt was the common enemy. But John of Gaunt was far away on
-the Scottish border, and there were enemies near at hand to be dealt
-with. The manor-houses of Kent were attacked; in a few cases, where
-their owners were notoriously bad landlords, were burnt. The main
-thing, however, was to obtain the rent-rolls, the lists of tenants and
-serfs, and all the documents of the lawyers. These papers were seized
-and destroyed by the peasants, for no assurance of freedom was possible
-while such evidence of service could be produced. These documents were
-the legal instruments of landlord rule; and as the people had risen to
-end this rule, a beginning had to be made by destroying the machinery.
-There was no general reign of terror in the country; there was nothing
-of the ferocity of the Jacquerie in France; no slaughter of landlords;
-and no common destruction of property.
-
-The nobility seemed to expect judgment at the hands of the people,
-and those who were at Plymouth making preparation for their invasion
-of France put to sea as quickly as possible when news came of the
-rising.[64] But the people had risen not for blind vengeance or for
-civil war, and the class who suffered badly at the rising were the
-lawyers rather than the landlords. It was the lawyer’s hand that the
-peasants saw and felt, and not the mailed fist, for the lawyer was not
-only the land agent of the lord of the manor, he was also the judge in
-matters of dispute between landlord and tenant, and it was he who kept
-the lists of villeins and serfs, and in the service of his lord did not
-scruple to manipulate those lists.
-
-In those first days of the rising, when yeomen and more than one
-landholder joined the army of revolt,[65] and all who were willing to
-cry “King Richard and the Commons” were counted as supporters, the
-worst that the landlord suffered (except in extreme cases) was the loss
-of his papers, but the lawyer who clung to his office was often hanged
-without mercy, as a scourge to the commonwealth.
-
-Tyler was at Canterbury on Monday, June 10th, and here Archbishop
-Sudbury’s palace was ransacked for papers, and his tenant-rolls burnt.
-Beyond this, and a rough exhortation to the monks to prepare to elect a
-new archbishop, no injury was done. The following day Tyler was back at
-Maidstone, and his men burst open the archbishop’s prison and released
-John Ball, with all others who had incurred ecclesiastical displeasure.
-This accomplished, with John Ball, the people’s poor priest, in the
-midst of them, 30,000 men of Kent--yeomen, craftsmen, villeins and
-peasants--set out for London under Wat Tyler’s command.
-
-Blackheath was reached at nightfall on Wednesday, June 12th, and a camp
-fixed; but a few indefatigable rebels hastened on to Southwark that
-same night to burst open the Marshalsea and King’s Bench prisons. John
-Wraw was at Blackheath, and after a short conference with Wat Tyler,
-hastened back to Suffolk to announce that the hour of rising had struck.
-
-Near Eltham Tyler had overtaken the young king’s mother, the widow of
-the Black Prince, returning from a pilgrimage, and had promised that
-no harm should befall her or her women from his host. Reassured, the
-princess and her company went on their way in safety to the Tower of
-London, where Richard and his council were assembled, and told of the
-great uprising.
-
-Judges had already been despatched into Kent at the first news of the
-disorders, but had turned back before reaching Canterbury, not liking
-the look of things.
-
-Early on Thursday morning, June 13th, the camp at Blackheath was astir.
-It was Corpus Christi day and a solemn festival. After mass had been
-said before all the people, John Ball preached on his old theme of
-equality and brotherhood. “For if God had intended some to be serfs
-and others lords He would have made a distinction between them at the
-beginning.” He went on to speak of the work to be taken in hand at once.
-
-“Now is the opportunity given to Englishmen, if they do but choose to
-take it, of casting off the yoke they have borne so long, of winning
-the freedom they have always desired. Wherefore let us take good
-courage and behave like the wise husbandman of scripture, who gathered
-the wheat into his barn, but uprooted and burned the tares that had
-half-choked the good grain. Now the tares of England are her oppressive
-rulers, and the time of harvest has come. Ours it is to pluck up these
-tares and make away with them all--the evil lords, the unjust judges,
-the lawyers, every man indeed who is dangerous to the common good. Then
-should we all have peace for the present and security for the future.
-For when the great ones have been rooted up and cast away, all will
-enjoy equal freedom, all will have common nobility, rank and power.”
-
-The sermon was received with bursts of cheers, and the people shouted
-that John Ball should be archbishop, “for that the present archbishop
-and chancellor, Simon Sudbury, was but a traitor.”
-
-Later that morning Sir John Newton arrived at the Tower with a message
-from Tyler, asking for an audience with the king. All along it was the
-belief of the commons that the king had but to hear the tale of their
-wrongs and redress would be speedily obtained.
-
-“Hold no speech with the shoeless ruffians,” was the advice of Sir
-Robert Hales, the treasurer. But Richard agreed to an interview,
-and presently rowed down the Thames in the royal barge as far as
-Rotherhithe with the Earl of Suffolk (President of the Council), and
-the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick.
-
-The river bank was crowded with the commons of Kent, and Wat Tyler and
-John Ball urged the king to land and listen to the message his subjects
-brought. They were promptly rebuked by the Earl of Salisbury[66] for
-their boldness:
-
-“Gentlemen, you are not properly dressed, nor are you in a fit
-condition for the king to talk to you.”
-
-Instead of landing, Richard listened to the counsels of fear and pride,
-and the royal barge was turned and rowed back swiftly to the Tower.
-
-Wat Tyler and the men of Kent, with thousands more from Surrey, at
-once marched on to London Bridge, where they destroyed the houses of
-ill-fame that clustered round the south side of the bridge. The prisons
-had been pulled down the night before, and now the brothels were burnt
-to the ground and their inmates dismissed--that the new City of God
-of John Ball’s vision might be cleansed of its old foulness. These
-places of infamy, rented by Flemish women, were the property of William
-Walworth, the Mayor of London; and their destruction filled him with
-rage against the invaders.
-
-Walworth made some attempt to fortify London Bridge by placing iron
-chains across the bridge; and he gave orders for the drawbridge to be
-pulled up, in order that a passage might be prevented. But on Tyler’s
-threat that he would burn the bridge if a way was not quickly made for
-him, Alderman Sibley (who, with Aldermen Horne and Tonge, supported
-the claims of the revolutionaries on the City Corporation) had the
-chains removed and the draw-bridge lowered, and Alderman Horne met
-Tyler at the city gate and bade him welcome.
-
-Fifty thousand men followed Tyler in London, and the city was now at
-the mercy of the peasant army. Walworth, who had no want of spirit,
-declared to the king and his council in the Tower that 6,000 soldiers
-could be raised in the city, but “fear had so fallen upon the soldiery
-that they seemed half dead with fright.” Sir Robert Knolles with 600
-men-at-arms guarded the Tower.
-
-It was now that Wat Tyler’s great qualities of leadership and the good
-discipline of his army were seen. With London in his hands, he warned
-his followers that death would be the instant punishment for theft;
-and proclaimed to the citizens, “We are indeed zealots for truth and
-justice, but we are not thieves and robbers.” Every respect was to be
-shown to the persons and property of the people of London, and wrath
-was only to fall on John of Gaunt and the ministers of the crown, and
-the lawyers--the enemies, as it seemed to Tyler, of the good estate of
-England. In return, the citizens offered bread and ale freely to the
-invaders, and London artisans joined their ranks in large numbers.
-
-The archbishop’s palace at Lambeth was soon stormed, and all the
-records it contained were destroyed; the building itself was left
-uninjured.
-
-At four o’clock in the afternoon the Savoy Palace of John of Gaunt,
-by the Strand, was in flames; and all its wealth of treasure, rich
-tapestries and costly furniture, rare vessels of gold and silver,
-precious stones, and art work of priceless value, heaped up on a
-bonfire or ground to powder. The Duke of Lancaster’s jewelled coat,
-covered with gems, was set up as a target and riddled with arrows,
-before it was cut into a thousand pieces and pounded to dust. One
-wretched man was caught attempting to sneak off with a silver cup;
-and being taken in the act, was put to death as Tyler had decreed.
-The Savoy was burnt to the ground, but no one interfered with its
-inhabitants; and Henry, Earl of Derby, John of Gaunt’s son (who was
-to reign in Richard’s stead as Henry IV.), passed out with all his
-servants unmolested. The wine-cellar proved fatal to certain of the
-host, who, drinking freely, perished, buried under the fallen building.
-
-From the Savoy the army of destruction passed to the Temple, the
-head-quarters of the Knights Hospitallers, of whom Sir Robert Hales was
-president, and a hive of lawyers. The Temple was burnt, but no lives
-were lost; for the lawyers, “even the most aged and infirm of them,
-scrambled off with the agility of rats or evil spirits.”
-
-At nightfall the priory of the Hospitallers at Clerkenwell, the prisons
-at the Fleet and at Newgate, and the Manor House at Highbury, had all
-been demolished; and the men of Essex, led by Thomas Faringdon, a
-London baker, were at Mile End; while William Grindcobbe, with a body
-of men from St. Albans, lay at Highbury.
-
-In vain Walworth urged the king and his royal council to act. Richard
-had sent to Tyler asking for a written statement of the grievances of
-the commons, and had been told in reply that the king must meet his
-commons face to face, and hear with his own ears their demands. In the
-evening Walworth proposed that the garrison at the Tower should be
-despatched against Tyler, “to fall upon these wretches who were in the
-streets, and amounted to 60,000, while they were asleep and drunk. They
-might be killed like flies,” Walworth added, “for not one in twenty had
-arms.”
-
-But the handful of soldiers at the Tower were in mortal terror of the
-peasant host, and “all had so lost heart that you would have thought
-them more like dead men than living.”
-
-The Earl of Salisbury checked Walworth’s rash proposals. “If we begin
-what we cannot carry through,” he observed, “we shall never be able to
-repair matters. It will be all over with us and our heirs, and England
-will be a desert.”
-
-An open conflict with Tyler and his 60,000 was a very hazardous
-proceeding. Who could be sure of escape if it came to battle? So far
-Tyler had only struck at the chief ministers and the lawyers, and why
-should others risk their lives in such a quarrel? Besides, it was
-said that Wat Tyler and a mad priest of Kent were for doing away with
-all nobles, and for making all men equal, and caution was necessary
-in dealing with men who held such strange opinions. England without
-its nobility would be a desert, and at all costs such an irreparable
-calamity as the loss of England’s nobility must be prevented.
-
-So Walworth got no help in his plans for resistance; and when that
-night a messenger from Tyler warned the king that if he refused to meet
-the commons of England in open conference, the people would seize the
-Tower, Richard sent word in reply promising to meet his subjects on
-the morrow at noon at Mile End, and there hear their complaints.
-
-Tyler accepted the king’s word, and after sleeping with his men hard
-by the Tower, at St. Catherine’s Wharf, was at Mile End betimes.
-Here he met Grindcobbe, and hearing that the people of Hertfordshire
-had trouble with the abbot at St. Albans, bade Grindcobbe return and
-accomplish freedom for the abbot’s tenants and serfs.
-
-Richard went to Mile End with no large retinue, and two of his
-companions, the Earl of Kent and Sir John Holland, left him at
-Whitechapel and galloped off in craven fear of the multitude that
-thronged the road. Richard, though he was only fifteen, displayed
-both courage and cunning when confronted with Tyler. He knew that the
-discontent in the country was directed against the government, and not
-against the king, and that the misrule could not fairly be laid to his
-charge. Besides, he was the son of the Black Prince, and the people
-showed no signs of hostility. His policy was to yield and to wait an
-opportunity for regaining power.
-
-The conference at Mile End began with a request from Richard to know
-what was required of him. Tyler answered that first all traitors should
-be executed, and to this demand the king agreed. Then four definite
-proposals were put forward by Wat Tyler:
-
-1. A free and general pardon to all concerned in the rising.
-
-2. The total abolition of all villeinage and serfdom.
-
-3. An end to all tolls and market dues,--“freedom to buy and sell in
-all cities, burghs, mercantile towns, and other places within our
-kingdom of England.”
-
-4. All customary tenants to be turned into lease-holders whose rent
-should be fixed at 4d. an acre for ever.
-
-Richard at once assented to these requests, and to prevent any
-uncertainty and remove all doubt or suspicion of good faith, thirty
-clerks were set to work on the spot to draw up charters of manumission,
-and to present banners to each county represented.
-
-Then Richard bade the people return home in peace, bearing the king’s
-banner in token that the king had granted the request of his subjects.
-One or two from each village remained to carry the charters of freedom
-signed and sealed by royal warrant.
-
-Richard was taken at his word. Thousands of the peasants dispersed
-that day believing their cause had triumphed. Nothing could be plainer
-than the charters of manumission:--“Know that of our special grace
-we have manumitted all our liege and singular subjects and others of
-the county of Hertford, freed each and all of their old bondage, and
-made them quit by these presents; pardon them all felonies, treasons,
-transgressions, and extortions committed by any and all of them, and
-assure them of our _summa pax_.”
-
-So ran the document which the peasants of Hertford bore, and similar
-charters were given to the counties of Bedford, Essex, Kent, and Surrey.
-
-Richard was also taken at his word concerning the execution of
-traitors, and by the authority of Wat Tyler, Archbishop Sudbury, the
-chancellor, Sir Robert Hales, the treasurer, and John Legge, the
-poll-tax commissioner, were dragged out of the Tower and beheaded on
-Tower Hill. When Richard returned from Mile End the heads of these
-three men were on the gate of London Bridge.
-
-Simon Sudbury, Archbishop of Canterbury, deserved a better fate, for
-he was an amiable and gentle priest, and “lenient to heretics.” As
-chancellor he shared the punishment of a government deservedly hated,
-but there were many who deplored his death.
-
-The soldiers at the Tower offered no resistance, but joked and
-fraternised with the people.
-
-(John of Gaunt’s chaplain, William Appleton, some of Legge’s
-subordinates, and Richard Lyons also perished that day on Tower Hill.
-Of these, Richard Lyons was a thoroughly corrupt person, who five
-years earlier had been convicted of gross usury and of fraudulently
-“forestalling” in the wool trade, and had escaped the penalty of the
-law on being sentenced to pay a heavy fine and suffer imprisonment. At
-one time he had been a member of Edward III.’s council, and in that
-capacity had enriched himself and his friends at the expense of the
-nation.)
-
-A cry was raised in London that night against the Flemings, and many
-of these industrious aliens, whose only offence was the employment of
-cheap labour, were put to death, denied even the right of sanctuary
-when they fled to the altar of the church of the Austin Friars. The
-houses of certain unpopular citizens were also fired, and it went hard
-with all who refused to shout for “King Richard and the Commons.”
-
-But Tyler gave no sanction to the attack on the Flemings, and though
-the London mob took the law into its own hands and dealt roughly
-with those whom it disliked, there is no evidence of general rioting
-and disorder. To the end the peasant folk in London remembered the
-brotherhood John Ball had proclaimed, and respected their fellows, and
-their good order is a lasting tribute to their leaders.
-
-Tyler, with the bulk of the men of Kent and Surrey, remained in the
-city, and the king hearing of what had happened at the Tower, decided
-to pass the night at the Wardrobe, by St. Paul’s, whither his mother
-had gone when the Tower was invaded.
-
-Tyler, in spite of all that had been obtained at Mile End, was not
-satisfied. The peasants and serfs had been freed by royal warrant, but
-the landlords remained in possession of power, and there was no promise
-of better government, no word as to the restoration of the old common
-rights in the land, or the repeal of the savage forest laws. Reforms
-had been won, but the changes were not strong enough to ensure a social
-revolution.
-
-Once more, on the Saturday, June 15th, Richard was invited to meet his
-subjects, and again he declared his willingness, summoning his commons
-by proclamation to meet him that afternoon at Smithfield, in the square
-outside St. Bartholomew’s Priory.
-
-It seemed on the morning of June 15th as though the rising had
-succeeded triumphantly. The peasants had their charters of manumission,
-the nobles were thoroughly alarmed and cowed, the soldiery powerless,
-and Wat Tyler and his men still held the City of London.
-
-Holding such an advantage, Tyler determined to make the king decree
-further reforms, and when the two met at Smithfield, the confidence of
-victory could be seen in the peasant leader’s bearing.
-
-Richard, with two hundred retainers, and with Henry, Earl of Derby, the
-Earls of Suffolk and Salisbury, Sir Simon Burley, and Walworth, the
-mayor, were on the east side of the square, the great priory at their
-back.
-
-Tyler and his army drew up on the west side, and when Walworth opened
-the proceedings by calling on Wat Tyler to speak with the king, Tyler,
-seated on a little horse, rode out into the middle of the square with a
-single attendant. There he dismounted, dropped on one knee before the
-king, and shook him heartily by the hand. He bade Richard be of good
-cheer, and declared that within a fortnight he should have even more
-thanks from the commons than he had won already. “You and I shall be
-good comrades yet,” Tyler added.
-
-Richard, in some embarrassment, enquired why the commons did not return
-home, and Tyler answered with a great and solemn oath that no one
-should leave the city until they had got a further redressing of all
-their grievances. “And much the worse will it be for the lords of this
-realm if this charter be refused,” he concluded.
-
-Then Richard bade Tyler say what charter it was the commons demanded.
-
-“First, then,” said Tyler, “let no law but the law of Winchester
-prevail throughout the land, and let no man be made an outlaw by
-the decree of judges and lawyers.[67] Grant also that no lord shall
-henceforth exercise lordship over the commons; and since we are
-oppressed by so vast a horde of bishops and clerks, let there be but
-one bishop in England; and let the property and goods of the holy
-Church be divided fairly according to the needs of the people in each
-parish, after in justice making suitable provision for the present
-clergy and monks. Finally, let there be no more villeins in England,
-but grant us all to be free and of one condition.”
-
-“All that you have asked for I promise readily,” Richard answered, “if
-only it be consistent with the regality of my crown. And now let the
-commons return home since their requests have been granted.”
-
-In the presence of his nobles and the hearing of his people the king
-had promised that the demands of his subjects should be granted.
-
-For Wat Tyler the victory seemed complete, and now that the battle was
-won he called out that he was thirsty, and complained of a parched
-throat. The days had been strenuous, and Tyler longed for a draught of
-the good home-brewed beer of his native county. His attendant brought
-him water, and Tyler rinsed out his mouth with it, to the disgust of
-the king’s courtiers. Then beer was brought in a mighty tankard, and
-Tyler drank a deep draught to the health of “King Richard and the
-Commons.” He remounted his little horse, while the nobles stood by in
-silent and sullen anger, “for no lord or counsellor dared to open his
-mouth and give an answer to the commons in such a situation.” Had they
-not heard it proclaimed that henceforth all were to be free and equal
-in the land?
-
-A “valet of Kent,” some knight in the royal service, broke silence,
-muttering loudly his opinion that Wat Tyler was the greatest thief and
-robber in all Kent.
-
-Tyler caught the abusive words, and immediately ordered his attendant
-to cut down the man who had spoken in this insulting fashion.
-
-The “valet” edged back within the ranks of the king’s party, and Tyler
-drew his dagger. Walworth, sharing to the full the rage of the nobles
-at the capitulation of the king, and yet anxious to avoid a conflict,
-shouted that he would arrest all those who drew weapons in the royal
-presence. Tyler struck impatiently at Walworth, but the blow was
-harmless, for the mayor had armour on beneath his jerkin.
-
-Before Tyler could defend himself the mayor retaliated. Drawing a short
-cutlass he slashed at Tyler, wounding him in the neck so that he fell
-from his horse. And with the fall of their leader fell all the promised
-liberties of the peasants, and the rising collapsed.
-
-Two knights, Ralph Standish and another, plunged their swords into him
-while he was on the ground. Still, mortally wounded though he was,
-Tyler managed to scramble on to his little horse. He rode a yard or
-two, gave a last call on the commons to avenge his death, and then
-dropped to the ground to rise no more.
-
-Had the commons at once attacked the king’s party, they would have
-conquered. But confusion fell upon the people, and there was no one
-ready to take command. “Let us stand together,” “We will die with our
-captain or avenge him,” “Shoot, lads, shoot,”--the various cries went
-up, and the bowmen looked to their weapons.
-
-But Richard, with the presence of mind that marked his dealings with
-the people at Mile End, turned the doubt and uncertainty to his own
-advantage. He rode out boldly into the middle of the square, reminded
-the people that he, and not Tyler, was their king, and bade them follow
-him into the fields and receive their charters.
-
-There was no reason to refuse obedience, no reason to mistrust
-the king. Tyler had always spoken well of Richard, and the people
-themselves had seen him only yesterday sign their charters, and had
-heard him in Tyler’s presence, only a few minutes ago, promise to do
-the will of the commons. It was not by the king’s hand that their
-leader had been slain.
-
-A small band carried Tyler’s body into the Priory of St. Bartholomew,
-while the rest of the peasants followed Richard into the fields that
-stretched from Clerkenwell to Islington. Here he held them until Sir
-Robert Knolles arrived with 700 soldiers, for Walworth had lost no
-time in spreading the news that Tyler was dead, and in raising a troop
-for the king. By Richard’s orders the commons were dispersed when the
-soldiery arrived, the men of Kent, now broken and dispirited, being
-marched through the city, and left to take their way home.
-
-That very night Walworth and Standish were knighted for what they had
-done, and in the morning Wat Tyler’s head stared horribly from London
-Bridge.
-
-“My son, what sorrow I have suffered for thee this day,” cried the
-king’s mother, when Richard came to the Wardrobe.
-
-“I know it well, madam,” answered the king; “but rejoice with me now,
-and thank God that I have this day won back my heritage of England, so
-nearly lost.”
-
-The great uprising was over. Wat Tyler had fallen, as it seemed, in the
-very hour of victory.
-
-By Walworth’s orders, Jack Straw and two prominent men of Kent were
-hanged on the night of June 15th, without the formality of trial. Jack
-Straw, an itinerant priest sharing John Ball’s views, it is said,
-explained before he died what had been in the minds of the leaders of
-the revolt. They had meant to get rid of the supremacy of the landlords
-altogether, and to substitute for the established clergy a voluntary
-ministry of mendicant friars; the boy-king was to be enlisted in the
-cause of the revolution before the monarchy was finally abolished;
-and in place of parliament and royal council each county was to enjoy
-self-government.[68]
-
-No longer in the presence of danger, the king and his ministers struck
-fiercely at the rebels.
-
-On June 18th a general proclamation was issued ordering the arrest of
-all malefactors and the dispersal of all unruly gatherings. On June
-22nd, Chief Justice Sir Robert Tressilian went on assize, and “showed
-mercy to none and made great havock.” John Ball was taken at Coventry
-and, with Grindcobbe, hanged at St. Albans on July 15th.
-
-The Earl of Suffolk went down to Suffolk with 500 lances on June 23rd,
-and John Wraw, with twenty others, including four beneficed clergy, was
-quickly taken and hanged. Henry Despenser, Bishop of Norwich, grandson
-of Edward III.’s minister, suppressed the rising in Norfolk, and walked
-beside Litster to the gallows.
-
-At least a thousand peasant lives were sacrificed to the law under
-Tressilian’s sentence.
-
-At Waltham a deputation came to Richard to ask if it were true that the
-royal promises and charters were annulled, and the king’s answer left
-no room for doubt, for it breathed all the hatred and contempt of the
-commons that Tyler had striven to end:
-
-“O vile and odious by land and sea, you who are not worthy to live when
-compared with the lords whom ye have attacked; you should be forthwith
-punished with the vilest deaths were it not for the office ye bear.
-Go back to your comrades and bear the king’s answer. You were and are
-rustics, and shall remain in bondage, not that of old, but in one
-infinitely worse. For as long as we live, and by God’s help rule over
-this realm, we will attempt by all our faculties, powers, and means to
-make you such an example of offence to the heirs of your servitude as
-that they may have you before their eyes, and you may supply them with
-a perpetual ground for cursing and fearing you.”
-
-In despair at this rough ending to all their cherished hopes of
-freedom, the Essex peasants made a last attempt to fight for liberty,
-and on June 28th, at Great Baddow and Billericay, more than 500 fell
-before the king’s soldiery.
-
-On July 2nd all the charters of manumission and royal pardons were
-declared formally annulled, and sheriffs were strictly forbidden to
-release any prisoners. It was not till August 30th an amnesty was
-granted to those suspected of taking part in the rising. In the autumn
-parliament refused to ratify the charters, and the lawyers declared
-that without the consent of parliament the charters were illegal.
-
-So there was an end to all Wat Tyler and the peasants had risen to
-obtain, and well might it seem that the rising had been in vain.[69]
-
-Yet it was not altogether in vain that John Ball had rung his bell and
-died for his faith, that Wat Tyler had led the peasant folk of Kent
-to do battle for freedom. The poll-tax was stopped for one thing. And
-villeinage was doomed. “The landlords gave up the practice of demanding
-base services; they let their lands to leasehold tenants, and accepted
-money payments in lieu of labour; they ceased to recall the emancipated
-labourer into serfdom or to oppose his assertion of right in the courts
-of the manor and the county.” (W. Stubbs.)
-
-The great uprising brought out the desire for personal liberty in
-the labouring people of England that has never since been utterly
-quenched. It was the first insistence that peasants and serfs were men
-of England. “It taught the king’s officers and gentle folks that they
-must treat the peasants like men if they wished them to behave quietly,
-and it led most landlords to set free their bondsmen, and to take fixed
-money payments instead of uncertain services from their customary
-tenants, so that in a hundred years’ time there were very few bondsmen
-left in England.” (F. York Powell.)
-
-If Wat Tyler died as a man should for the cause he loves, few of those
-who trampled on the cause of the peasants were to know the paths of
-peace in later years.
-
-Richard died in prison at the hands of Henry Bolingbroke, John of
-Gaunt’s son, whom Tyler had let depart in safety when the Savoy was in
-flames. The Earls of Suffolk and Warwick died exiled fugitives. The
-Earl of Salisbury, fleeing from Henry V., was hanged in the streets of
-Cirencester. Chief Justice Tressilian was hanged for a traitor in 1387,
-and Sir Simon Burley was beheaded.
-
- This worldly wealth is nought perseverant
- Nor ever abides it in stabilitie.
-
-
-
-
-Jack Cade, the Captain of Kent
-
-1450
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: William of Worcester, Gregory, Mayor of London, 1451–2;
-_Collections of a London Citizen_; _an English Chronicle_; _Three
-Fifteenth Century Chronicles_ (Camden Society); Fabyan--_Ellis
-Letters_ (second series), _Issue Rolls, Devon, Rolls of Parliament,
-Paston Letters_, vol. i, with introduction by Dr. Gairdner;
-Orridge--_Illustrations of Jack Cade’s Rebellion_; Durrant
-Cooper--_John Cade’s Followers in Kent and Sussex_; J. Clayton--_True
-Story of Jack Cade_; Dr. G. Kriehn--_The English Rising in 1450_,
-Strasburg, 1892.
-
-
-
-
-JACK CADE, THE CAPTAIN OF KENT
-
-1450
-
-
-The rising of the commons of Kent in 1450 under their captain, Jack
-Cade, was the protest of people--sick of the misrule at home and of
-the mismanagement of affairs abroad--driven to take up arms against an
-incapable government that would not heed gentler measures.
-
-It was not such a peasant revolt as Wat Tyler had led, this rising of
-the fifteenth century. It was largely the work of men of some local
-importance, and country squires were active in enrolling men, employing
-the parish constable for that purpose in a good many parishes.[70]
-
-For years discontent had been rife. Henry VI., a weak, religious
-man, more fit for the cloister than the throne, had lost the great
-statesmen of the early years of his reign. The Duke of Bedford, good
-Duke Humphrey of Gloucester, and Cardinal Beaufort were all dead, and
-Richard, Duke of York, by far the ablest man left among the nobles,
-had been banished to the government of Ireland. The Duke of Suffolk
-became the chief minister of the crown in 1445, and all the disasters
-of the war in France and of corrupt maladministration in England were
-laid at his door. Suffolk was responsible for the king’s marriage
-with the penniless princess, Margaret of Anjou, who, ambitious and
-self-willed, proved the worst possible counsellor for Henry. And the
-price of this marriage was the territories of Anjou and Maine, which
-were ceded to Margaret’s father, besides a heavy tax of one-fifteenth
-of all incomes demanded by Suffolk in payment for his expenses in
-arranging and carrying out the undesirable wedding. The years of
-Suffolk’s ministry saw nothing but defeat and disgrace as the hundred
-years’ war with France drew to its end. The victories of Edward III.
-and Henry V., and all the wealth of life and treasure poured out so
-lavishly by England, had come to nothing, and by 1451 all France save
-Calais was lost. Popular discontent turned to action early in 1450
-against Suffolk and his fellow ministers. At the opening of parliament
-Suffolk was impeached as a traitor, along with Lord Say-and-Sele, the
-treasurer, and Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury; and Suffolk, without even
-demanding a trial by his peers, threw himself on the king’s mercy.
-Henry was satisfied with the banishment of his fallen minister for five
-years; but when Suffolk went on board, the sailors of the vessel that
-was to take him across seas decreed a capital sentence, and after a
-rough court-martial trial the Duke of Suffolk was beheaded on May 2nd
-in a small boat off the coast of Dover, and his body left on the sands.
-Four months earlier, Moleyns, Bishop of Chichester, who had only just
-resigned the keepership of the Privy Seal, and was known as a supporter
-of Suffolk’s, had been slain by the sailors of Portsmouth, when he
-arrived at that town with arrears of pay long overdue to the troops.
-Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury, survived till the end of June, and then,
-at the time when Cade was marching on London, he was dragged away from
-the very altar of Erdington Church, in Wiltshire, when he had said
-mass, and put to death on a hill there by the infuriated people of his
-diocese.[71]
-
-Widespread as the discontent was in 1450, there was no general movement
-throughout the land as in the days when John Ball and his companions
-bound the peasants together by village clubs. Kent, “impatient in
-wrongs, disdaining of too much oppression, and ever desirous of new
-change and new fangleness,” was well organised for revolt, and the
-men of Surrey and Sussex were ready to bear arms with Cade. Outside
-these counties no one is found to have taken the lead against the
-government. Kent and Sussex had their own reasons for revolt, for
-piracy swept the English Channel unchecked, and the highways were
-infested with robbers--soldiers broken in the war; and they had their
-leader--Mortimer, whom some called “John Mendall” and others, later,
-Jack Cade. So by the end of May a full list of grievances and necessary
-reforms was drawn up, and the commons of Kent had, for the second time
-in history, risen in arms and encamped on Blackheath, resolute to get
-redress from the king for their injuries.
-
-The success of democratic revolt depends largely on the clear courage
-of its leaders and the complete confidence of the people in those
-they elect for their captains. In 1450 Jack Cade proved himself
-both clear-headed and brave, and the men of Kent followed him
-whole-heartedly.
-
-To this day we are still in the dark as to the real name and family of
-the Captain of Kent. He was known popularly as “Mortimer,” and was so
-described in the “pardon” he received. He was a man of some property,
-or he would not have been attainted by special act of parliament, nor
-have enjoyed the confidence of the men of substance who accepted his
-generalship. He was known as an Irishman and as a soldier in the French
-wars, and it is likely enough that he served under the Duke of York
-both in France and Ireland. His strong advocacy of the claims of York
-favours the notion of kinsmanship; but, on the other hand, York was by
-far the ablest statesman of the day, and to demand his recall to the
-king’s council was no guarantee of family motives.
-
-There was some talk at the time that Cade was called John Aylesmere,
-and that he was married to the daughter of a Surrey squire at Taundede.
-But there is no more evidence for these things than for the charges
-made against him in the warrant for his arrest, that he had once killed
-a woman in Sussex and had then fled to France and fought with the
-French arms.
-
-The undisputed high character of Cade’s followers is all against the
-portrait painted by the government after his death; when, anxious to
-blacken the good name of so resolute a leader, it was made out that he
-was merely a disreputable ruffian. The landowners of Kent and Sussex
-would never have accepted for their captain a mere swashbuckling
-blackguard. They rallied to him as a Mortimer, seeing in him a
-likeness to Richard, Duke of York.[72] If his real name was Cade, then
-he was probably a squire or yeoman, for Cade was no uncommon name round
-Mayfield and Heathfield in Sussex, and Cades were landed proprietors
-near Reigate as late as the seventeenth century.
-
-It was enough that, chosen Captain of Kent, Cade, or Mortimer, was
-known and trusted as a brave, upright man of good character and
-ability.[73] Whether descended from nobles or of good Sussex stock
-was a small matter to men in earnest for the changes and reforms the
-country needed.
-
-Ashford was the heart of the rising, and from Ashford the host marched
-to Blackheath, where, at the beginning of June, the camp was fixed. The
-army, estimated at 46,000, included 18 esquires, 74 county gentlemen,
-and some five clerks in holy orders, who were presently joined by the
-Abbot of Battle, the Prior of Lewes, and twenty-three county gentlemen
-from Sussex.
-
-Cade at once explained that they must deal directly with the king if
-they were to get relief from their present burdens, and then set to
-work to draw up the bill of “the complaint and requests” of the commons
-of Kent, while the rank and file laboured “to dyke and stake the camp
-all about, as it had been in the land of war.”
-
-But war had not yet been declared, and for the present discipline was
-loose in the camp at Blackheath.[74] “As good was Jack Robin as John at
-the Noke, for all were as high as pig’s feet; until the time that they
-should come and speak with such states and messengers as were sent unto
-them. Then they put all their power into the man that was named captain
-of all their host.”
-
-On June 7th the king was at Smithfield with 20,000 soldiers, and
-messengers were promptly despatched to Blackheath to know the meaning
-of the insurrection. Cade answered by showing the petition he had drawn
-up, and mentioned that they had assembled “to redress and reform the
-wrongs that were done in the realm, and to withstand the malice of them
-that were destroyers of the common profit, and to correct and amend the
-defaults of them that were the king’s chief counsellors.” He then sent
-off the “bill of complaints” to the king and to the parliament then
-sitting at Westminster, “and requested to have answer thereof again,
-but answer he had none.” The “complaint” was received with contempt,
-and the opinion of the king’s counsellors was that “such proud rebels
-should rather be suppressed and tamed with violence and force than with
-fair words or amicable answer.”
-
-Yet “the complaint,” which consisted of fifteen articles, was no
-revolutionary document. It contained protests against the royal threat
-to lay waste Kent in revenge for the death of the Duke of Suffolk;
-the diversion of the royal revenue raised by heavy taxation to “other
-men”; the banishment of the Duke of York “to make room for unworthy
-ministers who would not do justice by law, but demanded bribes and
-gifts”; the purveyance of goods for the royal household without
-payment; the arrest and imprisonment on false charges of treason of
-persons whose goods and lands were subsequently seized by the king’s
-servants, who then “either compassed their deaths or kept them in
-prison while they got possession of their property by royal grant”;
-the interference with the old right of free election of knights of the
-shire by “the great rulers of the country sending letters to enforce
-their tenants and other people to choose other persons than the common
-will is to elect”; the misconduct of the war in France, demanding
-inquiry and the punishment by law of those found guilty. Complaint was
-also made of various local grievances--the insecurity of property,
-the arbitrary conduct of the lords of the seaports, the extortion in
-taxation owing to sheriffs and under-sheriffs farming their offices,
-the fines exacted by sheriffs for non-compliance with the orders of the
-court of exchequer (whose writs were sealed with green wax) when no
-summons or warning had been given, and the “sore expense” incurred by
-there being only one Court of Sessions in the whole county.
-
-Five “requests” were added to the bill of complaints. These expressed
-the desire of the commons that the king should reign “like a king
-royal”; that “all the false progeny and affinity of the Duke of
-Suffolk” should be banished from the king’s presence and brought to
-trial, and the Duke of York and his friends included in the royal
-council; that punishment should be meted out to those responsible for
-the death of the Duke of Gloucester; that the extortions practised
-daily by the king’s servants in the taking of goods from the people
-should cease; that the old Statute of Labourers for keeping down
-wages should be abolished; and that the “false traitors” and “great
-extortioners,” Lord Say and Crowmer, the sheriff of Kent, should be
-brought low.
-
-In brief, the charter of the commons of Kent demanded the total
-expulsion of all Suffolk’s ministers and relatives from public service,
-the return of the Duke of York and his party to power, the suppression
-of the bribery, corruption, and extortion practised by the sheriffs and
-government servants, and the repeal of the Statute of Labourers.
-
-It would have been well if Henry had heeded these complaints and
-requests. As it was he pushed on to Blackheath, in spite of murmuring
-in his army, and Cade, unwilling to risk a battle, and knowing that
-disaffection was at work in London, quietly withdrew to Sevenoaks.
-There was no spirit in the royal troops to suppress the rising, and
-many favoured the Captain of Kent. But two knights, Sir Humfrey
-Stafford and Sir William Stafford, kinsmen of the Duke of Buckingham
-and the Archbishop of Canterbury, and men of some military repute,
-decided to pursue the rebels and advanced to Sevenoaks with a small
-picked body of soldiers. Their defeat was complete. Both knights were
-slain, and those of their men who were not cut to pieces fled from the
-battle, or joined Cade’s host.
-
-The result of this disaster to the royal plans was that Henry returned
-to London with an army that soon melted away, or broke into open
-disorder. Many of the nobles, who on receipt of the petition of the
-commons of Kent had called for violent measures against the rebels,
-now left the king, and, with their retainers, rode to their country
-estates. Henry, to appease the clamour of some of his own followers,
-ordered the arrest of Lord Say-and-Sele, the king’s treasurer, and of
-Sheriff Crowmer, and bade officers take them to the Tower. Parliament
-was dissolved, and Cade was busy in Kent gathering reinforcements, and
-doing what he could to repair locally the mischief of Suffolk’s rule
-before proceeding to London.[75]
-
-As a last resource, Henry decided to treat with Cade by ambassadors,
-and on June 29th, when the commons were again encamped on Blackheath,
-came the Duke of Buckingham, and Stafford, Archbishop of Canterbury,
-for many years the king’s chancellor--a gentle old man, who, if he
-had made no stand against the misgovernment himself, was hardly to be
-blamed--to arrange, if possible, a peaceful settlement.
-
-The conference came to nothing, for neither Buckingham nor the
-archbishop could promise Cade any positive redress of grievances, or
-the interview he sought with the king.
-
-“These lords found him sober in talk, wise in reasoning, arrogant in
-heart, and stiff in opinions; one who that by no means would dissolve
-his army, except the king in person would come to him, and assent to
-the things he would require” (Holinshed.)
-
-The failure of the mission was reported, and Henry, after appointing
-Lord Scales as guardian of the prisoners in the Tower, hastily fled
-to Kenilworth, although the lord mayor and citizens of London promised
-to stand by him if he would remain in the city. There was little of
-sovereignty in Henry VI., son of Henry V., the conqueror of Agincourt.
-Quiet he loved, and in religious exercises he found the satisfaction
-that others found in war and statecraft.
-
-On the first of July the way was open for the commons to enter London.
-Suffolk, Bishop Moleyns, and Bishop Ayscough had all been summarily
-executed. Lord Say, the treasurer, alone remained of the discredited
-ministers. No opposition was offered to Cade by the citizens of London.
-The Common Council had discussed the rising, and at the Guildhall only
-one dissentient voice had been raised to the admission of the Captain
-of Kent to the city. One Horne, a stockfishmonger and alderman, alone
-objected to any recognition of the unlawful assembly of the commons,
-and he was sent to Newgate prison for safety, and on Cade’s entry fined
-500 marks for his daring speech.
-
-Negotiations had been opened between the City Council and the commons
-while the latter were at Blackheath, and Thomas Cocke (or Cooke),[76]
-a past warden of the Drapers’ Company, acted as the mutual friend of
-both parties. From Cocke the corporation learnt of Cade’s purposes, and
-that the city stood in no danger from the rising; and it was Cocke
-who carried instructions from Cade to the wealthy foreign merchants,
-requiring them to furnish horses, arms and money for his army.
-
-“Ye shall charge all Lombards and strangers, being merchants, Genoese,
-Venetians, Florentines and others this day to draw them together: and
-to ordain for us, the captain, twelve [sets of] harness complete, of
-the best fashion, twenty-four brigandines, twelve battle-axes, twelve
-glaves, six horses with saddle and bridle completely harnessed, and
-1,000 marks of ready money.”
-
-So ran the summons, which was duly obeyed.[77] For Cade had added the
-stern warning that “if this demand be not observed and done, we shall
-have the heads of as many as we can get of them.”
-
-The corporation had really no choice but to welcome Cade. Kings and
-nobles had fled, and here was the Captain of Kent with 50,000 men come
-to do justice at their gates. London had suffered as badly as any place
-from the misgovernment of the country, and it was plain the commons
-of Kent were no army of maurauders, for no complaint had been heard
-of their ill doing in Kent, and their captain had treated with full
-civility the Duke of Buckingham and Archbishop Stafford.
-
-So the keys of the city were presented to Cade, and at five o’clock
-on the 2nd of July the Captain of Kent, mounted on a good horse, rode
-across London Bridge, followed by all his army. In Cannon Street, in
-the presence of Sir John Chalton, the Lord Mayor, and a great multitude
-of people, Cade laid down his sword on the old London Stone and
-declared proudly, “Now is Mortimer lord of this city.” At nightfall
-he returned to his headquarters, the White Hart, a famous inn in
-Southwark, and next morning was betimes in the city. That day sentence
-was passed on Lord Say-and-Sele and on his son-in-law, Sheriff Crowmer.
-They were removed from the Tower by Cade’s orders, taken to the
-Guildhall, tried and condemned for “divers treasons,” and for “certain
-extortions,” and executed forthwith. Say was beheaded at the standard
-in Cheapside, and Crowmer at Mile End, and so bitter was the public
-feeling against these two men, and so fierce the popular hatred, that
-their heads were carried on poles through the city, and made to kiss in
-ghastly embrace before being placed on London Bridge.
-
-These, with a third man named John Bailey, who was hanged with Cade’s
-permission for being a necromancer and a dabbler in magic and the black
-arts, were the only persons put to death while Mortimer was lord of
-the city. At Southwark, where the commons were now encamped, as at
-Blackheath, theft in the popular army was treated as a capital offence,
-and two or three “lawless men” were hanged. It was inevitable if
-discipline and good order were to be obtained in so vast a company that
-punishment should follow sharp and swift on all who brought discredit
-on the rising.
-
-Lord Say and Sheriff Crowmer being dead, the city fathers saw no
-further purpose in Cade’s lordship, and they dreaded being called upon
-to contribute to the support of his army, for they knew that Cade
-needed money for his men. To the everlasting credit of the commons no
-charge was laid against them of riot or disorder. The city was in
-their hands for three days, yet no harm befell the citizens. On their
-captain alone has blame fallen for the events of those days in July.
-
-The difficulties of the man were immense. He had rendered no mean
-service to the state by calling attention to the ills that plagued
-the country, and proposing remedies. He had roused a large body of
-Englishmen to demand a better government, and by the sharp method of
-the times he had got rid of a bad minister and a corrupt sheriff, so
-that public life was at least the healthier for the deliverance from
-two of its oppressors. And now he had this army of 50,000 men, all
-needing food and shelter--an orderly, well-disciplined body, no mob
-of mercenaries--and the city of London, with all its wealth, gave him
-nothing.
-
-Cade had to get supplies. The commons of Kent could not live on the
-good will of the London people. Their captain was forced to levy toll
-where he could. At present all he had received was the tribute from the
-foreign merchants and 500 marks from the fishmonger Horne.
-
-On July 3rd, the night of Say’s execution, Cade supped with Philip
-Malpas, Cocke’s father-in-law. Malpas was one of Suffolk’s party, a
-King Henry’s man, unpopular in the city, and though an alderman and a
-draper, an expelled member of the city council. Warned by Cocke, Malpas
-got rid of his valuables before Cade arrived. But the Captain of Kent
-found certain jewels belonging to the Duke of York in the house, and
-these he carried off.[78]
-
-The following night Cade supped with a merchant named Curtis (Ghirstis
-according to Fabyan, Girste according to Stow) in the parish of St.
-Margaret Pattens and before he left insisted on a contribution to the
-war chest. Curtis paid, but he resented bitterly the abuse of his
-hospitality. It seemed to him, as it seemed to his fellow merchants to
-whom he told the tale of his wrongs, sheer robbery, and the following
-morning (Sunday, July 5th), while Cade rested quietly at the White Hart
-in Southwark, the city fathers were busy shaking their heads over the
-business, and grave anxiety filled their minds. This might be but the
-beginning of pillage; there were always materials in London for a riot,
-apart from Cade’s army.
-
-“And for this the hearts of the citizens fell from him, and every
-thrifty man was afraid to be served in like wise, for there was many a
-man in London that awaited and would fain have seen a common robbery”
-(Stow.)[79]
-
-In the course of the day mayor and corporation were in consultation
-with Lord Scales, the Governor of the Tower, with the result that
-decision was made to prevent Cade and the commons from re-entering the
-city. London Bridge was at once seized and fortified by the citizens,
-and Matthew Gough, a distinguished soldier in the French wars, was
-placed in command.
-
-Cade, knowing nothing of the hostility he had created, took his ease
-that day--it was the last peaceful Sabbath he was to know. Towards
-evening he gave orders for the King’s Bench and Marshalsea prisons to
-be opened, and their inmates--for the most part victims of official
-extortion and injustice--to be released. This was done, and certain
-“lawless men” convicted of disobedience were haled off to be hanged; to
-the end there was no relaxing of discipline.
-
-Then came word that the passage of London Bridge was stopped, and the
-right of entry to the city barred against the commons as against a
-foe. Cade took this as a declaration of war, of the civil war he had
-done his best to prevent, and sallied out to force an entrance. At
-nine o’clock the battle began on the bridge, and all through the short
-summer night it raged, neither side effecting victory. “For some time
-the Londoners were beat back to the stulpes at St. Magnus corner, and
-suddenly again the rebels were repulsed and driven back to the stulpes
-at Southwark.” It was not till nine o’clock on Monday morning that the
-commons, wearied and disheartened, fell back from the fray, and Cade
-understood that the attack had failed, and that for the first time
-since the assembling of the people on Blackheath, at the end of May,
-a check had been given to the democratic movement. A hasty truce was
-settled between Cade and the mayor, that while the truce lasted the
-commons should not cross into London nor the citizens into Southwark.
-Cardinal Kemp, Archbishop of York, the king’s chancellor, who with old
-Archbishop Stafford had been left undisturbed in the Tower since the
-king’s ignominious flight, immediately decided that the time had come
-to arrange a settlement with the Captain of Kent.
-
-Kemp sent messengers that day to the White Hart, asking Cade to meet
-the representatives of the king, “to the end that the civil commotions
-and disturbances might cease and tranquility be restored,” and Cade
-consented.
-
-Kemp, who had himself presided at the trial and condemnation of
-Suffolk, brought to the conference, which was held in the church of St.
-Margaret, Southwark,[80] on July 7th, Archbishop Stafford and William
-Waynfleet, Bishop of Winchester. The chancellor, bent on making peace,
-also brought pardons to all concerned, duly signed and sealed. He
-listened courteously to Cade’s “complaints” and “requests,” received
-the petition, promised it should have the full consideration of
-parliament, and then announced a full pardon to all who should return
-home.
-
-The proposals of the bishops won the general approval of the commons.
-There was nothing to be gained, it seemed, by remaining in arms, now
-they had won a promise that their charter should come before parliament.
-
-Cade alone hesitated. What if parliament should disavow these
-“pardons,” and the commons be treated as the peasants were treated when
-they trusted a king’s word? He asked for the endorsement of his own
-pardon, and the pardons of his followers, by parliament before his army
-dispersed. Chancellor Kemp explained that this was impossible, because
-parliament was dissolved. The people were satisfied with the cardinal’s
-word. The rising was at an end.
-
-The following day the bulk of the commons departed from Southwark for
-their farms and cottages in Kent and Surrey and Sussex. Cade watched
-them go. His own mind was made up. Not till parliament should give him
-a pardon of indisputable legality would he lay down his arms. With a
-small band of followers he set off for Rochester, sending what goods
-and provisions he had by water.
-
-The rising was at an end, and nothing more was heard in parliament, or
-elsewhere, of the famous charter of “complaints” and “requests.”
-
-With the break-up of the insurgent army, the government woke to
-activity. Alexander Iden was appointed sheriff of Kent, and marrying
-Crowmer’s widow, subsequently gained considerable profit. Within a week
-the king’s writ and proclamation, declaring John Cade a false traitor,
-was posted throughout the countryside, and Cade, defeated in an attempt
-to get possession of Queenborough Castle, was a fugitive with the
-reward of 1,000 marks on his head, alive or dead, and with Sheriff Iden
-in hot pursuit.
-
-Near Heathfield, in Sussex, Iden came up with his prey, early on
-Monday, July 13th.
-
-Cade died fighting. A broken man, worn and famished, friendless and
-alone, he still had his sword. The spirit of Mortimer, Captain of
-Kent, flickered up in the presence of his enemies--it were better to
-die sword in hand fighting for freedom than to perish basely by the
-hangman. So Cade fought his last fight in the Sussex garden, and fell
-mortally wounded, overpowered by the sheriff and his men.
-
-In all haste Iden sent off the dead body to London; it was identified
-by the hostess of the White Hart, and three days later the head was
-stuck on London Bridge. The body was quartered and portions sent to
-Blackheath, Norwich, Salisbury, and Gloucester, for public exposure.
-The sheriffs of London, upon whom the gruesome task fell of despatching
-these remains, complained bitterly of the cost of this proceeding,
-“because that hardly any persons durst nor would take upon them the
-carriage for doubt of their lives.”[81]
-
-Iden got his 1,000 marks reward, besides getting the governorship of
-Rochester Castle, at a salary of £36 per annum.
-
-Cade was “attainted of treason” by act of parliament, and all his
-goods, lands, and tenements made forfeit to the crown. A year later
-another act of parliament made void all that had been done by Cade’s
-authority during the rising.
-
-In January, 1451, Henry VI. went into Kent with his justices, and this
-royal visitation was known as the harvest of heads; for in spite of
-Cardinal Kemp’s pardons, twenty-six men of Canterbury and Rochester
-implicated in the rising were hanged.
-
-So the last echoes of the rising died away, and corruption and
-misgovernment remained. But the commons of Kent and their captain had
-done what they could, and in the only way that seemed possible, to get
-justice done, and their failure was without dishonour.
-
-
-
-
-Sir Thomas More and the Freedom of Conscience
-
-1529–1535
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: William Roper--_Life of Sir Thomas More_, 1626;
-Harpsfield--_Life of More_ (Harleian MSS.); Stapleton--_Ires Thomæ_,
-1588; Cresacre More--_Life of More_, 1627; Erasmus--_Epistolae_
-(Leyden, 1706); Sir James Mackintosh--_Life of More_, 1844;
-Campbell--_Lives of the Chancellors_; Foss--_Lives of the Judges_;
-_Calendar of State Papers--Henry VIII._, edited by Dr. Brewer and Dr.
-Gairdner (Rolls Series); _More’s English Works_, edited by William
-Rastell; Rev. T. E. Bridgett--_Life of Blessed John Fisher_, and _Life
-and Writings of Sir Thomas More_, 1891.
-
-[Illustration: SIR THOMAS MORE
-
-(_From the Drawing by Hans Holbein._)]
-
-
-
-
-SIR THOMAS MORE AND THE FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE
-
-1529–1535.
-
-
-“Did Nature ever frame a sweeter, happier character than that of
-More?”--so Erasmus wrote in 1498, when Thomas More was twenty, and
-Erasmus, recently come to England, some ten years older. It was at the
-beginning of their friendship, a friendship that was to last unbroken
-till death,[82] and More had then passed from the household of Cardinal
-Morton to Oxford, and from Oxford to Lincoln’s Inn, to take up his
-father’s calling and follow the law as a barrister.
-
-Twenty years later Erasmus, writing at length to Ulrich von Hutten,
-gives us a portrait of More in full manhood. Temperance, simplicity,
-human affection, good humour, independence of mind--these qualities are
-conspicuous.
-
-“I never saw anyone so indifferent about food. Until he was a young
-man he delighted in drinking water, but that was natural to him. Yet,
-that he might not seem to be singular or unsociable, he would conceal
-his temperance from his guests by drinking the lightest beer, or often
-pure water, out of a pewter vessel.”
-
-“He prefers milk diet and fruits, and is especially fond of eggs. He
-would rather eat corned beef and coarse bread than what are called
-delicacies.”
-
-“He likes a simple dress, using neither silk nor purple nor chains of
-gold--except on state occasions. It is wonderful how careless he is of
-all that ceremony which most men identify with politeness. He neither
-requires it from others nor is anxious to use it himself, though when
-it is necessary, at interviews or banquets, he knows how to employ it.
-But he thinks it unmanly to waste time over such trifles.”
-
-“He seems born and fashioned for friendship, and is a most faithful and
-enduring friend. He is easy of access to all; but if he chances to get
-familiar with one whose vices will not brook correction, rather than
-a sudden breaking off, he gradually relaxes the intimacy and quietly
-drops it. He abhors games of tennis, dice, cards, and the like, by
-which most gentlemen kill time. Though he is rather too negligent of
-his own interests, no one is more diligent in behalf of his friends.
-So polite, and so sweet-mannered is he in company, that no one is
-too melancholy to be cheered by him. Since boyhood he has always so
-delighted in merriment that it seems to be part of his nature; yet his
-merriment is never turned into buffoonery.”
-
-“No one is less led by the opinions of the crowd, yet no one is less
-eccentric.”
-
-The friendship of More and Erasmus had ripened in those twenty
-years. In More’s house, and at his instigation, Erasmus had written
-the _Praise of Folly_,[83] and the great scholar watched with warm
-interest the famous career and the brilliant character of the man he
-loved so heartily.
-
-More was already high in Henry VIII.’s favour when Erasmus could write
-that no one was less led by the opinions of the crowd, and more than
-once his independence and courage of mind had been proved in the twenty
-years that had passed.
-
-Drawn at first to the monastic life, More had spent four years
-(1500–1504) with the Carthusians in Smithfield, “frequenting daily
-their spiritual exercises, but without any vow.” Then it is plain to
-him that his vocation is not the priesthood, but marriage and public
-life, and he leaves the Charterhouse, and in 1505 is married and in
-Parliament.[84] But all his life the devotion to religion, and to
-the services of the Church, remain in More, and he is ascetic in the
-mortifications of the body till the spirit and the will ride supreme.
-
-In the House of Commons More stood out against the exactions of Henry
-VII., and at once fell under the king’s displeasure.
-
-More’s son-in-law, Roper, tells the story:
-
-“In the time of King Henry the Seventh, More was made a burgess of the
-Parliament wherein was demanded by the king (as I have heard reported)
-about three-fifteenths, for the marriage of his eldest daughter,
-that then should be Scottish Queen; at the last debating whereof he
-made such arguments and reasons against, that the king’s demands were
-thereby overthrown. So that one of the king’s privy chamber being
-present thereat, brought word to the king out of the Parliament house
-that a beardless boy had disappointed all his purpose. Whereupon the
-king, conceiving great indignation towards him, could not be satisfied
-until he had some way revenged it. And forasmuch as he, nothing have,
-nothing could lose, his Grace devised a causeless quarrel against his
-father, keeping him in the Tower till he had made him pay a hundred
-pounds fine.... Had not the king soon after died, Sir Thomas More was
-determined to have gone over sea, thinking that being in the king’s
-indignation, he could not live in England without great danger.”
-
-The grant from parliament to the king was reduced from £113,000 to
-£30,000 by More’s action; and if this action brought royal anger, it
-won for More the confidence of his fellow-citizens in London, so that
-we see him in the second year of Henry VIII. under-sheriff for the
-city, and according to Erasmus and Roper, the most popular lawyer of
-the day. With all his legal business, and good income, More is never
-anxious after money. “While he was still dependent on his fees, he gave
-to all true and friendly counsel, considering their interests rather
-than his own; he persuaded many to settle with their opponents as the
-cheaper course. If he could not induce them to act in that manner--for
-some men delight in litigation--he would still indicate the method that
-was least expensive.”[85]
-
-More’s rising reputation was bound to attract the notice of Henry
-VIII., for the king was alert in the early years of his reign to
-get good men at the court, and Wolsey, who had become chancellor on
-Archbishop Warham’s retirement in 1515, was anxious to enlist More in
-the royal service. The court had no attractions for More, his embassies
-to Flanders and Calais, to settle trade disputes and difficulties
-with France, wearied him, and in 1516 he was engaged in finishing
-his _Utopia_. According to Roper, it was More’s independence of mind
-that made the king force office at court upon him. A ship belonging
-to the pope, which had put into Southampton, was claimed by Henry as
-a forfeiture. More argued the case so clearly that the commissioners
-decided in the pope’s favour, and the king at once declared he must
-have More in his service.
-
-Then for the next twelve years Sir Thomas More enjoyed the royal
-favour and friendship. His promotion was rapid. Secretary of state,
-master of requests when the king was travelling, privy councilor,
-under-treasurer, or chancellor of the exchequer--all these offices were
-filled. In 1521 More was knighted, in 1523 he was speaker of the House
-of Commons, and in 1525 chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster.
-
-Erasmus writes to Ulrich von Hutten in 1519 in praise of More’s public
-work: “In serious matters no man’s advice is more prized, and when the
-king wishes for recreation no man’s conversation is more entertaining.
-Often there are matters deep and involved that demand a grave and
-prudent judge, and More unravels these questions in a way that gives
-satisfaction to both sides. Yet no one has ever prevailed on him to
-receive a gift for his decision. Happy that commonwealth where kings
-appoint such officials! No pride has come to him with his high estate.
-With all the weight of state affairs he remembers his old friends,
-and returns from time to time to the books he loves so well. Whatever
-influence has come to him with his high office, whatever favour he
-enjoys with his wealthy king, he uses all for the good of the state and
-for the assistance of his friends. Ever fond of conferring benefits and
-wonderfully prone to pity, his disposition has grown with his power of
-indulging it. Some he helps with money, to others he gives protection,
-and others he recommends for promotion. When he can help in no other
-way he does it by his advice: no one is sent away dejected. You
-might well say that he had been appointed the public guardian of the
-distressed and needy.”
-
-If the cares of state did not cut off Sir Thomas More from assisting
-old acquaintances, they made great inroads into the home life he loved
-so well. He had married again on the death of his first wife, and
-his letters to his children, especially to his “most dear daughter,
-Margaret”--Roper’s wife--are full of tenderness. He is anxious about
-the education of his children, and rejoices that his daughter shares
-his love for books. We find him writing to Margaret Roper just after
-her marriage in 1522:--
-
-“I am therefore delighted to read that you have made up your mind
-to give yourself diligently to philosophy, and to make up by your
-earnestness in future for what you have lost in the past by neglect.
-My darling Margaret, I indeed have never found you idling, and your
-unusual learning in almost every kind of literature shows that you
-have been making active progress. So I take your words as an example
-of the great modesty that makes you prefer to accuse yourself falsely
-of sloth rather than to boast of your diligence, unless your meaning
-is that you will give yourself so earnestly to study that your past
-history will seem like indolence by comparison.... Though I earnestly
-hope that you will devote the rest of your life to medical science and
-sacred literature, so that you may be well furnished for the whole
-scope of human life, which is to have a healthy soul in a healthy body,
-and I know that you have already laid the foundations of these studies,
-and there will be always opportunity to continue the building; yet I am
-of opinion that you may with great advantage give some years of your
-yet flourishing youth to humane letters and liberal studies.... It
-would be a delight, my dear Margaret, to me to converse long with you
-on these matters, but I have just been interrupted and called away by
-the servants, who have brought in supper. I must have regard to others,
-else to sup is not so sweet as to talk with you.”[86]
-
-The close friend of Erasmus and Dean Colet, an accepted champion of the
-New Learning, More was naturally enthusiastic for education--for girls
-as for boys. He had written to Gunnell, for a time the tutor of his
-family:--
-
-“Though I prefer learning, joined with virtue, to all the treasures
-of kings, yet renown for learning, when it is not united with a good
-life, is nothing else than splendid and notorious infamy: this would be
-especially the case in a woman.... Since erudition in woman is a new
-thing and a reproach to the sloth of men, many will gladly assail it
-and impute to literature what is really the fault of nature, thinking
-from the vices of the learned to get their own ignorance esteemed as
-virtue. On the other hand if a woman (and this I desire and hope with
-you as the teacher for all my daughters) to eminent virtue should add
-an outwork of even moderate skill in literature, I think she will have
-more real profit than if she had obtained the riches of Crœsus and the
-beauty of Helen.”
-
-In this letter More goes on to speak of the profit of learning and the
-happiness of those who give themselves to it--“possessing solid joy
-they will neither be puffed up by the empty praises of men nor dejected
-by evil tongues.”
-
-“These I consider the genuine fruits of learning, and though I admit
-that all literary men do not possess them, I would maintain that those
-who give themselves to study with such views (avoiding the precipices
-of pride and haughtiness, walking in the pleasant meadows of modesty,
-not dazzled at the sight of gold) will easily attain their end and
-become perfect. Nor do I think that the harvest will be much affected
-whether it is a man or a woman who sows the field. They both have the
-same human nature, which reason differentiates from those of beasts;
-both therefore are equally suited for those studies for which reason is
-perfectioned, and becomes fruitful like a ploughed land on which the
-seed of good lessons has been sown.”
-
-This strong love for wise learning, laying emphasis on a complete
-education--the training in virtue no less than the knowledge of
-letters--had its roots in More’s character. The “genuine fruits of
-learning” ripen in his life and death. His wide toleration, which will
-blame no man for not taking the path he trod to martyrdom, is coupled
-inextricably with a refinement of conscience that cannot be sullied by
-a denial of his faith. The freedom of conscience Thomas More claimed
-for himself he most willingly allows to others. Just as the education
-he valued for himself he extends to all his children.
-
-Standing largely aloof from the violent controversies Luther had
-started, hating the bitter intolerance and savage abuse of theological
-strife, refusing to be drawn into the deadly discussion of Henry
-VIII.’s divorce, Sir Thomas More is content to live in loyal devotion
-to his religion and to the service of the state, if haply he may. And
-when this is denied him he is content to die, retaining his tolerant
-good-humour and the love of his kind to the end, and without resentment
-at his fate.
-
-The courage of the sage never failed Sir Thomas More in his public
-work. As “a beardless boy” he had resisted in parliament the king’s
-extortions, as speaker of the House of Commons he protected the
-privileges of the commons. Wolsey had come down to the House with all
-his train to command a subsidy, but no word was uttered in reply to his
-address. In vain Wolsey appealed for an answer, Sir Thomas More could
-only declare that the speaker, then the mouthpiece of the commons, had
-nothing to say till he had heard the opinion of the House. “Whereupon,
-the cardinal, displeased with Sir Thomas More that had not in this
-parliament in all things satisfied his desire, suddenly arose and
-departed.”
-
-High as More stood at that time in the affection of Henry, Sir
-Thomas knew the king, and the nature of the favour of princes. Roper
-relates that when he offered his congratulations, at the time of the
-appointment to the chancellorship of the Duchy of Lancaster, More
-answered, “I may tell thee I have no cause to be proud thereof, for
-if my head would win him a castle in France (for then was there war
-betwixt us) it should not fail to go.”
-
-Aware of Henry’s character, More yet had no choice but to accept the
-lord chancellorship from the king on Wolsey’s fall in 1529. It was
-no matter for personal satisfaction, and More’s reply to the Duke of
-Norfolk was substantially the same as his previous answer to Roper:
-“Considering how wise and honourable a prelate had lately before taken
-so great a fall, he had no cause to rejoice in his new dignity.”
-Erasmus wrote, “I do not at all congratulate More, nor literature; but
-I do indeed congratulate England, for a better or holier judge could
-not have been appointed.”
-
-On November 3rd, 1529, Sir Thomas More, as chancellor, opened
-parliament, and in a long speech declared that “the cause of its
-assembly was to reform such things as had been used or permitted by
-inadvertence, or by changes of time had become inexpedient.” It was the
-opening of the seven years’ parliament, and before six years should
-run, this same parliament would, at the king’s order, condemn Sir
-Thomas More by act of attainder.
-
-The position of the new chancellor was dangerous from the first. Wolsey
-had fallen because he had failed to help Henry to a divorce from his
-queen, Catherine of Aragon, and More had been made his successor
-because the king had counted on him to accomplish the “great matter.”
-All that Sir Thomas could hope for was that he might be allowed to do
-his work as chancellor without being mixed up with divorce proceedings.
-As long as he was not called upon to declare publicly that the divorce
-was right, he had no wish to interfere in the matter. First to last
-no word of approval came from More’s lips to encourage Henry in the
-divorce, but he was not the man to express judgment on a case that he
-did not wish brought before him.[87] In the end the chancellor’s very
-silence turned Henry’s disappointment to active displeasure, and More’s
-life was taken in savage revenge for non-compliance with the royal will.
-
-Henry’s divorce dates the beginning of the Protestant Reformation in
-England--of that ecclesiastical revolution in which the supremacy of
-Rome was rejected, the crown superseded the pope as supreme head of
-the Church of England, and England was detached from the rest of Roman
-Catholic Christendom. In the reigns of Edward VI. and Elizabeth the
-revolution proceeded still further, and Catholic rites and doctrines,
-service books and ceremonies were rigorously cast out of the Church
-of England, and all who adhered to the old order in religion were
-punished by law. But those days were far off as yet.
-
-More, at the outset of this revolution, declines to follow the king in
-the rejection of the old allegiance to Rome. All he asks for is freedom
-of conscience to remain in the faith of his fathers, to worship as
-Christians in England had worshipped since the coming of Augustine. To
-escape death by giving up this freedom is impossible for Sir Thomas
-More.
-
-The divorce from Queen Catherine is the turning point in More’s worldly
-fortunes as well as in ecclesiastical affairs in England.
-
-Eighteen years passed from the day of Henry’s marriage to Catherine,
-on his accession to the throne, before the divorce was mooted. The
-scruple was that Catherine had been formerly betrothed to his dead
-brother Arthur; the moving force of Henry’s petition for divorce was
-the desire to marry Anne Boleyn. Unable to get the marriage annulled at
-Rome, or to get a favourable opinion from the universities, Henry fell
-back on Archbishop Cranmer to decree the divorce, and finally this was
-done in 1533, all appeals to Rome being henceforth forbidden. Henry
-had already, in 1531, called upon the clergy to acknowledge him as the
-supreme head of the Church of England, and the following year they were
-required to surrender the ancient right to meet and enact canons.[88]
-
-In these four years the chancellor had kept out of political life as
-far as he could, and had given his attention to his judicial work. But
-in May, 1532, he resigned the great seal into the king’s hands, “seeing
-that affairs were going badly, and likely to be worse, and that if he
-retained his office he would be obliged to act against his conscience,
-or incur the king’s displeasure as he had already begun to do, for
-refusing to take his part against the clergy. His excuse was that his
-salary was too small, and that he was not equal to the work. Everyone
-is concerned, for there never was a better man in the office.”[89]
-
-Nothing is known of Sir Thomas More’s work in the chancery except his
-integrity and his despatch. “When More took the office there were
-causes that had remained undecided for twenty years. He presided so
-dexterously and successfully that once after taking his seat and
-deciding a case, when the next case was called, it was found that
-there was no second case for trial. Such a thing is said never to have
-happened before or since.” (Stapleton.)
-
-For nearly two years More lived unmolested after his resignation of
-the chancellorship; but he had incurred the enmity of the king and the
-hatred of Anne Boleyn, and Henry was swiftly driving at certain changes
-in religion that were to bring Sir Thomas More to the Tower and the
-block, and many another honest Christian to the prison and the gallows
-of Tyburn.
-
-In June, 1533, after Cranmer had duly pronounced Henry’s marriage with
-Catherine void, came the coronation of Anne Boleyn, and Sir Thomas More
-declined an invitation from some of the bishops to be present at the
-celebration. He knew that his absence would be marked unfavourably by
-the king, and was ready to pay the penalty; but his care in avoiding
-the expression of any disapproval of Henry’s proceedings required an
-equal care that no approval should be expressed. To have been present
-at the coronation of Anne would have been, for More, to condone the
-divorce.
-
-In the autumn came an attempt to include More, with Bishop Fisher
-and certain monks and friars, in the treason of the “Holy Maid of
-Kent,”--Elizabeth Barton, a Canterbury nun. The “treason” amounted to
-this, that the nun, who was given to prophesying, declared that God had
-revealed to her to speak against Henry’s divorce, and it was sufficient
-to bring her to Tyburn. But against Sir Thomas More no shred of
-evidence could be procured, for none existed. He had seen the nun, and
-talked with her, and “held her in great estimation,” but would neither
-commit himself to a belief in her visions, nor permit any discussion on
-the king’s doings; but wrote to the nun a letter which could not have
-been more prudent, as he exhorted her “to attend to devotion, and not
-meddle in the affairs of princes.”
-
-The name of Sir Thomas More was struck out of the bill of attainder,
-but the days of his liberty were already numbered.
-
-The Act of Succession, passed in March, 1534, made Mary, the daughter
-of Henry and Catherine, illegitimate, and Elizabeth, Anne’s child,
-the heir to the throne. The act also declared that “all the nobles of
-the realm, spiritual and temporal, and all other subjects arrived at
-full age, should be obliged to take corporal oath, in the presence
-of the king or his commissioners, to observe and maintain the whole
-effect and contents of the act,” under the penalties for treason for
-refusal. The words of the oath were not inserted in the act, and the
-commissioners drew up a formula, requiring all persons to affirm in
-addition that the marriage with Catherine was invalid, and the marriage
-with Anne valid, and further to recall and repudiate allegiance to any
-foreign authority, prince, or potentate. This was a much larger demand
-than parliament had authorised, for it contained a denial of the papal
-supremacy, while all that the act had required was an acknowledgment
-of the succession to the crown. The pope had only just given his final
-decision on Henry’s appeal for divorce (March, 1534), and the decision
-had been against the king and in favour of the marriage. The oath now
-administered was in direct opposition to the supremacy of Rome, and
-as such was impossible to the consciences of men like Sir Thomas More
-and Bishop Fisher, though the great bulk of the clergy took it without
-giving any trouble.
-
-More was quite prepared to swear to the succession of Elizabeth.
-Parliament had, in his eyes, a plain right to decide who should wear
-the crown, and the doctrine of divine hereditary kingship does not
-come in till the Stuarts. But this mere willingness to comply with
-the letter of the law was not sufficient. More’s silent want of
-sympathy with the divorce, and with the breach it involved with Rome,
-was intolerable to Henry, who had counted More amongst his dearest
-friends; for friend or foe, in Henry’s power, could only live by abject
-agreement with the royal pleasure. No king had three more faithful
-servants than Henry VIII. had in Thomas Wolsey, Thomas More, and
-Thomas Cromwell, and no king destroyed his ministers with such fierce
-caprice.
-
-Sir Thomas More, unable to take the oath, was sent to the Tower in
-April, 1534, Bishop Fisher having already been lodged there. In
-November parliament met again, and passed the Act of Supremacy, making
-Henry VIII. “the supreme head of the Church of England,” and declaring
-that on and after the first of February, 1535, it was high treason
-“to deprive the king’s most royal person, the queen’s, or their heirs
-apparent of their dignity, title or name of their royal estates, or
-slanderously and maliciously publish or pronounce, by express writing
-or words, that the king, our sovereign lord, should be heretic,
-schismatic, tyrant, infidel, etc.” Under this act Sir Thomas More was
-to be assailed and to die. That the martyrdom was a “judicial murder”
-is plain--to Lord Campbell it was “the blackest crime that ever has
-been perpetrated in England under the form of law.”[90]
-
-The indictment was for treason, and on July 1st, a week after Bishop
-Fisher’s execution, Sir Thomas More was brought before the judges.
-To the charge of having refused the king, “maliciously, falsely, and
-traitorously, his title of supreme head of the Church of England,”
-More answered that the statute had been passed while he was in prison,
-and that he was dead to the world, and had not cared about such
-things--“your statute cannot condemn me to death for such silence, for
-neither your statute nor any laws in the world punish people except for
-words and deeds--surely not for keeping silence.”
-
-“To this the king’s proctor replied that such silence was a certain
-proof of malice intended against the statute, especially as every
-faithful subject, on being questioned about the statute, was obliged
-to answer categorically that the statute was good and wholesome.”
-“Surely,” replied More, “if common law is true, and he who is silent
-seems to consent, my silence should rather be taken as approval than
-contempt of your statute.”
-
-To the first article charging him with having always maliciously
-opposed the king’s second marriage, More had answered that anything
-he had said had been according to his conscience, and that for “this
-error,” he had already suffered fifteen months’ imprisonment, and the
-confiscation of his property.
-
-The trial was soon over, for the king had decided on More’s death
-when Fisher was executed, ordering the preachers to set forth to the
-people the treasons of the late Bishop of Rochester and of Sir Thomas
-More; “joining them together though the later was still untried.”[91]
-The jury, after a quarter of an hour’s absence, declared him guilty
-of death for maliciously contravening the statute, and sentence was
-pronounced by the chancellor “according to the tenour of the new law.”
-
-Death being now in sight, and faith having been kept with his
-conscience, More has no longer any reason to observe silence. To the
-usual question whether he has anything to say against the sentence, he
-replied, that for the seven years he had studied the matter he could
-not find that supremacy in a church belonged to a layman, or to any but
-the see of Rome, as granted personally by our Lord when on earth to
-St. Peter and his successors; and that, as the city of London could not
-make a law against the laws of the realm of England, so England could
-not make a law contrary to the general law of Christ’s Catholic Church;
-and that the Magna Charta of England said that “the English Church
-should be free to enjoy all its rights,” as the king had sworn at his
-consecration. Interrupted by the chancellor with the inquiry whether
-he wished to be considered wiser and better than all the bishops
-and nobles of the realm who had sworn to the king’s supremacy, More
-retorted, “For one bishop of your opinion, my lord, I have a hundred
-saints of mine; and for one parliament of yours, and God knows of what
-kind, I have all the general councils for a thousand years.” The Duke
-of Norfolk said that now his malice was clear.
-
-On the sixth of July, 1535, Sir Thomas More was beheaded on Tower Hill,
-for the king remitted the ferocious mutilations that accompanied the
-executions for treason at Tyburn. “The scaffold was very unsteady, and
-putting his feet on the ladder, he said, merrily, to the lieutenant of
-the Tower: “I pray thee see me safe up, and for my coming down let me
-shift for myself.”[92]
-
-Then, with a simple request to the people standing round to pray for
-him, and to bear witness that he died a Catholic for the faith of
-the Catholic Church, a friendly word to the executioner, and a last
-prayer--the 51st Psalm--the axe fell, and More was dead.
-
-Beyond More’s scholarship and wit, and his affection for his family
-and friends, stands out his great, unflinching quality of loyalty to
-conscience. When the power was in his hands as lord chancellor, no one
-was put to death by Sir Thomas More for heresy in England, though he
-did what he could by his pen to check the innovations of Luther, which
-he hated,--not only because they broke up the unity of Christendom,
-but because, it seemed to him, they struck at all social morality and
-decency.[93] The violence of Luther’s outbreak, the determination
-of the Lutherans--sure of their own possession of the truth--to
-allow no liberty to Catholics, and the antinomian communism of the
-anabaptists--all these things made Protestantism detestable to men like
-Sir Thomas More and Erasmus, and made More declare that dogmatising
-heretics ought to be repressed by the state as breeders of strife and
-contention. But his own record is clear: “And of all that ever came in
-my hand for heresy, as help me God, saving (as I said) the sure keeping
-of them, had never any of them any stripe or stroke given them, so much
-as a fillip on the forehead.”[94]
-
-“What other controversialist can be named, who, having the power
-to crush antagonists whom he viewed as the disturbers of the quiet
-of his own declining years, the destroyers of all the hopes which
-he had cherished for mankind, contented himself with severity of
-language?”[95]
-
-The author of the _Utopia_ was a critic, as Colet and Erasmus were,
-of abuses in the Church; but like his friends he lived and died a
-Catholic. He saw Lutheranism as the source of a thousand ills, and with
-Erasmus opposed it; but though heretics were anti-social and factious,
-he would not put one to death for error.
-
-It is all through Sir Thomas More’s character--this respect for
-conscience. There is no going back on the wide toleration of his early
-manhood, and high office and responsibilities of state no more cramp or
-belittle his faith than they destroy his playfulness or the warmth of
-his affections.
-
-He died a martyr for the religion of his life, for the simple right to
-abide in the old Catholic paths of his fellow-countrymen.
-
-As Sir Thomas More was not the first of the Catholic martyrs at the
-Reformation, for he had seen his old friends, the Carthusian monks,
-carried to Tyburn, so he was not the last. For the next fifty years
-of Henry and Elizabeth, English men and women were to suffer for
-the old faith of England, and in Mary’s reign to die as bravely for
-Protestantism.
-
-In spite of monasteries and priories destroyed, and parish churches
-stripped and plundered, in spite of penal laws which banned its
-priesthood and proscribed its worship, the Catholicism More died for
-has endured in England. All that parliament could do to exterminate
-the belief in papal supremacy has been done; all that panic and
-prejudice could accomplish by “popish plots” to the same end has been
-accomplished. These things have been no more successful than the
-mad “no popery” riots of Lord George Gordon in crushing the faith
-of the Roman Catholic minority. The penal laws have gone, Catholic
-emancipation has been obtained, a Catholic hierarchy has been set up,
-and to-day in England the freedom of conscience that was refused to Sir
-Thomas More is the accepted liberty of all.
-
-In 1887 Sir Thomas More, with Bishop Fisher and the Carthusian martyrs,
-were beatified by Pope Leo XIII. Serving their religion in life and
-death, they served the cause of human liberty, withstanding Henry as
-Anselm withstood the Red King, and as Langton withstood John.
-
-
-
-
-Robert Ket and The Norfolk Rising
-
-1549
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: _The Commotion in Norfolk_, by Nicholas Sotherton,
-1576 (Harleian MS.); _De Furoribus Norfolciensum_, by Nevylle, 1575
-(Translated into English by Wood, 1615); Holinshed--_Chronicle_;
-Sir John Hayward--_Life of Edward VI._; Strype--_Memorials_;
-Blomefield--_History of Norfolk_; F. W. Russell--_Kett’s Rebellion_; W.
-Rye; _Victoria County History--Norfolk_.
-
-
-
-
-ROBERT KET AND THE NORFOLK RISING.
-
-1549.
-
-
-The Norfolk Rising of the sixteenth century was a land war, caused
-directly by the enclosing of the common fields of the peasants, and the
-break up of the accustomed rural life.
-
-The landowners finding greater profit in breeding sheep and cattle
-than in the small holdings of peasants, began, about 1470, to seize
-the fields which from time immemorial had been cultivated by the
-country people in common, and to evict whole parishes by pulling down
-all the dwelling places. For eighty years these clearances were going
-on. Acts of Parliament were passed in 1489 and 1515 to prohibit the
-“pulling down of towns” and to order the rebuilding of such towns, and
-the restoration of pasture lands to tillage, but both acts were quite
-inoperative. In 1517, Cardinal Wolsey’s Royal Commission on Enclosures
-reported on the defiance of the law in seven Midland counties, where
-more than 36,000 acres had been enclosed; but legal proceedings against
-the landowners were stayed on the latter promising to make restitution.
-
-Thomas More, in the first part of his _Utopia_, in 1516, described for
-all time what the enclosures he witnessed meant for England.
-
-“For look in what parts of the realm doth grow the finest and therefore
-dearest wool, there 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 public
-weal--leave no ground for tillage, they inclose all into pastures;
-they throw down houses; they pluck down towns and leave nothing
-standing but only the church to be made a sheep fold.... They turn all
-dwelling-places and all glebe land into desolation and wilderness.
-Therefore, that one covetous and insatiable comorant may compass about
-and inclose many thousand acres of ground together within one pale or
-hedge, the husbandmen be thrust out of their own, or else either by
-cunning and fraud, or by violent oppression, or by wrongs and injuries
-they be so wearied, that they be compelled to sell all. By one means
-therefore or another, either by hook or by crook they must needs depart
-away, men, women, husbands, wives, fatherless children, widows, mothers
-with their young babies, and their whole household small in substance
-and large 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.... And when they have wandered abroad till the little
-they have be spent, what can they then else do but steal, and then
-justly 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 a work, though they never so willingly proffer
-themselves thereto. For one shepherd or herdsman is enough to eat up
-that ground with cattle, to the occupying whereof about husbandry many
-hands were requisite.”
-
-This was social England in the early years of Henry VIII., and every
-year saw things grow worse for the rural folk, in spite of further
-royal proclamations against enclosures in 1526. A series of bad
-harvests drove a starving population to riot in Norfolk in 1527 and
-1529. In 1536 came the suppression of 376 lesser monasteries, followed
-two years later by the dissolution of all remaining monasteries and
-priories, and in 1547 by the royal confiscation of the property of the
-religious guilds and brotherhoods.
-
-The landowners having established a starving unemployed class by the
-simple process of depriving people of access to the land, and the
-crown having removed the only source of relief to the unemployed by
-destroying the monasteries, it remained for parliament to deal with the
-“social problem” thus created by declaring poverty a crime, and the
-unemployed person a felon. The lash and the gallows were to solve the
-problem.
-
-In 1531, an act of parliament granted licences to the impotent beggar,
-and ordered a whipping for all other mendicants. Five years later
-stronger measures were adopted, and whipping was only permitted to
-first offenders: mutilation and hanging were the subsequent penalties
-on conviction, and thousands of unemployed men and women suffered under
-this act. But still the unemployed existed, for the enclosures had not
-been stopped; and so the first year of Edward VI. saw an act passed
-declaring the convicted unemployed “a slave.” (As it seemed to many
-that parliament had got rid of papal authority only to bring back
-slavery in England, this act was repealed in two years, and the act of
-1531 revived.)
-
-The bitterness of the agrarian misery, the violent destruction of all
-the old religious customs and habits of the people, the confiscation
-of the funds of the guilds, the open despoiling of the parish churches
-of the people[96]--all these things plunged the country into confusion
-and despair. The general rising in Lincolnshire and the north in 1536
-(known as the “Pilgrimage of Grace”) against the suppressions of the
-monasteries, and the rising in Cornwall and Devon in 1549 against
-Edward’s VI.’s new Book of Common Prayer were strong manifestations of
-the popular dislike of the changes made in religion by Henry VIII. and
-the ministers of Edward VI.
-
-In Norfolk, in 1537, the people made an insurrection against the
-suppression of the monasteries; but the later risings of 1540 (at
-Griston, when one John Walker “exhorted the people to destroy the
-gentry”), and in 1549, under Ket, were not concerned with the religious
-troubles of the times, but were frankly agrarian. The Norfolk rising,
-which Ket led, was no more connected with Protestantism than the
-Peasant Revolt of 1381 was with Lollardy. Agrarian disturbances took
-place in a number of counties in 1549. In May the peasants of Somerset
-and Lincoln were in revolt, and in July there were tumults in Essex,
-Kent, Wiltshire, Buckinghamshire, and Oxfordshire. A rude Cambridge
-ballad of the time extols the pulling down of enclosures:
-
- Cast hedge and ditch in the lake,
- Fixed with many a stake;
- Though they be never so fast,
- Yet asunder they are wrest.
- Sir, I think that this work
- Is as good as to build a kirk.
-
-In 1548 Protector Somerset had followed Wolsey’s footsteps in issuing
-a proclamation for a royal commission to inquire and report concerning
-enclosures, and to give the names of all who kept more than two
-thousand sheep or who had “taken from any other their commons.”[97]
-The commissioners were also “to reform” any cases of the enclosing of
-commons and highways, “without due recompense,” which they might find;
-“and to the intent your doings may proceed without all suspicion, and
-the people conceive some good hope of reformation at your hands, we
-would that as many of you as be in any of the cases to be reformed, do
-first, for example’s sake, begin to the reformation of yourselves.”
-
-Somerset’s ingenuous suggestion was naturally disregarded by the
-commissioners, and beyond making inquiries and publishing a report--to
-the effect that in the counties of Suffolk, Essex, Hertford, Kent, and
-Worcester nearly all the common lands[98] had been enclosed, while in
-Norfolk and Northampton large enclosures had been made--the commission
-of 1548 was as fruitless as its predecessors. Somerset, however, got
-some reputation by it as an enemy to the enclosures, and certainly
-incurred the dislike of the landowners. But where Wolsey, in the
-hey-day of power, had failed, there was small chance of success for
-Somerset, with the country in a state of anarchy, and the nation rent
-and distracted by a violent revolution in the Church.
-
-The only strong movement to prevent the utter downfall of the
-country-people was the Norfolk Rising, which Robert Ket directed in
-the summer of 1549. It failed in the end, but for more than six weeks
-the power of the landlords was broken round Norwich, their enclosures
-were stopped, and the hope of better things filled the hearts of the
-peasants.
-
-The rising began at Attleborough on 20th June when Squire Green, of
-Wylby, set up fences and hedges round the common lands at Harpham and
-Attleborough, and the people, excited by news that in Kent similar
-fences had been destroyed, proceeded to pull them down. For the next
-fortnight the revolt had neither leaders nor organization. “There were
-secret meetings of men running hither and thither, and then withdrawing
-themselves for secret conferences, but at length they all began to
-deal tumultuously and to rage openly.” On July 7th the annual feast at
-Wymondham, in honour of the translation of St. Thomas of Canterbury,
-brought the country folk together from miles round; and at the close
-of the fair they all set off to break down the fences set up round the
-common lands at Hetherset by one Sergeant Flowerdew.[99]
-
-Flowerdew, unable to save his fences, proposed a diversion. The Kets at
-Wymondham had made enclosures, why shouldn’t the rioters deal with them
-in similar fashion? Flowerdew actually paid over 40d. to encourage an
-attack on the Kets.
-
-Robert Ket and his brother were well-known men. Both were craftsmen,
-Robert, a tanner, and William, a butcher. They were landowners besides,
-and men of substance and of old family, for it was said the Kets had
-been in the land since the Norman Conquest. Robert Ket held three
-manors from the Earl of Warwick; his yearly income was put down at £50,
-and his property valued at 1,000 marks. Like other landowners, the Kets
-had made enclosures, but on the arrival of the people from Hetherset
-they at once declared themselves willing to stand by the movement for
-freeing the land. Robert Ket felt the misery of his neighbours. He
-saw that if the revolt was to be anything more than a local riot it
-must have necessary guidance, and his sympathies were entirely on the
-democratic side. And so from that time forward he gave up the quiet of
-a country gentleman’s life at Wymondham for the strenuous movement of
-an insurgent camp.
-
-To the appeal of the people for help, Ket answered passionately, “I
-am ready, and will be ready at all times, to do whatever, not only to
-repress, but to subdue the power of great men. Whatsoever lands I have
-enclosed shall again be made common unto ye and all men, and my own
-hands shall first perform it.”
-
-Then Robert Ket went on to commit himself body and soul to the
-movement, resolved that the peasants should not be left unaided in the
-struggle they had begun, and willing to take upon himself the burden
-and responsibility of leadership.
-
-“You shall have me, if you will, not only as a companion, but as a
-captain; and in the doing of the so great a work before us, not only as
-a fellow, but for a leader, author and principal.”
-
-If the ambition which clutches at sovereignty and rule is despicable,
-even more despicable is the weakness which refuses to take command at
-times of peril.
-
-To Robert Ket and his brother there was no promise of the world’s
-honour and glory should the rising be successful. At the best would
-be the satisfaction of a battle fought and won for the deliverance of
-long-suffering peasants. At the worst the laying down of life in a good
-cause, as Geoffrey Litster and many a Norfolk man had done in bygone
-days.
-
-Robert Ket’s leadership was acclaimed with enthusiasm, nor was it ever
-disputed throughout the rising. In this, the last of the great popular
-risings in England, the Norfolk men were as loyal to their leader as
-the men of Kent were to Wat Tyler and Jack Cade. And in each case that
-loyalty had ample justification.
-
-There were but a thousand men involved when the rising began, but under
-Ket’s command the movement passed rapidly from the fluid “running
-hither and thither” condition of the first fortnight, and became the
-march of an organized army.
-
-On July 10th, two days after Ket took command, this army was on the
-road to Norwich, and after crossing the river at Cringleford, lay
-encamped at Eaton Wood.
-
-It is plain from Ket’s speeches to his men, and from “The Rebels’
-Complaint,” which he published at this time, that to Robert Ket the
-rising was not only to put down enclosures, its aim was rather to
-strike at the root of the evil and to put an end to the ascendancy of
-the landlord class, and make England a free commonwealth. Either the
-people must put down landlords, or very soon the landlords would have
-the whole land in their possession, and the people would be in hopeless
-and helpless subjection. Had not an act of parliament been actually
-passed making “slaves” of the landless men, dispossessed by enclosures?
-When parliament was establishing slavery it was time for honest men to
-be up and doing, rousing the people to action.
-
-Ket’s speech at Eaton Wood is a fierce attack on the landlords, and a
-reminder that having ventured so far, the peasants must advance yet
-further:
-
- Now are ye overtopped and trodden down by gentlemen, and put
- out of possibility ever to recover foot. Rivers of riches ran
- into the coffers of your landlords, while you are pair’d to the
- quick, and fed upon pease and oats like beasts. You are fleeced
- by these landlords for their private benefit, and as well kept
- under by the public burdens of State wherein while the richer
- sort favour themselves, ye are gnawn to the very bones. Your
- tyrannous masters often implead, arrest, and cast you into
- prison, so that they may the more terrify and torture you in
- your minds, and wind your necks more surely under their arms.
- And then they palliate these pilleries with the fair pretence
- of law and authority! Fine workmen, I warrant you, are this law
- and authority, who can do their dealings so closely that men
- can only discover them for your undoing. Harmless counsels are
- fit for tame fools; for you who have already stirred there is
- no hope but in adventuring boldly.
-
-In “The Rebels’ Complaint,” the same note is struck. Only by taking
-up arms, and mixing Heaven and earth together, can the intolerable
-oppression of the landlords be ended.
-
- The pride of great men is now intolerable, but our condition
- miserable.
-
- These abound in delights; and compassed with the fullness of
- all things, and consumed with vain pleasures, thirst only after
- gain, inflamed with the burning delights of their desires.
-
- But ourselves, almost killed with labour and watching, do
- nothing all our life long but sweat, mourn, hunger, and thirst.
- Which things, though they seem miserable and base (as they are
- indeed most miserable), yet might be borne howsoever, if they
- which are drowned in the boiling seas of evil delights did not
- pursue the calamities and miseries of other men with too much
- insolent hatred. But now both we and our miserable condition
- is a laughing stock to these most proud and insolent men--who
- are consumed with ease and idleness. Which thing (as it may)
- grieveth us so sore and inflicteth such a stain of evil report,
- so that nothing is more grievous for us to remember, nor more
- unjust to suffer.
-
- The present condition of possessing land seemeth miserable
- and slavish--holding it all at the pleasure of great men; not
- freely, but by prescription, and, as it were, at the will and
- pleasure of the lord. For as soon as any man offend any of
- these gorgeous gentlemen, he is put out, deprived, and thrust
- from all his goods.
-
- How long shall we suffer so great oppression to go unrevenged?
-
- For so far as they, the gentlemen, now gone in cruelty and
- covetousness, that they are not content only to take all by
- violence away from us, and to consume in riot and effeminate
- delights what they get by force and villainy, but they must
- also suck in a manner our blood and marrow out of our veins and
- bones.
-
- The common pastures left by our predecessors for our relief and
- our children are taken away.
-
- The lands which in the memory of our fathers were common,
- those are ditched and hedged in and made several; the pastures
- are enclosed, and we shut out. Whatsoever fowls of the air or
- fishes of the water, and increase of the earth--all these do
- they devour, consume, and swallow up; yea, nature doth not
- suffice to satisfy their lusts, but they seek out new devices,
- and, as it were, forms of pleasures to embalm and perfume
- themselves, to abound in pleasant smells, to pour in sweet
- things to sweet things. Finally, they seek from all places all
- things for their desire and the provocation of lust. While
- we in the meantime eat herbs and roots, and languish with
- continual labour, and yet are envied that we live, breathe, and
- enjoy common air!
-
- Shall they, as they have brought hedges about common pastures,
- enclose with their intolerable lusts also all the commodities
- and pleasures of this life, which Nature, the parent of us all,
- would have common, and bringeth forth every day, for us, as
- well as for them?
-
- We can no longer bear so much, so great, and so cruel injury;
- neither can we with quiet minds behold so great covetousness,
- excess, and pride of the nobility. We will rather take arms,
- and mix Heaven and earth together, than endure so great cruelty.
-
- Nature hath provided for us, as well as for them; hath given us
- a body and a soul, and hath not envied us other things. While
- we have the same form, and the same condition of birth together
- with them, why should they have a life so unlike unto ours, and
- differ so far from us in calling?
-
- We see that things have now come to extremities, and we will
- prove the extremity. We will rend down hedges, fill up ditches,
- and make a way for every man into the common pasture. Finally,
- we will lay all even with the ground, which they, no less
- wickedly than cruelly and covetously, have enclosed. Neither
- will we suffer ourselves any more to be pressed with such
- burdens against our wills, nor endure so great shame, since
- living out our days under such inconveniences we should leave
- the commonwealth unto our posterity--mourning, and miserable,
- and much worse than we received it of our fathers.
-
- Wherefore we will try all means; neither will we ever rest
- until we have brought things to our own liking.
-
- We desire liberty and an indifferent (or equal) use of all
- things. This will we have. Otherwise these tumults and our
- lives shall only be ended together.
-
-Revolutionary as this manifesto is, Robert Ket is seen all through the
-rising exerting his authority on behalf of law and good order, curbing
-anarchy and checking ferocity in the rebel camp.
-
-Only one day was spent at Eaton Wood. Ket’s plan was to advance to
-Mousehold, a wide stretch of high, well-wooded ground to the east of
-Norwich. Here the camp was fixed on July 12th, the river having been
-crossed at Hailsdon, and a night’s halt called at Drayton--for the
-mayor of Norwich, Thomas Cod, positively refused to allow the rebels to
-pass through the city. Ket, anxious to unite citizens and peasants in
-a common cause, willingly avoided altercation, and Cod, alarmed at the
-rising, and unable to dissuade the insurgents from their enterprise,
-was careful to refrain from all hostile demonstrations. Cod’s one
-purpose was to exclude Ket’s army from the city, and to accomplish
-this he kept on friendly terms with Ket, even while appealing to the
-government to send down troops to suppress the rising. Ket’s purpose
-was to break down landlord rule in Norfolk, extend the area of revolt,
-and to get the king to attend to the complaints of his subjects.
-
-Ket’s company at Mousehold numbered no more than 2,600 on July 12th;
-but the ringing of bells and the firing of beacons brought in thousands
-of homeless men. At the end of a week 20,000 men were enrolled under
-the banner of revolt, and now Ket had all his work to do in maintaining
-discipline and in arranging for provisions for the camp.
-
-It is clear Robert Ket was the right man for a leader.[100] The
-people trusted him and obeyed his orders. Cod and two other
-reputable citizens of Norwich--Aldrich, an alderman, and Watson, a
-preacher--attended the camp daily, and along with Ket and his brother
-William sat under a great tree, known as the Oak of Reformation, and
-administered justice. The 20,000 hungry, disinherited men carried out
-in as orderly way as they could the instructions they received.
-
-Ket’s first business was to send to the king a plain statement of
-“Requests and Demands.” He knew what was wanted for rural England, and
-refused to admit that his purpose was disloyal or that his conduct was
-rebellion.
-
-The “Requests” were twenty-nine, and they contained a full statement
-of the grievances of the country folk. The chief requests were for the
-stoppage of enclosures, the enactment of fair rents, the restoration
-of common fishing rights in sea and river, the appointment of resident
-clergymen in every parish to preach and instruct the children, and
-the free election or official appointment of local “commissioners”
-for the enforcement of the laws. One significant prayer was “that all
-bond men may be made free, for God made all free with His precious
-bloodshedding.”
-
-This document, which was signed by Ket, Cod and Aldrich,[101] was
-answered by the arrival of a herald from the king with a promise that
-parliament should meet in October to consider their complaints, and
-that something should be done to redress their grievances, if in the
-meantime they would quietly disperse to their homes.
-
-All this was too vague and uncertain for Ket. Not till some definite
-step was taken by king or parliament to end the present distress was
-he willing to lay down his arms and bid his followers disperse. He had
-put his hand to the plough, and no turning back was possible while the
-evils he had risen against flourished unchecked.
-
-So Ket put his house in order on Mousehold Heath. The Oak of
-Reformation was boarded over “with rafters,” and to this place
-of summary justice landowners were brought and tried for making
-enclosures. Two men were chosen by the commons from every hundred to
-assist in the work of administration, and all the people were strictly
-admonished “to beware of robbing, spoiling and other evil demeanours.”
-As the army had to be victualled, Ket sent out men armed with his
-official warrant requiring the country houses to provide cattle and
-corn, “so that no violence or injury be done to any honest or poor
-man,” and this requisition brought in guns, gunpowder and money, in
-addition to “all kinds of victual.” The smaller farmers sent their
-contributions “with much private good will,” while on the landowners a
-great fear had fallen, and it seemed that the day of their might was
-passed.
-
-A royal messenger bearing commissions of the peace to various country
-gentlemen falling into the hands of Ket, he was at once deprived of
-these documents and sent on his way. Ket filled in the names of men who
-had joined the rising on these commissions, and these new magistrates
-gave assistance in maintaining order.
-
-Cod and Aldrich were shocked at the arrest of landowners.
-“Notwithstanding were divers gentlemen taken and brought to prison,
-some in Norwich Prison, some in Norwich Castle and some in Surrey
-Place.”--St. Leonard’s Hill.
-
-In every case the lives of the landowners were spared. Stern and
-unmoved by respect of persons was Robert Ket, but there was no taint
-of cruelty, meanness or bloodthirstiness in his rule. It was not his
-purpose to raise civil war or leave a festering sore of hatred by
-putting his neighbours to death. To destroy the power of the landlords
-and ensure the right of an evicted people to live on the land was the
-aim of the Norfolk Rising.
-
-At the end of the first week relations became strained between Cod and
-the army on Mousehold.
-
-It was the custom to have prayers every day under the Oak, and Dr.
-Conyers, vicar of St. Martin’s, Norwich, acted as chaplain. “Grave
-persons and good divines” would come out from the city and preach under
-the Oak, and on one occasion Dr. Matthew Parker, a Norwich man, who
-had been chaplain to Anne Boleyn, and who was to become Archbishop of
-Canterbury under Elizabeth, filled the pulpit. Parker’s sermon, full of
-rebukes on the rising and praise of Edward VI., was so obnoxious, for
-“he touched them for their living so near that they went near to touch
-him for his life,” that Conyers only prevented a riot by striking up
-the “Te Deum” in English, and during the singing Parker withdrew “to
-sing his part at home.”
-
-Matthew Parker was a great man in Norwich (his brother Thomas
-became mayor), and the incivility he had received at Mousehold gave
-great offence. Cod and the aldermen sent off Leonard Sutherton, a
-respectable burgess, to report to the king’s council the doings in
-Norfolk, and Sutherton brought back from London a royal herald, who
-went out to Mousehold and promised the king’s pardon to all that would
-depart quietly to their homes.
-
-The people cheered and shouted “God save the king’s majesty,” but to
-Ket this talk of pardon was altogether beside the mark. With some
-dignity he informed the herald that “kings and princes are wont to
-pardon wicked persons, not innocent and just men,” and added, “I trust
-I have done nothing but what belongs to the duty of a true subject.”
-
-The herald then called on John Petibone, the sword-bearer of Norwich,
-who with other civic notables was standing by, to arrest Robert Ket.
-But the thing was impossible. Ket had 20,000 men at his back, and the
-sword-bearer was supported by half-a-dozen elderly members of the town
-council. All that could be done was to escort the herald into the city,
-leaving Ket to his own devices.
-
-There was no more peace between the camp at Mousehold and the city of
-Norwich after this. Hitherto Mayor Cod had retained the keys of the
-city, and his authority had been respected by Ket. At the same time
-Ket’s men had gone freely to and fro throughout the city without let
-or hindrance. Now all was changed. First the landowners were being
-arrested and despoiled, then the learned doctor, Matthew Parker (was he
-not master of Corpus Christi College, Cambridge?) had been interrupted
-and hooted, and now a king’s herald was contemned! Cod ordered the city
-gates to be made fast, commanded Ket’s prisoners to be released, and
-placed the city’s ordnance in the meadows by the river. This amounted
-to a declaration of war, and Ket replied by bringing up his guns.
-
-The night of July 21st was spent “in fearful shot on both sides,” but
-little injury was done. For Ket’s guns brought “more fear than hurt to
-the city,” and “the city ordnance did not much annoy the enemy.”
-
-In the morning Ket sought to renew peace by asking permission for the
-transport of victuals through the city, “as the custom was of late,”
-and warning the mayor that refusal would provoke fire and sword.
-
-Cod refused permission, and Ket opened fire on the city gates. But “for
-lack of powder and want of skill in the gunners the ordnance was spent
-to small and little purpose.” A desperate encounter followed, with
-bows and arrows for the chief weapons of offence. Boys from Mousehold,
-“naked and unarmed, would pluck the arrows from their bodies and hand
-them to the rebels to fire at the city.” At Bishopsgate a number of men
-swam the river and forced their way into the city, and on the night of
-July 22nd Norwich was in the hands of Robert Ket.
-
-No reprisals followed. The herald made a last attempt to induce
-the insurgents to disperse by promising pardons, and was greeted
-derisively. “Depart with a plague on thee!” they cried. “To the devil
-with these idle promises. We shall only be oppressed afterwards.”
-Forthwith the herald did depart, with eight pounds of gold in his
-pocket from the mayor.
-
-Ket retired to Mousehold, the passage through the city having been
-secured, and Cod accompanied him, leaving a deputy, Augustine Steward,
-who lived in the big house in Tombland, opposite Erfingham Gate, to act
-as mayor.
-
-Judgment went on as before under the Oak of Reformation, and people
-clamoured for the landowners to be hanged. “So hated at this time
-was the name of worship or gentleman, that the basest of the people,
-burning with more than hostile hatred, desired to extinguish, and
-utterly cut off, not only the gentry themselves, but if it were
-possible, all the offspring and hope of them.” (Nevylle.)
-
-But Ket was as strong in his mercy as in his resistance to the land
-enclosers. The gentry were imprisoned, and made to pay tribute:
-their fences were pulled down, but their lives were spared, and no
-hurt befell them. In the city Steward, no friend to Ket, was left
-undisturbed in authority.
-
-At the end of July came William Parr, Marquis of Northampton, with
-1,500 soldiers, mostly Italian mercenaries, and a number of country
-squires with their retainers, to put down the rising. Steward at
-once admitted him to the city; but Northampton--Henry VIII.’s
-brother-in-law--was neither a soldier nor statesman, and after two
-days’ hard fighting he fled from Norwich, utterly defeated.
-
-Ket’s men were badly armed, but they had numbers on their side, and
-they fought for freedom and for very life. They swam the river, as
-before, and forced an entrance. “Half dead, drowned in their own and
-other men’s blood, they would not give over; but till the last gasp,
-when their hands could scarce hold their weapons, would strike at their
-adversaries.”
-
-Lord Sheffield fell in the fight on August 1st, killed by a stalwart
-rebel--one Fulke, a butcher and carpenter by trade--and some hundred of
-Ket’s men lay dead. The city suffered. Several houses and city gates
-were fired, and only a heavy rain prevented the flames from spreading.
-(This same rain drove many of the rebels to take refuge in the
-cathedral, much to the annoyance of the dean and chapter.)
-
-And now for three weeks Ket had to take charge of Norwich as well as
-of Mousehold camp, for it was impossible to trust Steward. Many of the
-wealthier townsmen hastened away to Cambridge and London, leaving their
-wives and families behind. Trade was at an end.
-
- The state of the city began to be in most miserable case, so
- that all men looked for utter destruction, both of life and
- goods. Then the remnant that feared God, seeing the plague
- thus of sorrow increasing, fell to prayer and holy life, and
- wished but to see the day that after they might talk thereover,
- looking never to recover help again, nor to see their city
- prosper.
-
- The women resorted twice a day to prayer, and the servants
- (except what must needs stay at home) did the same. When Ket’s
- ambassadors were sent to any private house they were fain
- to bake or brew or do any work for the camp, else they were
- carried as traitors to the Oak. As for trading, there was none
- in the city, people being forced to hide up their choicest
- goods, and happy were they that had the faithfullest servants.
-
- They that did keep open their shops were robbed and spoiled,
- and their goods were measured by the arm’s length and dispersed
- among the rebels; their children they set away for fear of
- fire. I, the writer (who was then above twenty-two years of
- age, and an eye-witness) was present after prayer during this
- dolorous state, when people met and bewailed the miserable
- state they were in. (Sutherton.)
-
-But for all their misery the tradesmen of Norwich were in no fear for
-their lives. The city had done its best to thwart the rising, but Ket
-treated it generously, allowing neither pillage nor bloodshed--though
-he did not scruple to take what goods were necessary for his army.[102]
-It was beyond the power of man to prevent all thieving during those
-first few weeks of August, for the civic magistracy was gone, and Ket
-had large responsibilities on his hands.
-
-The hope that the rising would become general turned to disappointment
-in the weeks that passed after the flight of Northampton. In Suffolk
-a number of men rose at Ket’s call, and made an unsuccessful attempt
-to take Yarmouth. A small camp set up at Rising Chase was dispersed,
-but for a fortnight the peasants gathered at Watton, and stopped the
-passages of the river at Thetford and Brandon Ferry. For want of
-leadership they then came on to Mousehold. At Hingham a rising was
-put down by Sir Edmund Knyvett. And while Ket waited, hoping against
-hope for better news, the fugitive citizens from Norwich had already
-persuaded Somerset to send down an army to crush the revolt.
-
-On August 21st the Earl of Warwick, with 14,000 troops, reached
-Cambridge, and three days later was at Norwich.
-
-Warwick, Henry VIII.’s high chamberlain, the son of Dudley, Henry
-VII.’s minister, was a man of war and resolution. Sent down to suppress
-the rising he did his work, but not till he had tried an appeal to the
-peasants to disperse without further trouble.
-
-Halting outside the city, Warwick sent a herald to proclaim pardon to
-all who should now return to their homes, and, as before, the people
-shouted, “God save King Edward!” Ket himself talked with the herald on
-the high ground near Bishop’s Gate.
-
-Negotiations ended abruptly. Some ill-mannered boy gave an indecent
-and offensive salute to the herald, and was shot dead by an arrow from
-the herald’s escort. At once the cry of “treachery” was raised by the
-people, and all talk of peace was at an end. While the herald tried
-to persuade Ket to come to the Earl of Warwick under a flag of truce,
-the rebels gathered round their leader and besought him not to forsake
-them. To Ket there could be sure reliance on royal promises of pardon,
-and no surrender of the charge he had undertaken. His reply to the
-herald was to retire on Mousehold and prepare for battle.
-
-Warwick at once entered the city, and began the business of
-pacification by promptly hanging sixty men in the Market Place,
-by Norwich Castle, “without hearing the cause”; and by issuing a
-proclamation that all who were out of doors would receive similar
-treatment. Then came a mishap, for the greater part of Warwick’s
-artillery fell into Ket’s hands. The drivers of the gun-carriages,
-entering the city after the soldiers, by St. Bennet’s Gate on the west,
-and ignorant of the way, actually passed out at Bishop’s Gate on the
-east on the very road towards Mousehold, and were quickly taken. Ket
-had now the advantage in ordnance, and there was fighting in the city
-all Sunday, August 25th. So uncertain was the issue that the burgesses
-feared Warwick would suffer Northampton’s fate, and prayed him to
-depart without further loss. But Warwick, waiting for reinforcements,
-and knowing that 1,400 German mercenaries were close at hand, was not
-the man to beat an ignominious retreat.
-
-The hireling “lanznechts” arrived next day, and on Tuesday, August
-27th, came the fatal battle.
-
-Instead of remaining at Mousehold, where a strong resistance might have
-been made, the rebels decided to march out boldly from their camp and
-meet the king’s army in the open country that lay between Mousehold
-Heath and the city. An old song was recalled, which, it seemed,
-foretold victory in such a case:
-
- The country gnoffes (churls), Hob, Dick, and Rick,
- With clubs and clouted shoon,
- Shall fill the vale
- Of Dussindale
- With slaughtered bodies soon.
-
-But the country churls were to be the slaughtered, and not the
-slaughterers.
-
-Warwick marched out by the north-east gate of St. Martin-at-the-Oak,
-and for the last time a herald promised pardon to all who would
-surrender. But the hangings in the market place had destroyed all
-confidence in such proclamations, and the answer to the herald was that
-they “perceived this pardon to be nothing else but a cask full of ropes
-and halters.”
-
-Ket’s judgment failed him utterly on that last day of the rising. On
-the strength of an irrelevant old song he allowed his army to go to its
-doom unchecked, and at the very time when good generalship was wanted
-above all other things, Robert Ket seems to have lost his nerve, and to
-have been struck by some paralysis of the will, as though conscious of
-impending ruin.
-
-The peasants poured down into the valley, and into the meadows beyond
-Magdalen and Pockthorp Gates, and fought with desperate courage,
-but they were simply cut to pieces by the professional soldiery. At
-four o’clock in the afternoon it was all over, the defeat utter and
-complete, and Robert Ket and his brother were in flight.
-
-The remains of the rebel army laid down their arms, when Warwick
-himself offered pardon in the king’s name to those who would surrender.
-
-The rising was at an end. The foreign mercenaries of the crown had
-triumphed over English peasants. Robert Ket was taken the same night
-at Swannington, eight miles north of Norwich. He had ridden away from
-the battle when the field was lost, but horse and rider were too tired
-to proceed further. Taking refuge in a barn, he was recognized by some
-men unloading a wagon of corn and seized. The farmer’s wife “rated him
-for his conduct, but he only prayed her to be quiet, and to give him
-meat.” That same night William Ket was taken, and the two brothers were
-delivered to the lord lieutenant of the county, and by him carried to
-London to be tried for their lives.
-
-At Mousehold Warwick proved the worth of the pardons he had given
-by first having nine of the bravest of the peasants hanged, drawn,
-and quartered under the Oak of Reformation, and distributing their
-bodies in the city; and then by hanging 300 prisoners on trees, and
-then forty-nine more at the Market Cross in Norwich. The country
-gentlemen of Norfolk, backed by their wealthier citizens, called for
-more executions, till Warwick turned with disgust from the vindictive
-clamour of these bloodthirsty civilians, and pointed out in impatient
-reproof that no one would be left “to plough and harrow over the lands”
-if all the peasants were massacred.
-
-And now the king’s authority having been re-established, a public
-service of thanksgiving was held in the church of St. Peter, Mancroft,
-and August 27th was ordered to be observed henceforth as “Thanksgiving
-Day” in Norwich. (This was done by prayers and sermon until 1667.
-In the grammar school, during Elizabeth’s reign, an account of the
-rising--_De Furoribus Norfolciensum_, written in Latin by Nevylle, and
-violently anti-popular in expression--was ordered to be used as a text
-book in place of the usual classics, and was so used for some years.)
-
-On September 7th Warwick returned to London.[103] In November Robert
-and William Ket, after lying in the Tower for two months, were brought
-to trial. They offered no defence for what they had done: for having
-borne arms without the king’s permission, and for having striven to
-stop the robbery and oppression of the peasant without the authority of
-king and parliament.
-
-On November 26th they were found guilty of high treason, their property
-confiscated, and they were condemned to death. On November 29th they
-were delivered out of the custody of the Tower to the high sheriff of
-Norfolk, and on December 1st the Kets were again in Norwich.
-
-It was winter, and hope was dead. The last great rising of the English
-peasantry had failed, crushed without pity, and the leaders of the
-army of revolt, who had judged it better to give up ease and worldly
-honour rather than acquiesce dumbly in the enslavement of their
-poorer neighbours, were to die as traitors.[104] On December 7th the
-executions were carried out, and Robert Ket was hanged in chains
-outside Norwich Castle, while William Ket was taken to Wymondham (where
-he held the manor of Chossell--Church lands, bought years earlier from
-the Earl of Warwick), and there hanged in chains from the parish church.
-
-The property of the Kets was duly taken by the servants of the crown,
-and the bodies of the rebel leaders swung in the wind--to remind
-unthinking men of the reward of rebellion, of the fate of all who
-challenge, without success, the arms of government.
-
-The Norfolk Rising was the last great movement of the English people
-in social revolt. Riots we have known even in our times, and mob
-violence, but no such rising as those led by Wat Tyler, by Cade, and
-by Ket has England seen since the year 1549.
-
-The country people sunk into hopeless poverty and permanent degradation
-under Edward VI. and Elizabeth, and with the rejection by the
-government of papal authority, the supremacy of the crown and of the
-ministers of the crown was established.
-
-In the nineteenth century, when the working people in town and country
-once more bestirred themselves at the call of freedom, their wiser
-leaders advised political and not revolutionary methods of action, and
-the advice has been followed.
-
-But if the year 1549 marks the end of organized democratic resistance
-to intolerable misgovernment, the coming centuries were to see the rise
-of the middle class with the insistent demand for the predominance of
-that class in the parliament of the nation, and the incurable belief
-that in a popularly elected House of Commons resided all the safeguards
-of civil and religious liberty.
-
-
-
-
-Eliot, Hampden, Pym, and the Supremacy of the Commons.
-
-1625–1643
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: S. R. Gardiner--_History of England_, _History of
-Great Civil War_, _History of Commonwealth and Protectorate_;
-Clarendon--_History of the Great Rebellion_;, John Forster--_Life
-of Sir John Eliot_, _Life of Hampden_, _Life of Pym_, _The Grand
-Remonstrance_, _Arrest of the Five Members_; Nugent--_Memorials for
-Life of Hampden_; _Calendar of State Papers_; _House of Commons’
-Journals_.
-
-[Illustration: SIR JOHN ELIOT
-
-(_From a Steel Engraving by William Holl._)]
-
-
-
-
-ELIOT, HAMPDEN, PYM, AND THE SUPREMACY OF THE COMMONS.
-
-1625–1643
-
-
-John Eliot, John Hampden, John Pym--by the work of these men comes the
-supremacy of the House of Commons in the government of England.
-
-All three are country gentlemen of good estate, of high principle
-and of some learning.[105] They are men of religious convictions, of
-courage and resolution, and of blameless personal character. Two of
-them--Eliot and Hampden--are content to die for the cause of good
-government.
-
-The strong rule of Elizabeth left a difficult legacy of government to
-James I. The despotism of the queen had been forgiven in the success
-of her State policy; and if she had no high opinion of parliament,
-Elizabeth had ministers who fairly represented the mind of the English
-middle class. Elizabeth’s absolutism in Church and State was the direct
-following of Henry VIII., and only at the very close of her reign was
-it threatened by the discontent of parliament. With a shrewd instinct
-for popularity Elizabeth at once yielded. Like her father, she saw the
-importance of retaining parliament on the side of the crown and making
-it the instrument of the royal will. There was no idea in the Tudor
-mind of parliament sharing the government with the crown. The business
-of the House of Commons of Elizabeth was to express its opinion and
-then decree the proposals of the crown. “Liberty of speech was granted
-in respect of the aye or no, but not that everybody should speak what
-he listed.” (1592.)
-
-In religion Elizabeth had done her worst to exterminate the Roman
-Catholic faith, and by the fierceness of her persecution had kindled
-undying enthusiasm for the old beliefs and worship. But forty years
-of repression did their work, and a generation arose which only
-knew Catholicism as the faith of a proscribed and unpatriotic sect,
-who denied the absolute sovereignty of the crown and had another
-sovereign at Rome--the religion of Spain--popery, in short: a
-faith worse than Mahomedanism or heathenism--the scarlet woman of
-the Apocalypse--according to the fierce Puritan expounders of the
-Bible, and not to be counted as Christianity. That this very Roman
-Catholicism--so hateful because the penal laws kept it hidden and
-unknown, and because it was the religion of Spain, then the national
-enemy--had been the religion of all England for centuries, and that
-under it the earliest charters of public liberty had been wrung
-from the crown, and the principle of a representative parliament
-established, were facts uncontemplated.
-
-But Elizabeth, while persecuting Roman Catholics, had left in the Book
-of Common Prayer of the Church of England a sanction for ceremonial
-and for episcopal ordination, and a body of doctrine which were to be
-interpreted under the Stuarts by certain Anglican divines as witnesses
-to Catholicism. Such interpretation was to be found in Elizabeth’s
-reign as a pious opinion. With Laud it was an active principle, and
-it brought him to the scaffold. The Elizabethan bishops in the main
-were thoroughly Protestant, the queen was the head of the Church of
-England, and the ritual of the Church prescribed by her was reduced to
-a simplicity that average Protestants could accept.
-
-If Elizabeth burnt anabaptists and hanged other nonconformists, her
-excuse was that the Church of England was sufficiently Protestant
-to include all well-affected persons. The extreme Puritans whom she
-persecuted had this in common with the Roman Catholics, that neither
-accepted the absolute supremacy of the crown, and the best Puritan
-teaching in England, even when it counselled conformity to the
-Established Church, was creating a mind and temper that only found
-expression in the Commonwealth.
-
-James I. came to the throne in 1603 prepared to carry on the Tudor
-absolutism. He failed because he had neither Elizabeth’s ministers nor
-her knowledge of the English country landowners. James never realised
-that Spain was the popular enemy, that a discontent had suddenly grown
-up in parliament in the last years of Elizabeth’s reign, and that the
-English landowners--in many cases from their inherited possession of
-the old Church lands--were generally bitterly hostile to the Roman
-Catholic religion. James was tolerant in religion, and not inclined to
-press Elizabeth’s penal laws against Roman Catholics, and this very
-toleration brought him under the dislike of the country party. He
-thought he could disregard the opinion of parliament and he found that
-while a House of Commons submitted to a despotism when the country was
-governed by a strong queen, it would not put up with the follies and
-extravagance of the Duke of Buckingham.
-
-James died before the strength of the growing movement for
-parliamentary government was seen. Charles who was no more tyrannical
-than his father, but even more blind to the signs of the times, fell
-before that parliamentary movement--a movement which outraged all
-the traditions of Tudor government--and with his fall brought down
-the throne, the House of Lords, and the Established Church. By his
-inability to understand the House of Commons, by his support of the
-Anglican movement towards Catholicism in the Church of England, and
-by the mistakes of his ministers, Charles ripened the desire for
-constitutional monarchy till the desire was irresistible.
-
-John Eliot gave forcible utterance to this desire, and died in prison
-for his speech. John Pym carried on the work till the sword of civil
-war was drawn. John Hampden, “the noblest type of parliamentary
-opposition,” was content to back Pym as he had earlier backed Eliot,
-and to die on Chalgrove Field. Brought up to regard as an alien creed
-the old belief in papal supremacy in religion, unable to accept the new
-doctrine of the Church of England that the king was supreme by divine
-right (a doctrine begotten by the Tudors and dying with the Stuarts),
-Eliot, Hampden, and Pym were all of the same Puritan type which found
-its authority in the individual conscience.
-
-Eliot was less afflicted than his colleagues by the theological
-Protestantism of the age.[106] First and last he was the
-straightforward country gentleman, with exalted views on the sacred
-responsibility of civil government, and a high standard of personal
-honour. For Eliot there was no nobler sphere of work for an Englishman
-than the House of Commons, and his example has not been without
-followers. Seneca and Cicero are on his lips, as the later Puritans
-had the Bible on theirs, and his eloquence marks the beginning of
-parliamentary oratory. With a strong and clear view of constitutional
-government, Eliot was no republican; he held to the notion that the
-king must depend on the decisions of parliament. Time was to show that
-this notion, in the event of a collision between king and parliament,
-was to make parliament the predominant partner.
-
-On his first entry into the House of Commons as member for St. Germans,
-in 1614, Eliot was the friend of Buckingham--whom he had met as a youth
-abroad--and on Buckingham’s rise to the lord high admiralship Eliot was
-knighted and became vice-admiral of Devon.
-
-The fidelity of his service to the State as vice-admiral brought an
-unpleasant experience of the will of princes. Grappling with the
-scourge of piracy which afflicted the seaports and shipping trade
-of the West of England, Eliot accomplished the arrest of Nutt, a
-notorious sea-robber. But Nutt had friends in high places, and Eliot
-found himself lodged in the Marshalsea prison over the business. He was
-released on Buckingham’s return from the continent, for the charges
-were absurd, and in 1624 returned to the House of Commons as member for
-Newport. Two years later Eliot was estranged from Buckingham--convinced
-that the favourite of the king was an evil counsellor--and had become
-the recognized leader of the House of Commons. Once assured in his
-mind that Buckingham was responsible for the policy of the king,
-Eliot became his implacable opponent. For the policy of the crown in
-not making war upon Spain, in relaxing the penal laws against Roman
-Catholics, and for the mismanagement of the war on the continent in
-support of the Protestants, Eliot held Buckingham responsible. In
-answer to the demand of Charles for money in 1626, Eliot insisted
-that an inquiry into past disasters should precede supply, and that
-Buckingham should be impeached. Not the king but his minister is to
-blame, Eliot maintained, for all that was wrong in the State, and
-this very speech strikes the note of the campaign that was beginning.
-Buckingham was not responsible to Charles alone, in the eyes of Eliot
-and his friends, but also to parliament.[107]
-
-Charles, quite unable to fathom the depth of the parliamentary
-discontent, or to note the strength of the current against absolutism,
-fell back upon the old Tudor doctrine of sovereignty, the doctrine of
-the high Anglican party in the Church of England, that the king was
-responsible for his acts to God alone. “Parliaments are altogether in
-my calling,” he replies to the House of Commons.
-
-Only twenty-five years had passed since Bacon had declared, “the Queen
-hath both enlarging and restraining power: she may set at liberty
-things restrained by Statute, and may restrain things which be at
-liberty.” Twenty-three years more were to see monarchy abolished and
-the king beheaded. Eliot, standing midway between Bacon and Bradshaw,
-cleaves to the theory of constitutional government and persists in the
-impeachment of a minister in whom parliament had no confidence.
-
-The prologue of impeachment declared in the plainest language the
-responsibility of the king’s ministers to parliament, and the
-responsibility of parliament to the nation: “The laws of England
-have taught us that kings cannot command ill or unlawful things, and
-whatsoever ill event succeed, the executioners of such designs must
-answer for them.”
-
-And now the issue was fairly set, and the battle begun between Charles
-and the House of Commons. In that year, 1626, no man in England could
-foretell the result.
-
-Charles, ill-advised to the end, believed he could overawe the Commons
-by a display of might, and was beaten. Twice he had Eliot arrested
-before the final imprisonment which ended Eliot’s life.
-
-The loyalty of the House of Commons to its leader compelled Charles
-to release Eliot, after sending him to the Tower for his attack on
-Buckingham. Then dissolving parliament in June, 1626, and falling back
-on a forced loan, the king was met by wide refusals, and Eliot, with
-Hampden and others, suffered imprisonment over this. Eliot was also
-deprived of his vice-admiralship and struck off the roll of justices of
-the peace.
-
-Driven to call a parliament for the third time in 1628, the king was
-faced by a stronger opposition than ever.
-
-Eliot, now member for Cornwall, throughout the session continued the
-attack on arbitrary taxation, and with the lawyers Seldon and Coke
-carried the Petition of Right to stop the illegal imprisonments, the
-enforced billeting of soldiers, and forced loans. Buckingham, slain
-at Portsmouth, no longer troubled the commonwealth; but Wentworth,
-ambitious to use his powers in the service of the government, had left
-the popular side for the king; while Laud, and Weston, the chancellor
-of the exchequer, were daily preaching to Charles the divine right of
-kings and to his subjects the duty of passive obedience.
-
-The following year both Eliot and Pym attacked the ecclesiastical
-policy of Laud. To them the established religion of England, settled
-on the Protestant basis by Elizabeth, was being definitely changed
-in a Catholic direction without the sanction of parliament, and in
-the very teeth of the opposition of the House of Commons. High-church
-clergymen, like Montague and Mainwaring, holding to the full a Catholic
-interpretation of the Book of Common Prayer, were only censured by the
-House of Commons to be promoted by the crown. Laud preaching a royal
-supremacy undreamt of by the great archbishops before Henry VIII.,
-combined with it a doctrine of ecclesiastical independence, owning no
-allegiance to Rome, equally novel.
-
-Eliot, stoical in his beliefs, and Pym, whose Calvinism was tempered
-by common sense, regarded with horror the revival in the Church of
-England of Catholic doctrines concerning the sacraments and the
-priesthood. They had done what they could to check any indulgence to
-Roman Catholics in England, and it was monstrous to them that the
-Church of England, whose formularies and ritual had been defined by
-parliament for the maintenance of Protestantism, should be expanded to
-reintroduce doctrines and practices essentially Catholic. But for the
-time the House of Commons was powerless in the matter, and only sixteen
-years later was Laud to expiate on the scaffold his Anglo-Catholicism,
-dying a veritable martyr for the high Anglican doctrine. “None have
-gone about to break parliaments but in the end parliaments have broken
-them,” declared Eliot on March 2nd, 1629, and Laud, no less than
-Charles and Wentworth, was to prove the truth of the warning.
-
-If parliament could do nothing in that year, 1629, to stop Laud’s
-policy, it could at least defend the privileges of its members. The
-goods of John Rolle, M.P., had been seized by the king’s officers
-because their owner had refused to pay tonnage and poundage on demand,
-and at once Eliot was up in arms in defence of the privileges of his
-fellow member, whose liberties had been interfered with.
-
-Pym was for a wider view of the matter--objecting to the question
-being narrowed down to a breach of privilege. “The liberties of this
-House,” he argued, “are inferior to the liberties of this kingdom. To
-determine the privilege of this House is but a mean matter, and the
-main end is to establish possession of the subjects, and to take off
-the commission and records and orders that are against us.” With Pym it
-was not Rolle, the member, who had been ill-used, but Rolle the British
-subject, and it was for the liberties of the subject he strove, holding
-the freedom of parliament as but a means to that end.
-
-Eliot, a House of Commons man, through and through, saw in the welfare
-of parliament the welfare of the nation, and stuck to his point,
-carrying the House with him, that the privileges of a member extended
-to his goods. To this Charles sent word that what had been done had
-been done by his authority. The only question now was, how long would
-it be before the king dissolved parliament.
-
-On the second of March, when the House met, the speaker’s first
-word was that the king had ordered an adjournment till the tenth,
-and that no business could be transacted. Eliot insisted on moving
-his resolutions, and the speaker was held down in his chair. Then
-the serjeant-at-arms attempted to remove the mace, and was promptly
-stopped, while the key of the House was turned from within.
-
-Eliot moved his declaration, beginning with the famous words: “By the
-ancient laws and liberties of England, it is the known birthright and
-inheritance of the subject, that no tax, tallage, or other charge shall
-be levied or imposed but by common consent in England; and that the
-subsidies of tonnage and poundage are no way due or payable but by a
-free gift and special act of parliament.”
-
-The resolutions were carried with loud shouts of assent, two members
-guarding the speaker, and the door was flung open; the sitting was over.
-
-A royal proclamation for dissolving parliament followed on the fourth
-of March, and Eliot, with eight other members, was summoned to appear
-before the Privy Council.
-
-From the hour of that summons John Eliot’s liberty was over, and not
-for eleven years was England to have another parliament.
-
-For the fourth time Eliot was a prisoner. He declined altogether to
-give an account of what he had said in parliament, or to acknowledge
-any right of interference with the proceedings in parliament. To the
-crown lawyers his reply was to stand on the privileges of a member of
-the House of Commons. “I refuse to answer,” he said, “because I hold
-that it is against the privilege of parliament to speak of anything
-which is done in the House.” He insisted that he was accountable to
-the House alone, and that no other power existed with a constitutional
-right to inquire into his conduct there.
-
-At the end of October Eliot was removed from the Tower to the
-Marshalsea, and then in January, 1630, he was charged in the King’s
-Bench with two other members, Holles and Valentine, with conspiring to
-resist the king’s lawful order, to calumniate ministers of the crown,
-and to assault the speaker. Again Eliot refused to acknowledge the
-jurisdiction. He was fined £2,000, and sent back to the Tower.
-
-To the last Eliot’s loyalty to the House of Commons remained unshaken.
-He had but to acknowledge that he had done wrong, to admit that he had
-offended, and the prison doors would have opened to him. But to make
-this acknowledgment was to deny the sacred liberty of parliament,
-to admit wrong was to betray the House of Commons. To John Eliot the
-welfare of the House of Commons was a national cause--dearer than life.
-To betray its honour was to betray the State. The loyalty of John Eliot
-to the House of Commons was interwoven with his devotion to the State,
-but it was something England had never seen before, and never saw
-again. “He learned to believe, as no other man believed before or after
-him, in the representatives of the nation.” (Gardiner.)
-
-The character and temperament of Eliot must be taken into account
-in understanding this passionate belief in the House of Commons. It
-was not as a great thinker but as a great orator he had risen to the
-leadership of the House of Commons. He saw in his mind, as no other man
-saw at the time, a perfectly balanced constitution of king, lords, and
-commons. In parliament was the best wisdom of the country placed at the
-service of the crown. In the crown was the appointed ruler who, with
-his ministers, had but to come to parliament for advice and counsel.
-So it seemed to John Eliot; and single-minded himself, he could not
-realise that in the House of Commons were plenty of men of but passing
-honesty, and that Charles and Laud and Wentworth were fundamentally
-opposed to his views of constitutional government, and bitterly hostile
-to the growing powers of the commons.[108]
-
-[Illustration: JOHN PYM
-
-(_From an Engraving by Jacob Houbraken._)]
-
-Months passed, and John Eliot’s health gave way in the confinement in
-the Tower, but his steadfastness was unchanged. He corresponded with
-his friend John Hampden, wrote his treatise on the _Monarchy of Man_,
-and calmly awaited his end. An application on behalf of his friends
-and his son for Eliot’s release was made in October, 1622, on the
-ground that “the doctors were of opinion he could never recover of his
-consumption until such time as he might breathe in purer air.” The
-reply of Chief Justice Richardson was “that, although Sir John were
-brought low in body, yet was he as high and lofty in mind as ever; for
-he would neither submit to the king nor to the justice of that court.”
-
-On November 27th, 1632, the spirit of John Eliot, unbroken by
-captivity, passed from the body his gaolers had deprived of life. A
-last appeal from his son to the king for the removal of his father’s
-body into Cornwall, there to lie with those of his ancestors at Port
-Eliot, received the curt refusal, “Let Sir John Eliot’s body be buried
-in the church of the parish where he died.” And so he was buried in the
-Tower, and no stone marks the spot where he lies.
-
-John Eliot was but forty-two when he laid down his life for the
-principle of parliamentary government.
-
-Any satisfaction that might have been felt by Charles and Laud at the
-death of the foremost antagonist to their policy of absolutism was
-fleeting. For if Eliot was dead, the cause he had championed with such
-conspicuous sincerity and courage was alive, and John Hampden and John
-Pym were at hand to carry on the fight till Cromwell and his Ironsides
-were ready to end the battle.
-
-Charles was determined that, until the commons should be more
-submissive, he would call no parliament, but would govern through his
-ministers alone. The difficulty was to find money.
-
-In 1634 London and the seaports were persuaded to furnish supplies
-for ships on the pretext that piracy must be prevented. A year later
-and the demand was extended to the inland counties, and John Hampden,
-taking his stand on the Petition of Right which Charles had granted
-in 1628, declined to pay. Ten out of twelve of the king’s judges had
-decided that ship-money might be enforced if the kingdom appeared to
-be in danger, but against this declared legality there was the decree
-of parliament forbidding forced loans or taxes without parliamentary
-sanction.
-
-On this resistance of the ship-money Hampden’s fame has been chiefly
-built up. The amount was small--only a matter of some twenty
-shillings--the issue was of a first importance. It was clear to Hampden
-that if the king could raise money by such methods, what need would
-there be in the royal mind for the calling of parliament at all? The
-question was forced upon him: Was parliament an essential part of the
-constitution? The judges had declared ship-money was legal, other
-taxation and forced loans could easily find justification on the
-judicial bench, and thus the crown obtain its revenue, and England
-ruled without any let or hindrance from its citizens. To admit the
-position was to see the work of centuries undone, and the old contest
-in the land for liberties in return for taxes abandoned.
-
-Hampden’s refusal to pay ship-money was a declaration for parliamentary
-government. No more a republican than Eliot or Pym, Hampden could see
-that either crown or parliament must be supreme in the affairs of
-the nation.[109] The constitution was not to be balanced so evenly
-as Eliot had believed. Eliot himself had been deprived of life for
-maintaining, not the supremacy but the liberty of parliament. For John
-Hampden the evils of royal supremacy were obvious and present: misrule,
-the restoration of a religion banished by authority of crown and
-parliament, and disliked and feared by the majority of serious-minded
-people in the country, and the imprisonment of all who claimed the old
-freedom of parliament.
-
-The case was decided against him in the law courts, but five of the
-twelve judges supported Hampden’s contention that the resistance to
-payment was valid, and the arguments for his defence were published
-far and wide. “The judgment proved of more advantage and credit to the
-gentleman condemned than to the king’s service.”[110]
-
-Three years later, and Charles was forced to summon parliament to get
-money for his war in Scotland--the “Bishop’s War,” perhaps the most
-hopeless of all his ventures.
-
-Parliament met in April, and its temper was so unfavourable to the
-desires of the king, for the forcible conversion of the Scots to
-episcopacy, that it was dissolved in three weeks. John Pym was notable
-in that “Short Parliament” as the spokesman of the aggrieved country
-party, and the commons decided that the grievances of the nation
-must be considered before supplies were voted. The Scotch war was
-intolerable to Pym and Hampden. They had no objection to episcopacy as
-long as bishops were men of Protestant convictions. It was Laud the
-“Anglo-Catholic,” Laud the preacher of the divine right of kings, not
-Laud the Archbishop of Canterbury, whom they detested, and they had no
-relish for the expenditure of English life and treasure in the forcing
-of Laudian doctrine on Protestant Scotland.
-
-In the long eleven years of silence from the utterance of parliament
-things had been going steadily from bad to worse in England, Pym
-made out. Naturally conservative in mind, seeing in the constitution
-of king and parliament an admirable instrument of government, and
-in the Established Church of England an excellent expression of the
-Protestant religion, Pym had found that with parliament suspended the
-Protestantism of the Established Church had been steadily undermined by
-Laud’s policy, and the revival of some estranged Catholic doctrines and
-practices had proceeded apace. Without parliament there was no security
-for national well-being. “Powers of parliament are to the body politic
-as rational faculties of the soul to man,” he declares in April, 1640.
-
-Pym had entered the House of Commons with Eliot in 1614, and had
-been imprisoned in that year for his boldness. In 1620 he had been
-one of the “twelve ambassadors” to James I., for whom that king had
-ordered chairs to be set in Whitehall. With Eliot and Hampden he
-had pressed for Buckingham’s impeachment and for the Petition of
-Right. Now in 1640, John Pym, in his fifty-sixth year, was about to
-become the accredited leader of the parliamentary party, to be called
-“King Pym” by his enemies at the court, and to pass away when the
-long constitutional struggle was being settled on the field of civil
-war. Unimaginative, and averse from new ideas, Pym had a quite clear
-perception of the business of the House of Commons, and of the fitting
-relations of king and parliament. The crown, the lords, the commons
-were all recognized and necessary elements in the constitution, but
-their importance was not equal. The collective assembly of parliament
-had prevailed over the crown more than once; to Pym, the Laudian
-“divine right” was a novelty, and nonsense at that. Parliament could do
-much of its work with or without royal approval, and of the two Houses,
-if the Lords were unwilling to work with the lower House, the Commons
-could “save the kingdom alone.”
-
-In the autumn Charles was driven again to appeal to parliament, and
-in November, 1640, the “Long Parliament” met, only to be dissolved
-thirteen years later by the arms of Cromwell. To the eleven years
-of “personal government” by Charles succeed thirteen years of
-parliamentary government, and then the House of Commons, now too
-enfeebled to endure, itself goes down before a military dictatorship.
-
-Pym anticipated the coming struggle by riding over England on the eve
-of the elections to the Long Parliament and urging the electors to
-return men to the House of Commons resolute and alive to the crisis.
-The response was unmistakable. Parliament assembled to find some remedy
-for the distresses of the country before voting any money for the
-purposes of the crown. Enormous numbers of petitions were presented,
-and the House of Commons appointed its committees to attend to and
-report on the complaints.[111]
-
-Before the year closed the House of Commons had struck at the power of
-Laud and Wentworth (now the Earl of Strafford), and the two ministers
-lay in prison impeached for high treason. Windebank, Charles’s
-secretary of state, and Finch, the chancellor, were already fled over
-seas.
-
-It was Pym who went to the bar of the House of Lords to summon
-Strafford to surrender, and it was Pym who opened the charge of
-impeachment the following March. As in Eliot’s time, Hampden is content
-to be overshadowed by his friend, though his was the greater influence
-in the House.
-
-Clarendon has given us his view of Hampden at the opening of the Long
-Parliament:
-
- When this parliament began the eyes of all men were fixed upon
- him, as their _patriae pater_, and the pilot that must steer
- the vessel through the tempests and rocks which threatened it.
- I am persuaded his power and interest at that time were greater
- to do good or hurt than any man’s in the kingdom, or than any
- man of his rank hath had in any time; for his reputation of
- honesty was universal, and his affections seemed so publicly
- guided, that no corrupt or private ends could bias them.
-
-Baxter, it may be recalled, had written in the _Saints’ Rest_ that
-one of the pleasures which he hoped to enjoy in heaven was the society
-of John Hampden. The name of Hampden was blotted out in the copies
-published after the Restoration. “But,” wrote Baxter, “I must tell
-the reader that I did blot it out, not as changing my opinion of the
-person.”
-
-The work of Pym and Hampden is conspicuous at the beginning of the Long
-Parliament. The Star Chamber and High Commission Courts are abolished.
-Ship-money and all enforced taxation unauthorised by parliament are
-declared illegal. Oliver Cromwell’s motion for annual parliaments is
-amended into an act for triennial parliaments to be called with or
-without royal summons. Strafford--the only strong minister Charles
-had--perished on Tower Hill in May, both Pym and Hampden supporting
-impeachment instead of attainder, and voting for the fallen minister
-to be allowed the use of counsel at his trial. That Strafford was a
-criminal and a traitor ready to use his Irish army for the suppression
-of the English parliament Pym had no doubt.
-
-Still Charles would not admit the position lost, and still struggled
-to govern, not through parliament, but by personal rule. The death of
-Strafford, though approved by all supporters of the House of Commons,
-rallied the king’s friends. The House of Lords was no longer quite at
-one with the Commons in the contest. In the House of Commons a royalist
-party emerges to oppose Pym, and the beginning of party government
-is seen. Overtures are made by Pym to the queen--to be disregarded,
-of course; though the tide is setting towards revolution, yet Pym
-and Hampden are far from revolutionaries. They are willing to end
-the political power of the bishops by turning them out of the House
-of Lords, but have only moderate sympathy with the root-and-branch
-Puritans who would abolish episcopacy.
-
-In the Grand Remonstrance which Pym laid before the House of Commons in
-November, 1641, the case for the Parliament was stated with frankness,
-but the demands were not revolutionary. The main points were securities
-for the administration of justice, and insistence on the responsibility
-of the king’s ministers to parliament. The royalists fought the
-Remonstrance vigorously, and in the end it was only carried by a
-majority of eleven, 159 to 148. At the end of the debate the excitement
-was intense: “some waved their hats over their heads, and others took
-their swords in their scabbards out of their belts, and held them by
-the pummels in their hands, setting the lower part on the ground.”
-Violence seemed inevitable, “had not the sagacity and great calmness of
-Mr. Hampden, by a short speech, prevented it.”
-
-On the 1st of December the Remonstrance, with a petition for the
-removal of grievances, especially in matters of religion, was presented
-to the king at Hampton Court. “Charles had now a last chance of
-regaining the affection of his people. If he could have resolved to
-give his confidence to the leaders of the moderate party in the House
-of Commons, and to regulate his proceedings by their advice, he might
-have been, not, indeed, as he had been, a despot, but the powerful and
-respected king of a free people. The nation might have enjoyed liberty
-and repose under a government with Falkland at its head, checked by
-a constitutional opposition under the conduct of Hampden. It was
-not necessary that, in order to accomplish this happy end, the king
-should sacrifice any part of his lawful prerogative, or submit to any
-conditions inconsistent with his dignity.” So Macaulay wrote. But the
-days of “governments” and “constitutional oppositions” were far off in
-1641, and only the germ of party government is seen in the division of
-the House of Commons. To “submit to any conditions” from parliament was
-inconsistent with the king’s notions of royal dignity, fostered by Laud
-to reject all criticisms as denials of the absolutism of the crown.
-
-Charles promised an answer to the deputation which waited on him,
-and the answer was seen on January 3, 1642, when the king’s attorney
-appeared at the bar of the Lords, impeached Pym, Hampden, Holles,
-Strode, and Hazlerig of high treason, in having corresponded with the
-Scots for the invasion of England, and demanded the surrender of the
-five members. “All constitutional law was set aside by a charge which
-proceeded personally from the king, which deprived the accused of their
-legal right to a trial by their peers, and summoned them before a
-tribunal which had no pretence to a jurisdiction over them.”
-
-The House of Commons simply declined to surrender their members, but
-promised to take the matter into consideration.
-
-Then Charles, with some three hundred cavaliers, went to Westminster,
-and entered the House of Commons to demand the accused. But the five
-members, warned of his coming, were out of the way and safe within the
-city of London. “It was believed that if the king had found them there,
-and called in his guards to have seized them, the members of the House
-would have endeavoured the defence of them, which might have proved a
-very unhappy and sad business.” As it was, the king could only retire
-discomfited, with some words about respecting the laws of the realm and
-the privileges of parliament, and “in a more discontented and angry
-passion than he came in.”
-
-The invasion of the Commons was the worst move Charles could have made,
-for parliament was in no temper favourable to royal encroachments, and
-it had a large population at hand ready to give substantial support.
-The city of London at once declared for the House of Commons, ignored
-the king’s writs for the arrest of the five members, and answered the
-royal proclamation declaring them “traitors” by calling out the trained
-bands for the escort of the members back to Westminster, and for the
-protection of the House of Commons.
-
-Falkland and the royalist members turned for the moment from Charles at
-his unexpected attack on the House, the cavaliers of Whitehall, menaced
-by the trained bands from Southwark and the city, fled, and Charles,
-standing alone, left London.
-
-War was now imminent. Pym and Hampden at once prepared for the struggle.
-
-Pym secured the arsenals of Portsmouth and Hull for the parliament,
-but his efforts to obtain the control of the militia in the counties
-were frustrated for a time by the king’s natural refusal to consent to
-the Militia Bill, which would have placed troops under the orders of
-country gentlemen of the parliamentary party.
-
-Both king and parliament had to break through all constitutional
-precedent. The king levied troops by a royal commission, and Pym
-got an ordinance of both Houses of Parliament passed appointing the
-lords-lieutenant to command the militia, and thereby published the
-supremacy of parliament over the crown. In April the king appeared at
-Hull to obtain arms, and was refused admission to the town by Sir John
-Hotham, the governor. Parliament expressed its approval of Hotham’s
-act, the royalists gathered round Charles at York, and the final
-proposals of parliament for ending absolute monarchy were rejected by
-the king in June with the words, “If I granted your demands I should be
-no more than the mere phantom of a king.”[112]
-
-With this refusal all negotiations were broken off. Essex was appointed
-commander of the parliamentary army, and in August Charles raised the
-royal standard at Nottingham, and war was begun.
-
-Hampden threw himself vigorously into the campaign. From his native
-county of Buckingham, the county which made him its representative in
-parliament in 1640, he raised a regiment of infantry. “His neighbours
-eagerly enlisted under his command. His men were known by their green
-uniform, and by their standard, which bore on one side the watchword
-of the parliament, ‘God with us,’ and on the other the device of
-Hampden, ‘_Vestigia nulla retrorsum_.’” In the first stages of the war,
-before any decisive blow had been struck, Hampden was busy passing and
-repassing between the army and the parliament. Clarendon praises his
-courage and ability on the field.
-
-A skirmish at Chalgrove, on June 18th, 1643, between bodies of horse
-commanded by Rupert and by Hampden, ended in victory for the royalists.
-Hampden was seen riding off the field, “before the action was done,
-which he never used to do, and with his head hanging down, and resting
-his hands upon the neck of his horse.” He was mortally wounded, for two
-carbine balls were lodged in his shoulder, and reached Thame only to
-die six days later.
-
-The death of Hampden--at the age of 49--came at a dark hour in the
-early fortunes of the parliamentary army, and deepened the gloom.
-“The loss of Colonel Hampden goeth near the heart of every man that
-loves the good of his king and country, and makes some conceive little
-content to be at the army now that he is gone.” But Pym remained, and
-Cromwell and Vane, and many another resolute House of Commons man.
-
-Pym’s health was already broken when Hampden fell, but he lived to
-accomplish the alliance of the English Puritans and the Scotch army,
-and, as the price of this alliance, the abolition of episcopacy and
-the adoption of Presbyterianism in the Church of England. The Solemn
-League and Covenant was accepted by parliament, and imposed on the
-nation in September. Henceforth the parliamentary army was pledged to
-extirpate “Popery, prelacy, superstition, schism and profaneness”;
-to bring “the Churches of God in the three kingdoms to the nearest
-conjunction and uniformity in religion”; to “preserve the rights and
-privileges of the parliament and the liberties of the kingdom; and to
-unite the two kingdoms in a firm peace and union to all posterity.”
-
-The taking of the covenant--a political necessity--was John Pym’s
-last work. He was ten years older than Hampden, and his character
-was ruggeder and sterner and without the charm of the younger man.
-But Pym’s was the greater genius in politics, and his scheme of
-constitutional government was to be fulfilled in England at a later
-season.
-
-John Pym died on December 8th, 1643, and his body was buried in
-Westminster Abbey--only to be turned out at the Restoration and removed
-to St. Margaret’s churchyard.
-
-With Pym and Hampden gone, henceforth the conduct of parliament was in
-other hands, and the day of moderate statesmanship had passed.
-
-The war undertaken to preserve the liberties and establish the
-supremacy of the House of Commons was to bring in its train not only
-the abolition of monarchy and the House of Lords, but the suppression
-of the House of Commons itself.
-
-Important to the nation as the issues at stake were, most people in
-England took hardly any more part or interest in the great civil war
-than they had done in the Wars of the Roses. “A very large number of
-persons regarded the struggle with indifference.... In one case, the
-inhabitants of an entire county pledged themselves to remain neutral.
-Many quietly changed with the times (as people changed with the varying
-fortunes of York and Lancaster). That this sentiment of neutrality
-was common to the greater mass of the working classes is obvious from
-the simultaneous appearance of the club men in different parts of the
-country, with their motto, ‘If you take our cattle, we will give you
-battle.’”[113]
-
-How could it be otherwise? Supremacy of King, or supremacy of
-Commons,--seed time and harvest remain, and the labourer and the
-artizan must needs do their day’s work.
-
-Not till the deposing of the Stuarts--forty-five years after John
-Hampden’s death--is the supremacy of parliament over the crown arrived
-at by general consent, to become a recognized and settled thing in
-British politics. By the middle of the nineteenth century the House of
-Commons is unmistakably the ruling power in the constitution, and the
-labours of Eliot, Hampden and Pym are vindicated.
-
-In our own day changes in the balance of constitutional power may be
-noted. The supremacy of the House of Commons is quietly disappearing
-before the growing popularity of the crown, the reawakened activity of
-the House of Lords, and the steady gathering of the reins of power into
-the hands of the Cabinet and Executive. As the crown in the last twenty
-years has increased in popular esteem, so the influence and importance
-of the Commons has waned in the country; and this waning influence of
-the Lower House has been further diminished by the frequent rejection
-and revision of its measures by the House of Lords.
-
-The power of the Executive has also been obtained at the expense of the
-power of the Commons. The Cabinet, rather than the House of Commons,
-holds the supremacy to-day, and the direction of foreign policy, and
-the making of international treaties are no more within the authority
-of the House of Commons than are the administration of Egypt and India.
-Pym and Hampden fought and gave their lives for the right of the House
-of Commons to control the ministers of the crown and to order the
-policy of these ministers. By its own consent, and not from pressure
-from without, the House of Commons has silently surrendered this right,
-and has agreed that the policy of its Foreign Minister for the time
-being--whether he be Liberal or Conservative--must not be subject to
-reproof, still less to correction. In home affairs administrative order
-steadily supersedes statute law.
-
-In theory ministers are still subject to the House of Commons. In
-actual practice they can rely on not being interfered with as long as
-their party has a majority in the House. When the price of effective
-interference with the conduct of affairs is a defeat of the Cabinet
-and a consequent dissolution, the payment is more than members of
-parliament are prepared to make.
-
-Given the sense of security of social order and of the administration
-of justice, the nation, generally, no more heeds the passing of the
-supremacy from the House of Commons, than it heeded the winning of
-that supremacy.
-
-The Laudian doctrine in the Church of England, revived at the
-Restoration, disappeared with the passing of the non-jurors at the
-close of the seventeenth century. But its Anglo-Catholic teaching was
-renewed by the Oxford Movement, early in Queen Victoria’s reign, and
-has largely changed the whole appearance of the Church of England. The
-modern high Anglican, claiming, as Laud claimed, the right to interpret
-the Book of Common Prayer as a Catholic document, but no longer the
-advocate of any theory of divine right of kings, or the champion of any
-particular political creed, has travelled indeed far beyond Laud’s very
-limited success in winning support for Catholic doctrine and ritual in
-the Church of England. Laud was beaten by the opposition of parliament;
-his present day successors in the Church of England have prospered in
-spite of that opposition, and have triumphed over acts of parliaments,
-adverse judicial sentences, privations and imprisonments. But with Laud
-the movement was directed by bishops and approved by the king, the
-modern Laudian movement was banned by bishops and disfavoured by all in
-high authority.
-
-To-day nearly every Catholic doctrine, save papal supremacy, has its
-expounders and defenders in the Church of England, and Catholic rites
-and ceremonies are freely practised.
-
-Laud, dying on the scaffold in 1645 at the hands of parliament,
-is amply avenged in the twentieth century by the victorious
-high-churchman. The Laudian clergy of the Established Church can now
-maintain their Anglo-Catholic faith and practice, without any fear
-of parliamentary interference. For generally they enjoy a popularity
-and respect that the House of Commons does not willingly venture to
-assail.
-
-
-
-
-John Lilburne and the Levellers
-
-1647–1653
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Lilburne’s Pamphlets; _Calendar of State Papers_; _Charles
-I. and the Commonwealth_; _State Trials_; _House of Commons’ Journals_;
-Whitelocke--_Memorials of English Affairs_; Clarendon--_History
-of the Rebellion_; W. Godwin--_History of the Commonwealth_; S.
-R. Gardiner--_History of the Great Civil War_; _History of the
-Commonwealth and Protectorate_; G. P. Gooch--_History of Democratic
-Ideas in the Seventeenth Century_.
-
-
-
-
-JOHN LILBURNE AND THE LEVELLERS
-
-1647–1653.
-
-
-From his coming of age in 1637 till the near approach of death, when he
-turned, a dying man, to the peaceful tenets of the Quakers, the life of
-John Lilburne is a record of twenty years of strife and battle with the
-rulers of the land.
-
-He came of pugnacious stock, for John Lilburne’s father, a well-to-do
-Durham squire, was the last man to demand the settlement of a lawsuit
-by the ordeal of battle, and came into court armed accordingly--only
-to be disappointed by an order from the crown, forbidding the proposed
-return to such ancient and obsolete methods of deciding the differences
-of neighbours.
-
-Apprenticed to a wholesale cloth-merchant in London, John Lilburne
-soon became acquainted with Bastwick and Prynne, then busy over
-anti-episcopal pamphlets, and, keeping such company, naturally fell
-into the clutches of the Star Chamber. The charge against him was that
-he had helped to print and circulate unlicensed books, in particular,
-Prynne’s _News from Ipswich_; and though Lilburne declared the charge
-to be false, on his refusal to take the usual oath to answer truly all
-questions put to him, the Star Chamber adjudged him guilty, and passed
-sentence--Lilburne was to be whipped from the Fleet to Westminster, to
-stand in the pillory, and to be kept in prison.
-
-The sentence was carried out on February 13th, 1638, but Lilburne was
-not cowed, for he scattered some of Bastwick’s offending pamphlets
-on the road, and was gagged in the pillory to reduce him to silence.
-In prison things went hardly with Lilburne, for the authorities had
-him placed in irons and kept in solitary confinement, and only the
-compassion of fellow prisoners saved him from actual starvation in the
-two years and nine months of his imprisonment.
-
-It was a rough beginning, and John Lilburne was henceforth an agitator
-and a rebel.
-
-At the end of 1640 one of the first things done by the Long Parliament
-was to order Lilburne’s release, and in the following May the sentence
-was pronounced “illegal and against the liberties of the subject.” But
-illegal or not, the punishment had been inflicted, and with unbroken
-spirit, passionately resenting the tyranny that could so wrong men,
-Lilburne flew quickly to the attack on the authors of the injustice.
-
-At Edgehill Lilburne held a captain’s commission, and at Brentford he
-was taken prisoner by the royalists. Only the threat of swift reprisals
-by the parliamentary army saved him from being shot as “a traitor,” and
-the following year he was again at liberty on an exchange of prisoners.
-Again, after fighting at Marston Moor, he fell into the hands of the
-royalists, and, shot through the arm, was kept in prison at Oxford for
-six months.
-
-Brave soldier as Lilburne was, he left the army in 1645 (with the rank
-of Lieutenant-Colonel and with £880 arrears of pay owing to him)
-rather than take the covenant and subscribe to the requirements of
-Cromwell’s “new model.”
-
-And now monarchy having fallen from its high estate, Lilburne at once
-saw elements of tyranny in the Parliamentary government, and did not
-hesitate to say so. Courageous and intrepid, with considerable legal
-knowledge, a passion for liberty, and clear views on democracy, John
-Lilburne might have given invaluable service to the commonwealth. He
-had shown skill and daring in the war, his character for fearless
-endurance had been proved, his ability as a pamphleteer was
-considerable, and his capacity for work enormous; the government had
-either to treat Lilburne as a friend or foe--he was not to be ignored.
-The government, unwisely, decided Lilburne was an enemy, and for the
-next ten years he fought the rule of parliament and the army, his
-popularity increasing with every new pamphlet he produced. The price
-the commonwealth government paid for its opposition to Lilburne was to
-be seen on the death of Cromwell.[114]
-
-From 1645 to 1649 Lilburne’s vigorous criticisms of the men in power
-provoked retaliation, and brought him to Newgate. But in prison or out
-of prison Lilburne went on hammering away to establish a democratic
-constitution. The time was to come when Cromwell would find the Long
-Parliament had outlived its usefulness and would end it by main force.
-Lilburne was anxious in 1647 for a radical reform of parliament and a
-general manhood suffrage. His proposals were popular in the army, and
-had Cromwell supported him the whole future of English politics would
-have been changed.
-
-When the Presbyterian majority in parliament proposed the disbandment
-of the army in 1647, the regiments chose their agitators, and, refusing
-to disband, drew up the “Agreement of the People” and the “Case for the
-Army.” These documents give the political standpoint of the Levellers
-and the particular grievances to be remedied.
-
-The distribution of parliamentary seats according to the number of
-inhabitants was the chief proposal in the “Agreement of the People,”
-and the principles maintained are that “no man is bound to a government
-under which he has not put himself,” and that “all inhabitants who have
-not lost their birthright should have an equal voice in elections.”
-
-The particular demands in the “Case for the Army” were the abolition
-of monopolies, freedom of trade and religion, restoration of enclosed
-common lands, and abolition of sinecures.
-
-While Cromwell and Ireton were both bitterly against manhood suffrage,
-the council of officers to whom the Levellers appealed agreed to
-support it, without approving the rest of the programme.
-
-Cromwell, relying on the army to prevent a royalist reaction--for
-Charles was plotting from Carisbrooke for aid from Scotland, and
-the royalists in the House of Commons were anxious to effect a
-reconciliation--would give neither time nor patience to the demands of
-Lilburne and the Levellers.
-
-In vain the Levellers exclaimed, in 1648, “We were ruled before
-by King, Lords, and Commons, now by a General, Court Martial, and
-Commons: and, we pray you, what is the difference?” Cromwell, at all
-costs, was determined to preserve the discipline of the army, and to
-suppress mutiny with an iron hand. For him the army which had beaten
-the cavaliers was the one safeguard against the return of the old
-order in Church and State. Lilburne and the Levellers, with the “Fifth
-Monarchy” men, had been the strength, the very life of the army that
-had conquered at Marston Moor and Naseby. The petition of the Fifth
-Monarchy men for the reign of Christ and His saints (which, according
-to prophecy, was to supersede the four monarchies of the ancient
-world) had no terrors for Cromwell; in other words, they demanded
-government exclusively by the godly, Independents and Presbyterians
-combining to elect all representatives, “and to determine all things
-by the Word.” “Such a proposal might attract fanatics; it could not
-attract the multitude. The Levellers who stood up for an exaggeration
-of the doctrine of parliamentary supremacy were likely to be far more
-numerous.”[115] To Cromwell the immediate thing was the royalist
-danger; it was no season for embarking on democratic experiments
-with which he had no sympathy. The breach between Cromwell and the
-Levellers widened, and as Cromwell became more and more impatient
-of their agitation, distrust and suspicion of Cromwell and of the
-newly-appointed Council of State ripened, in 1649, into revolt.[116]
-It is the perennial misunderstanding between the statesman and the
-agitator. The one weighted by responsibility can rarely travel at
-the pace of the other, untrammelled by office, and as the distance
-between the two lengthens, it seems they are not even pursuing the same
-course--as, indeed, very often they are not.
-
-Lilburne had none of Cromwell’s anxieties as to a possible royalist
-reaction; for him the danger could not come from the dethroned king
-and his defeated cavaliers, but from a parliamentary oligarchy or
-a military dictatorship. But he overestimated the strength of the
-Leveller movement in the army. With the presentation of the “Agreement
-of the People” the bulk of the discontent in the army diminished, and
-while the Levellers who remained became in several regiments openly
-mutinous, the movement generally died down, so that when the revolt
-came, it was suppressed without difficulty.[117]
-
-Lilburne was out of prison at the beginning of 1649. He took no part in
-the trial of Charles I., and let it be known that he doubted the wisdom
-of abolishing monarchy before a new constitution had been drawn up.
-
-As neither the remnant of the Long Parliament nor Cromwell and Fairfax
-were doing anything to set up this new constitution, Lilburne proceeded
-to lay a remonstrance before parliament, and to follow this up by his
-two pamphlets on “England’s New Chains.” He now urged that “committees
-of short continuance” should supersede the Council of State, that the
-Self-denying Ordinance should be put in force, “seeing how dangerous it
-was for one and the same persons to be continued long in the highest
-commands of a military power,”[118] that a new parliament should be
-elected, and the “Agreement of the People” proceeded with heartily.
-At the same time he called for army reform by a reconstruction of the
-General Council and the election of agitators.
-
-The expulsion of five troopers from the army for directly petitioning
-parliament provoked another pamphlet--“The Hunting of the Foxes from
-Newmarket to Whitehall by five small beagles late of the army.” The
-argument here was that Cromwell, Ireton, and Harrison ruled the council
-of officers, and that the council of officers ruled parliament and the
-nation. “The old king’s person and the old lords are but removed, and a
-new king and new lords with the commons are in one House, and so we are
-under a more absolute arbitrary monarchy than before.”
-
-There was only one answer to be made to Lilburne’s pen, and that was
-to arrest the man who held it, for the commonwealth had no one on its
-side who could reply to him. At the end of March Lilburne and three
-of his supporters, Walwyn, Prince, and Richard Overton were arrested
-as traitors, “England’s New Chains” having been voted by parliament
-seditious and destructive of the government, and were committed to the
-Tower to await trial.
-
-At once a petition was got up and signed by 80,000 persons for
-Lilburne’s release, and a fortnight later--April 18th--another petition
-was taken to the bar of the House of Commons to the same effect.
-Parliament promised that the prisoners should have a legal trial, but
-declared the course of justice must not be interfered with. A large
-deputation of women also appeared at Westminster on April 23rd with a
-similar petition; but these were forbidden to enter the House, and,
-admonished by members to “go home and wash their dishes,” answered they
-would soon have no dishes to wash.[119]
-
-Lilburne was not brought to trial till October, and in the six months’
-interval, though the output of democratic pamphlets continued from
-the Tower, the Leveller movement in the army ended in open mutiny and
-defeat.
-
-Carlyle tells the story accurately enough of the mutiny in Whalley’s
-regiment in Bishopsgate, London, on April 25th:
-
- They want this and that; they seize their colours from the
- cornet, who is lodged at the “Bull” there; the general
- (Fairfax) and lieutenant-general (Cromwell) have to hasten
- thither, quell them, pack them forth on their march, seizing
- fifteen of them first to be tried by court-martial. Tried by
- instant court-martial, five of them are found guilty, doomed
- to die, but pardoned; and one of them, Trooper Lockyer, is
- doomed and not pardoned.[120] Trooper Lockyer is shot in
- Paul’s Churchyard on the morrow. A very brave young man, they
- say; though but three-and-twenty. “He has served seven years
- in these wars,” ever since the wars began. “Religious,” too,
- “of excellent parts and much beloved”; but with hot notions
- as to human freedom, and the rate at which the milleniums are
- attainable. Poor Lockyer! He falls shot in Paul’s Churchyard
- on Friday, amid the tears of men and women. Lockyer’s corpse
- is watched and wept over, not without prayer, in the eastern
- regions of the city, till a new week come; and on Monday, this
- is what we see advancing westward by way of funeral to him:
-
- About one thousand went before the corpse, five or six in a
- file; the corpse was then brought, with six trumpets sounding
- a soldier’s knell, then the trooper’s horse came, clothed all
- over in mourning, and led by a footman. The corpse was adorned
- with bundles of rosemary, one half stained in blood, and the
- sword of the deceased along with them. Some thousands followed
- in ranks and files, all had sea-green and black ribbon tied on
- their hats and to their breasts, and the women brought up the
- rear.
-
- At the new churchyard at Westminster some thousands more of the
- better sort met them, who thought not fit to march through the
- city. Many looked upon this funeral as an affront to parliament
- and the army; others called these people “Levellers”; but they
- took no notice of any of them.[121]
-
-In May one Corporal William Thompson rallied a body of Levellers at
-Banbury, published a manifesto called “England’s Standard Advanced,”
-and inveighed against the tyranny of courts-martial. Overwhelmed by
-force of numbers, Thompson escaped, and later died fighting alone near
-Wellingborough. Some twenty of his followers joined the mutineers of
-Scrope’s regiment at Salisbury. Numbering some 1,200, these Levellers
-made their way by Marlborough and Wantage to Burford. Here Cromwell
-came up with the mutineers, and surprised them at midnight. Resistance
-was hopeless, and the majority at once surrendered. All were pardoned
-except Cornet Thompson (brother to William), and two corporals--Church
-and Perkins--who showed neither fear nor admitted any wrong on their
-part. These three men were shot in Burford churchyard on May 15th,[122]
-and with their deaths the Leveller movement was at an end.
-
-But Lilburne was unsubdued. His new “Agreement of the Free People,”
-published on May 1st, called for annual parliaments elected by manhood
-suffrage--pensioners, militant royalists, and lawyers excluded--and
-for the free election of unendowed church ministers in each parish.
-At the same time he disclaimed all connection with Winstanley’s
-“Diggers”--political reform was Lilburne’s demand.[123]
-
-Released on bail in July, Lilburne issued in August an “Impeachment for
-High Treason against Oliver Cromwell and his son-in-law, James Ireton.”
-In this his hatred of government by the army compels the admission that
-monarchy is preferable to a military despotism: “If we must have a
-king, I for my part would rather have the prince than any man in the
-world.... For the present army to set up the pretended Saint Oliver or
-any other as their elected king, there will be nothing thereby from the
-beginning of the chapter to the end thereof but wars and the cutting
-of throats year after year; yea, and the absolute keeping up of a
-perpetual army under which the people are absolute and perfect slaves.”
-
-Thereupon, instead of bringing him to trial, the government merely
-issued a warrant for Lilburne’s arrest. The agitator met this by
-a stronger manifesto, “An Outcry of the Young Men and Apprentices
-of London,” calling on the army to rise in support of a democratic
-parliament and to vindicate the men executed at Burford. Some response
-came from the garrison at Oxford, who summoned their officers to join
-in the demand for a free parliament, but no success attended this step.
-
-At last in October Lilburne was brought to trial at the Guildhall,
-not on the charge for which he had been first committed to the Tower
-in March, but for the “treason” of his later pamphlets. The trial is
-memorable for Lilburne’s demand that counsel should be assigned to
-him in the event of legal technicalities arising, and for his bidding
-the jury remember they were judges of law as well as of fact. His
-real defence lay in the question he had put so often: Was England to
-be governed by the sword and a mock parliament, or by duly elected
-representatives of the People? The jury understood that Lilburne was on
-trial for putting that question, and, agreeing with him, they acquitted
-him. The verdict was received with tremendous applause, and “a loud and
-unanimous shout” of triumph went up from the citizens of London in the
-Guildhall.[124]
-
-In December Lilburne was elected to the common council of the city,
-but parliament promptly declared the election void. “Fiercely as
-Lilburne attacked Cromwell, there was at times considerable liking
-between the two men, and they met on friendly terms before Cromwell
-went to Scotland in 1650. Cromwell assured Lilburne of his desire
-to make England enjoy the real fruit of all the army’s promises and
-declarations,” and friendly relations lasted till Cromwell’s return.
-But, in Cromwell’s absence, Lilburne charged Hazlerigg with corruption
-in the administration of justice concerning a disputed colliery lease
-in Durham, and parliament took up the matter. In January, 1652, it
-declared Lilburne’s petition for redress a libel, and imposed a fine of
-£7,000 with a sentence of banishment for life.
-
-This proceeding by parliament revived the methods of the Star Chamber
-in imposing a conviction and a sentence without trial, but the House of
-Commons was determined to stop Lilburne’s activities at all cost.
-
-Cromwell made no effort to hinder the conviction, and Lilburne insisted
-that Cromwell’s professions of friendship were hypocritical, and that
-the general himself was responsible for the sentence.
-
-For the time Lilburne retired to Holland, where he discussed favourably
-the chances of a royalist restoration. But on the expulsion of the
-Rump of the Long Parliament the agitator at once wrote off to Cromwell
-for permission to return to England, and getting no answer crossed
-to London in June, 1653, and settled in lodgings in Moorfields. He
-petitioned Cromwell and the Council of State for leave to remain
-unmolested, promising to live peacefully, but Cromwell, with the whole
-government on his shoulders, had no willingness to incur the risk
-Lilburne and his doctrine of popular rights involved to the safety of
-the State.
-
-Lilburne was promptly arrested by Cromwell’s order and brought to trial
-at the Old Bailey on July 13th. The government case was that he had
-returned to England knowing that a sentence of death was decreed by
-parliament if he broke his exile.
-
-Lilburne’s defence, in the main, was that the parliament which had
-passed sentence was dead, and that if Cromwell had acted justly in
-dissolving it, then its unjust actions ought not to be maintained; if
-Cromwell had acted unjustly, why was he not punished?
-
-Again the jury acquitted him, and again the people of London expressed
-their satisfaction at the verdict, “the very soldiers sent to guard the
-court joining in the shouts, and beating their drums and sounding their
-trumpets as they passed along the streets to their quarters.”
-
-But “for the peace of the nation” Cromwell would not let Lilburne be at
-large. Back in the Tower, then at Guernsey, and then in Dover Castle
-for more than two years Lilburne was a prisoner.
-
-His health was broken in 1656, and consumption had set in. Death was
-near, and for John Lilburne the days of “carnal sword-fighting and
-fleshly hustlings and contests” were over. He wrote to Cromwell from
-Dover Castle telling the Lord Protector of his conversion to Quakerism,
-and Cromwell, assured that there was to be no more agitation from
-“Free-Born John,” granted his release, and a pension of 40s. a week.
-
-The battle was over for John Lilburne, liberty could not stay the
-hand of death. The many imprisonments and close confinements had done
-their work, and rapid consumption marked down the man who had stood up
-against the whole might of Cromwell’s government.
-
-John Lilburne died at Eltham in August, 1657, at the age of forty. A
-year later, and his old antagonist, and older comrade-in-arms, Oliver
-Cromwell, Lord Protector, was dead, and the Commonwealth government
-which had contemned the agitation for democracy was doomed.
-
-
-
-
-Winstanley the Digger
-
-1649–1650
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: Winstanley’s Pamphlets; Whitelocke--_Memorial of English
-Affairs_; Clarke Papers; L. H. Berens--_Digger Movement in the days of
-the Commonwealth_.
-
-
-
-
-WINSTANLEY THE DIGGER
-
-1649–1650.
-
-
-In the spring of 1649, the “Digger” movement revealed a strange
-and unexpected manifestation of the democratic spirit in England.
-Free communism had been the creed of more than one Protestant sect
-on the continent in the sixteenth century, and the Anabaptists had
-been conspicuously identified with the proposal. But in England John
-Lilburne and the Levellers were attacking the parliamentary government
-in the name of political democracy, and social agitation had been
-unknown since the Norfolk Rising of 1549, save for a riot against land
-enclosures at the beginning of James I.’s reign.
-
-Gerrard Winstanley was the leader at the sudden outbreak of social
-discontent, and his “Digger” movement was to end this discontent and
-all other miseries of the time by getting rid of enclosures of common
-lands, and allowing people to plough these common lands and waste
-spaces, “that all may feed upon the crops of the earth, and the burden
-of poverty be removed.”
-
-Little is known of Winstanley, and the movement is shortlived. The
-“Diggers” never threatened the safety of the Commonwealth government
-as Lilburne and the Levellers did, for Winstanley’s social doctrine
-included the non-resistance principles that later found exponents
-in the Society of Friends, and the agrarian revolution he preached
-could hardly be accomplished without force of arms. What is notable
-about Winstanley is his witness to the fact that a social question
-existed--that he saw beyond the Civil War, and the strife for political
-liberties, a great mass of poverty unheeded; and seeing the miseries of
-his fellows resolutely thought out some cure for their distress, and
-did his best, as it seemed to him, to get this cure adopted.
-
-Neither the Council of State nor the republican army had time or
-patience for Winstanley’s schemes, and the “Diggers” were dispersed
-with little trouble; but Winstanley’s religious teaching was to
-exercise considerable influence in the world when George Fox became its
-preacher, and his social teaching on the land question has thousands of
-disciples in Great Britain to-day.
-
-Gerrard Winstanley was born in Lancashire in 1609.[125] He seems to
-have settled in London as a small trader and to have lost what money he
-had in business--cheated he says, “in the thieving art of buying and
-selling, and by the burdens of and for the soldiery in the beginning
-of the war”--so that he was obliged “to accept of the good-will of
-friends to live a country life.” In the country Winstanley ponders the
-source of the ills around him, and, having some considerable gift of
-expression, gives utterance, in a number of pamphlets, to a cry for
-reform, and gathers followers.
-
-In December, 1648, Winstanley (or one of his friends) issued the
-earliest of the Digger publications under the title of “Light Shining
-in Buckinghamshire--A Discovery of the Main Ground, Original Cause
-of all the Slavery of the World, but chiefly in England. Presented
-by way of a Declaration of many of the Well-affected in that County,
-to all their poor oppressed Countrymen in England. And also to the
-consideration of the present army under the conduct of the Lord
-Fairfax.”
-
-A month later and Winstanley publishes his “New Law of Righteousness:
-Budding forth to restore the whole Creation from the Bondage of the
-Curse. Or a glimpse of the new Heaven and the new Earth, wherein dwells
-Righteousness.” Here, with a good deal of mystical religious phrasing
-(the author explains that when he was in a trance the message came
-to him), Winstanley proclaims his calling and unfolds his agrarian
-proposals:
-
- And when the Lord doth show unto me the place and manner, how
- He will have us that are called common people manure and work
- upon the common lands, I will then go forth and declare it by
- my action, to eat my bread by the sweat of my brow, without
- either giving or taking hire, looking upon the land as freely
- mine as another’s.
-
-There is to be no forcible expropriation of landlords:
-
- If the rich still hold fast to this propriety of Mine and
- Thine, let them labour their own lands with their own hands.
- And let the common people, that say the earth is _ours_, not
- _mine_, let them labor together, and eat bread together upon
- the commons, mountains, and hills.
-
- For as the enclosures are called such a man’s land, and
- such a man’s land, so the Commons and Heath are called the
- common people’s. And let the world see who labor the earth in
- righteousness, and those to whom the Lord gives the blessing,
- let them be the people that shall inherit the earth.
-
- None can say that their right is taken from them. For let the
- rich work alone by themselves; and let the poor work together
- by themselves. The rich in their enclosures, saying, _This is
- mine_; and the poor upon the commons, saying, _This is ours,
- the earth and its fruits are common_. And who can be offended
- at the poor for doing this? None but covetous, proud, idle,
- pampered flesh, that would have the poor work still for this
- devil (particular interest) to maintain his greatness that he
- may live at ease.
-
- Was the earth made for to preserve a few covetous, proud men
- to live at ease, and for them to bag and barn up the treasures
- of the earth from others, that these may beg or starve in a
- fruitful land: or was it made to preserve all her children? Let
- Reason and the Prophets’ and Apostles’ writings be judge....
- For the earth is the Lord’s; that is the spreading Power of
- Righteousness, not the inheritance of covetous proud flesh that
- dies. If any man can say that he makes corn or cattle, he may
- say, _That is mine_. But if the Lord made these for the use of
- His creation, surely then the earth was made by the Lord to be
- a Common Treasury for all, not a particular treasury for some.
-
- Leave off dominion and lordship one over another; for the
- whole bulk of mankind are but one living earth. Leave off
- imprisoning, whipping, and killing, which are but the actings
- of the curse. Let those that have hitherto had no land, and
- have been forced to rob and steal through poverty; henceforth
- let them quietly enjoy land to work upon, that everyone may
- enjoy the benefit of his creation, and eat his own bread
- with the sweat of his own brows. For surely this particular
- propriety of mine and thine hath brought in all misery upon
- people. First it hath occasioned people to steal from one
- another. Secondly it hath made laws to hang those that did
- steal. It tempts people to do an evil action, and then kills
- them for doing of it. Let all judge whether this be not a great
- evil.
-
-In April, 1649, the time was ripe--so Winstanley and his friends
-judged--for making a start to get rid of this evil.
-
-The Council of State, but a few months old, and much occupied with
-dangers in Scotland and Ireland, and with mutinous Levellers in
-the army, was suddenly informed of the strange activities of “a
-disorderly and tumultuous sort of people” by one Henry Sanders, of
-Walton-upon-Thames.
-
-Sanders’ testimony affirmed that “there was one Everard, once of the
-army but was cashiered, who termeth himself a prophet, one Stewer and
-Colten, and two more, all living at Cobham, came to St. George’s Hill
-in Surrey, and began to dig on that side the hill next to Camp Close,
-and sowed the ground with parsnips, carrots, and beans. On Monday
-following they were there again, being increased in their number, and
-on the next day they fired the heath, and burned at least forty rood of
-heath, which is a very great prejudice to the town. On Friday last they
-came again, between twenty and thirty, and wrought all day at digging.
-They did then intend to have two or three ploughs at work, but they had
-not furnished themselves with seed-corn, which they did on Saturday
-at Kingston. They invite all to come in and help them, and promise
-them meat, drink, and clothes. They do threaten to pull down and level
-all park pales, and lay open, and intend to plant there very shortly.
-They give out they will be four or five thousand within ten days, and
-threaten the neighbouring people there, that they will make them all
-come up to the hills and work: and forewarn them suffering their cattle
-to come near the plantation; if they do, they will cut their legs off.
-It is feared they have some design in hand.”[126]
-
-The date of this information was April 16th, and Bradshaw, the
-President of the Council, at once asked General Fairfax “to disperse
-the people so met, and to prevent the like for the future, that a
-malignant and disaffected party may not under colour of such ridiculous
-people have any opportunity to rendezvous themselves in order to do a
-greater mischief.”
-
-Fairfax sent Captain John Gladman to attend to the matter, and Gladman
-reports three days later that Mr. Winstanley and Mr. Everard are the
-chief men responsible, that he “cannot hear that there have been above
-twenty of them together since they first undertook the business,” and
-that Mr. Winstanley and Mr. Everard will wait upon Lord Fairfax. He
-adds; “I believe you will be glad to be rid of them again, especially
-Everard, who is no other than a mad man. I intend to go with two or
-three men to St. George’s Hill this day and persuade these people to
-leave this employment if I can, and if then I see no more danger than
-now I do I shall march back again to London to-morrow.” Gladman’s
-opinion is that “the business is not worth the writing nor yet taking
-notice of.”
-
-The interview between Fairfax and Winstanley and Everard took place
-on April 20, and Everard explained that the Diggers “did not intend
-to meddle with any man’s property nor to break down any pales or
-enclosures, but only to meddle with what was common and untilled, and
-to make it fruitful for the use of man: that they will not defend
-themselves by arms, but will submit unto authority; that as their
-forefathers lived in tents, so it would be suitable to their condition
-now to live in the same.”
-
-Fairfax evidently decided that the movement was not so alarming as
-the Council of State had represented, for Winstanley and his Diggers
-resumed their work, and at the end of May, Fairfax, with the officers
-of the army, paid a visit to St. George’s Hill. Winstanley returned
-“sober answers” to the inquiries of Fairfax, “though they gave little
-satisfaction (if any at all) in regard of the strangeness of their
-action.” Winstanley’s argument, often enlarged in his pamphlets, was
-that the people were dispossessed of their lands by the crown at the
-Norman Conquest, and that “the king who possessed them by the Norman
-Conquest being dead, they were returned again, being Crown Lands, to
-the Common People of England.”
-
-This was not conclusive to their visitors, and “some officers wished
-they had no further plot in what they did, and that no more was
-intended than what they did pretend.” To the objection that the ground
-was too poor to repay cultivation, “the Diggers answered they would use
-their endeavours and leave the success to God, who had promised to make
-the barren ground fruitful.” Public opinion gave out that the Diggers
-were “sober, honest men,” and that “the ground will probably in a short
-time yield them some fruit of their labour, how contemptible soever
-they do yet appear to be.”
-
-Encouraged by Fairfax’s “kindness and moderation,” Winstanley appeals
-to him in June against the interference of the local landowners, and
-getting no response (for Fairfax had said that the Diggers were to
-be left to “the Gentlemen of the County and the Law of the Land”),
-publishes an appeal to the House of Commons against his arrest for
-trespass by the Lords of Manors in Surrey. The House of Commons,
-occupied with State matters, turned an indifferent ear to Winstanley’s
-complaint, and the leader of the Diggers sent a “Watchword to the City
-of London and the Army,” telling the wrongs the Diggers suffered at the
-hands of the law for “digging upon the barren common”--how they were
-mulcted in damages at £10 a man, with costs at twenty-nine shillings
-and a penny, and taken in execution, and how their cows were seized by
-the bailiffs. At the end of November the very huts they had built were
-pulled down, and it was a hard winter for the little colony still left
-on St. George’s Hill.
-
-Winstanley does not merely relate his injuries in these publications,
-he is all the time urging that his plan for setting people upon the
-common lands is the needful thing in England, that a common ownership
-of land is God’s will, and that the crown lands taken by the Normans
-must revert to the people on the execution of the king.
-
-In the spring of 1650 an attempt was made to extend the digging
-propaganda--for the planting of St. George’s Hill was doomed--and
-some of Winstanley’s disciples made a tour through the counties of
-Middlesex, Bedford, Hertford, Huntingdon, and Northampton, settling
-down at last on some waste ground near Wellingborough. Here they were
-very soon arrested by a local justice of the peace, the Council of
-State ordered their prosecution, and the movement was suppressed.
-
-To the Council of State these Diggers were “Levellers,”[127] “intruders
-upon other men’s properties,” “seditious and tumultuous,” against whom
-the public peace must be preserved.
-
-Of Winstanley’s future, when the days of the digging were over, nothing
-seems to be known. Only one pamphlet is issued by him after 1650--“The
-Law of Freedom in a Platform; or, True Magistracy Restored”--an open
-letter to Oliver Cromwell, February, 1652. With this final manifesto
-on the land question, and on the whole social question, as he saw
-it, Gerrard Winstanley disappears from history. In the multitude of
-prophets and preachers, visionaries and practical reformers of the
-Commonwealth, Winstanley is little heeded by his contemporaries. The
-importance of his mission is seen more clearly to-day, when statesmen,
-politicians, and philanthropists all urge agrarian changes and the
-excellence of land culture.
-
-As to Winstanley’s claim on behalf of the people to the common lands,
-the advantage of possession of these lands was realized by the
-landowners in the eighteenth century, and from 1760 to 1830 more than a
-thousand acts of parliament were passed for enclosing these lands.[128]
-
-In “The Diggers Song,” (of unknown authorship[129]), the outlook of
-Winstanley and his followers is expressed in popular form:
-
- You noble Diggers all, stand up now, stand up now,
- You noble Diggers all, stand up now,
- The waste land to maintain, seeing Cavaliers by name,
- Your digging do disdain; and persons all defame.
- Stand up now, stand up now.
-
- Your houses they pull down, stand up now, stand up now,
- Your houses they pull down, stand up now;
- Your houses they pull down to fright poor men in town,
- But the Gentry must come down, and the poor shall wear the crown.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- With spades, and hoes, and plowes, stand up now, stand up now,
- With spades, and hoes, and plowes, stand up now;
- Your freedom to uphold, seeing Cavaliers are bold
- To kill you if they could, and rights from you withhold.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- Their self-will is their law, stand up now, stand up now,
- Their self-will is their law, stand up now;
- Since tyranny came in, they count it now no sin
- To make a gaol a gin, to starve poor men therein.
- Stand up now, stand up now.
-
- The Gentry are all round, stand up now, stand up now,
- The Gentry are all round, stand up now;
- The Gentry are all round, on each side they are found,
- Their wisdoms so profound to cheat us of our ground.
- Stand up now, stand up now.
-
- The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now, stand up now,
- The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now;
- To arrest you they advise, such fury they devise,
- The devil in them lies, and hath blinded both their eyes.
- Stand up now, stand up now.
-
- The Clergy they come in, stand up now, stand up now,
- The Clergy they come in, stand up now;
- The Clergy they come in, and say it is a sin
- That we should now begin our freedom for to win.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- The tithes they yet will have, stand up now, stand up now,
- The tithes they yet will have, stand up now;
- The tithes they yet will have, and Lawyers their fees crave,
- And this they say is brave, to make the poor their slave.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- ’Gainst Lawyers and ’gainst Priests, stand up now, stand up now,
- ’Gainst Lawyers and ’gainst Priests, stand up now;
- For tyrants they are both, even flat against their oath,
- To grant us they are loath, free meat, and drink and cloth.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- The club is all their law, stand up now, stand up now,
- The club is all their law, stand up now;
- The club is all their law, to keep poor men in awe,
- But they no vision saw, to maintain such a law.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now, stand up now,
- The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now;
- The Cavaliers are foes, themselves they do disclose
- By verses, not in prose, to please the singing boys.
- Stand up now, Diggers all!
-
- To conquer them by love, come in now, come in now,
- To conquer them by love, come in now;
- To conquer them by love, as it does you behove,
- For He is King above, no Power is like to Love.
- Glory here, Diggers all.
-
-
-
-
-Major Cartwright
-
-“The Father of Reform”
-
-1775–1824
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: _Life and Correspondence of Major Cartwright_, edited by
-his Niece, 1826; _A Memoir of John Cartwright the Reformer_, 1831; _The
-Times_, September 25th, 1824; Graham Wallas--_Francis Place_.
-
-[Illustration: MAJOR CARTWRIGHT
-
-(_From a Contemporary Drawing._)]
-
-
-
-
-MAJOR CARTWRIGHT “THE FATHER OF REFORM”
-
-1775–1824.
-
-
-The substance of Major Cartwright’s life is told on the pedestal
-beneath his statue in the dingy garden of Burton Crescent, to the south
-of Euston Road, in London.
-
- JOHN CARTWRIGHT,
-
- Born 28th September, 1740. Died 23rd September, 1824.
-
- The Firm, Consistent and Persevering Advocate of _Universal
- Suffrage_, Equal Representation, Vote by Ballot and Annual
- Parliaments.
-
- He was the first English Writer who openly maintained the
- Independence of the United States of America, and although his
- distinguished merits as a Naval Officer in 1776 presented the
- most flattering Prospects of Professional Advancement, yet he
- nobly refused to draw his Sword against the Rising Liberties of
- an oppressed and struggling People.
-
- In Grateful Commemoration of his inflexible integrity, exalted
- Patriotism, “profound Constitutional Knowledge,” and in sincere
- admiration of the unblemished Virtues of his Private Life,
-
- THIS STATUE
-
- was erected by Public Subscription near the spot where he
- closed his useful and meritorious career.
-
-There is nothing false or exaggerated in this epitaph. Fox, in the
-House of Commons, testified to Cartwright’s “profound constitutional
-knowledge.” Hazlitt, who never met Cartwright, classed him with the
-men of one idea (and lingered over the subject), but the charge is
-ill-founded. It is true that for nearly fifty years, in season and out
-of season, Cartwright, a pupil of Locke in politics, contended publicly
-for annual parliaments and manhood suffrage, claiming personality and
-not property as the ground for enfranchisement, and insisting that
-while the right of the rich and the poor to the vote was equal, the
-need of the latter was far greater. But this agitation was by no means
-the limit either of his ideas or his activities.
-
-Entering the navy at eighteen, John Cartwright, who came of an old
-Nottingham family, devised improvements in the gun service, and, made a
-lieutenant, was marked for high promotion. The revolt of the American
-colonies cut short his professional career. An innate love of liberty
-compelled the young naval officer to side with the colonists, and
-he writes in 1776 that it is a mistaken notion that the planting of
-colonies and the extending of empire are necessarily the same things.
-Self-governing colonies, he declares, bound to England only by “the
-ties of blood and mutual interests, by sincere love and friendship,
-which abhors dependence, and by every other cementing principle which
-hath power to take hold of the human heart,” are to be desired.
-
-Lord Howe put Cartwright’s principles to the test by inviting him to
-join the expedition against the Americans, and Cartwright, who was
-“passionately attached to the navy,” and had an immense admiration for
-Howe, could only answer that he was unable to take part in a war he
-thought unjust. With this refusal his naval services were ended, in
-spite of Howe’s quiet and dignified reply that “opinions in politics
-are to be treated like opinions in religion.” (No word of reproach came
-from Howe, no taunt of want of courage or lack of patriotism.)
-
-Cartwright never condemned all war. He urged in a letter to a nephew in
-the army that the answer to the question of the justice or injustice
-of a war decided whether justifiable homicide or wilful murder was
-committed by those engaged in battle. He hated standing armies and
-barracks and barrack life, and all the pomp and glory of militarism, as
-heartily as he hated the attempt to coerce the colonists. But no sooner
-was he out of the navy than, with a major’s commission, he at once
-set to work to train the Nottinghamshire militia, only retiring from
-this post in 1791 when the government cancelled his appointment for
-attending a meeting called to celebrate the fall of the Bastille.
-
-The militia in Cartwright’s view was strictly a citizen army for home
-defence. “The militia,” he wrote, “by its institution is not intended
-to spread the dominion or to vindicate in war the honour of the crown,
-but it is to preserve our laws and liberties, and therein to secure the
-existence of the State.” Thirteen years before the fall of the Bastille
-Major Cartwright had the cap of liberty displayed on the banners and
-engraved on the buttons of the Nottinghamshire Militia. A greater
-service than providing symbols of liberty was rendered to the army by
-Cartwright in the matter of better clothing for the men. The misery
-endured by ill-clad sentries aroused his compassion and indignation,
-and Cartwright worried the government until it provided great-coats for
-all private soldiers.
-
-The humaner courage is as conspicuous in John Cartwright’s long life as
-his political enthusiasm.
-
-Four times he risked his life to save others from drowning, rescuing
-two men from the Trent, a naval officer at sea, and, in late
-middle-life, a small boy who had fallen into the New River, near
-London. In the year 1800, hearing of a riot planned at Sheffield,
-Cartwright made his way alone to the barn where the conspirators were
-assembled, and stayed all night, reasoning with them against their
-project. In the morning the confederates, dissuaded from violence,
-quietly dispersed, and the riot was prevented.
-
-An untiring advocacy of democratic politics earned for Cartwright,
-justly, the title of “The Father of Reform.” He was the real founder
-of that movement for political reform, which in the nineteenth
-century swept away rotten boroughs, gave representation to all towns
-of importance, and extended the franchise to the great bulk of male
-householders in town and country; which to-day presses towards a
-general suffrage for men and women.
-
-Major Cartwright began his speeches and pamphlets on behalf of
-political reform in 1776, just after his retirement from the navy, and
-his acceptance of the commission in the militia.
-
-The ideas of the French Encyclopædists, the writings of Rousseau, and
-the revolt of the American colonists, had aroused a belief in social
-equality, and the “natural” rights of man, and this belief Cartwright
-championed till his death. His early pamphlets, beginning with
-“Legislative Rights of the Commonalty Vindicated,” (1777) are heavy
-reading to-day, but in them Cartwright argued for all the famous “six
-points” of the People’s Charter of fifty years later--Universal Manhood
-Suffrage, Annual Parliaments, Vote by Ballot, Abolition of Property
-Qualification for Parliamentary Candidates, Payment of Members, and
-Equal Electoral Districts. He even uses the modern phrase in urging
-“one man one vote.”
-
-Unlike Thomas Paine, and many of the “Radical Reformers,” Cartwright
-pleads for political democracy as the natural outcome of the Christian
-faith, maintaining that “No man can have a right sense and belief
-of Christianity who denies the equality of all conditions of men.”
-Incidentally, challenged on the point of why not Votes for Women?
-Cartwright could only fall back on certain passages in the Bible to
-justify his objection to Women’s Enfranchisement. Nothing was more
-abhorrent to his mind than the notion that government was a matter
-for “experts,” an exclusive affair for persons with specially trained
-intelligences. “Of all the errors to which mankind have ever submitted
-their understandings,” he wrote, “there is no one to be more lamented
-than that of conceiving the business of civil government to be above
-the comprehension of ordinary capacities.”
-
-The poor, because of their very poverty, had a need for the vote and
-for parliamentary representation which the man of property could not
-experience. This Cartwright emphasised in a petition he presented to
-the House of Commons as late as 1820:
-
- And when your Honourable House shall further consider that the
- humblest mortal on earth is equally a co-heir of an immortality
- with the most exalted who now wears stars, or coronets, or
- crowns, your petitioner hopes that your Honourable House
- will rise superior to the mean thoughts and vulgar prejudices
- of the uncharitable among the wealthy, the ignorant, the
- interested, the vain, and the proud; and will acknowledge
- that, in reference to the respective claims of legislative
- representation by the poor and the rich, the poor have equal
- right but far more need.
-
-Enthusiasm and an entirely disinterested zeal for democracy kept
-the spirit of youth in Cartwright, and carried him at the age of
-80 over a trial for sedition undisturbed. His zeal was not to be
-quenched. “Moderation in practice may be commendable,” he declared,
-“but moderation in principle is detestable. Can we trust a man who is
-moderately honest, or esteem a woman who is moderately virtuous?”
-
-This very allegiance to principle had its drawbacks in the world of
-practical politics, of corruption and compromise. Three times Major
-Cartwright stood for parliament: for the county of Nottingham in 1780,
-for Boston in 1806 and 1807; and on each occasion he was at the bottom
-of the poll. His nominations for Westminster in 1818 and 1819 received
-no serious support at all. The old major was no more distressed by any
-feeling of personal disappointment at these defeats than he was cast
-down at seeing no signs of the triumph of political democracy in his
-lifetime. At eighty-four we find him writing cheerfully, “To despair in
-a good cause is to approach towards atheism.”
-
-Cartwright did not live to see the passage of the great Reform Bill of
-1832. Wilkes’ motion for reform in 1776 had been negatived in the House
-of Commons without a division. In 1780 the Duke of Richmond’s motion
-in the House of Lords for manhood suffrage and annual parliaments was
-mocked by the outbreak of the Gordon (“No Popery”) Riots in London on
-the very day the motion was made. Pitt’s third and last effort for
-parliamentary reform was rejected in 1785. The French Revolution turned
-men’s minds in Great Britain towards democracy, but reaction followed
-hard on the Terror in Paris, and for a time a government terror crushed
-every expression in favour of political liberty in England. Sir Francis
-Burdett became the parliamentary leader of the “radical reformers”
-early in the nineteenth century, and in 1809 found fifteen supporters
-in the House of Commons. Ten years later the government, in the face
-of a strong working-class movement for political reform, brought
-out the military against the people at a peaceful meeting held at
-Peterloo, near Manchester, and followed this up by six repressive acts
-of parliament, and a general prosecution of the leaders of the reform
-agitation.
-
-Cartwright was eighty when, with several friends, he was charged “with
-being a malicious, seditious, evil-minded person, and with unlawfully
-and maliciously intending and designing to raise disaffection and
-discontent in the minds of his majesty’s subjects.”
-
-All England knew that Major Cartwright was a single-minded and
-high-principled man, in whose heart was neither guile nor malice, a
-man who had proved his loyalty and patriotism over and over again,
-and was no more seditious than he was evil-minded or disaffected.
-Apart from his advocacy of political reform and his services to the
-militia, Cartwright had done much for farming and agriculture, he had
-helped Clarkson and Wilberforce in their anti-slavery work, and he had
-called the attention of the government, as loudly as he could, to the
-defenceless state of the east coast against foreign invasion. Yet in
-1820 a British jury, obedient to the orders of a political judge, found
-John Cartwright guilty of “maliciously intending and designing to raise
-disaffection and discontent,” and a fine of £100 was inflicted.
-
-Francis Place, the radical tailor of Charing Cross, in whose shop the
-later Chartists and Reformers were to be found, gives his impression of
-Major Cartwright as he knew him in old age:
-
-“When he was in town he used frequently to sup with me, eating some
-raisins he brought in his pocket, and drinking weak gin and water.
-He was cheerful, agreeable, and full of curious anecdote. He was,
-however, in political matters exceedingly troublesome and sometimes as
-exceedingly absurd. He had read but little, or to little purpose, and
-knew nothing of general principles. He entertained a vague and absurd
-notion of the political arrangements of the Anglo-Saxons, and sincerely
-believed that these semi-barbarians were not only a political people,
-but that their ‘twofold polity,’ arms-bearing and representation, were
-universal and perfect.”[130]
-
-To Place, chief political wire-puller of his age, industrious and
-persistent in getting things done, with a typical cockney politician’s
-scorn of disinterested enthusiasm, Major Cartwright appeared
-“troublesome” and “absurd”--Francis Place had quite an honest liking
-for the “old gentleman,” as he called him, all the same. By the
-government Cartwright stood convicted as a “seditious, evil-minded
-person.” Posterity is content to know John Cartwright by the title his
-contemporaries conferred upon him--the Father of Reform--and to rank
-him as the foremost man in England in the eighteenth century to raise
-the standard of Political Democracy.
-
-
-
-
-Ernest Jones and Chartism
-
-1838–1854
-
-
-AUTHORITIES: R. G. Gamage--_History of the Chartist Movement_; Thos.
-Frost--_Forty Years’ Recollections_; Ernest Charles Jones--_Songs
-of Democracy_; Graham Wallas--_Life of Francis Place_; J. A.
-Hobson--_Ernest Jones_, in _Dictionary of National Biography_; _The
-Times_, Jan. 27, 29; Mar. 31, 1869.
-
-
-
-
-ERNEST JONES AND CHARTISM
-
-1838–1854.
-
-
-The Chartist agitation was at once the largest, the most revolutionary,
-and the least successful of all the serious political movements of
-the first half of the nineteenth century. For ten years, with varying
-fortune, it threatened the authority of parliament, and then slowly
-expired--destroyed by its own internal weakness and the quarrels of its
-leaders rather than by the repression of the government.
-
-The failure of the great Reform Act of 1832 to accomplish any
-particular improvement in the lot of the mass of working people brought
-the Chartist movement to life,[131] and roused the politically minded
-leaders of the workmen to agitate for changes in the constitution that
-would place political power in the hands of the whole people.
-
-The six points of the Charter, embodied in the “People’s Charter” drawn
-up by Francis Place and Lovett in 1838, revived the old programme
-of Major Cartwright and, in substance, the earlier demands of John
-Lilburne and the Levellers. Universal manhood suffrage, the ballot,
-payment of members of parliament, equal electoral districts, abolition
-of property qualification for members, and annual parliaments, these
-were the “six points” of the Charter, the platform of its advocates,
-and for ten years the hope of multitudes of earnest and devoted men and
-women.
-
-Francis Place and the Working-Men’s Association which gave Chartism
-its name and programme never had any considerable voice in its
-direction.[132]
-
-Feargus O’Connor, who had sat in parliament from 1832 to 1835 for an
-Irish constituency, was from the first the real leader of the movement.
-His personality and his rhetorical powers roused the manufacturing
-districts in the North and the Midlands to form political unions for
-the Charter in 1838, and his presence dominated the first Convention,
-held in London, with Lovett for its secretary. Later, O’Connor’s
-obvious weaknesses, his vanity and egotism, his want of self-control
-and that “one fatal disqualification for a leader of revolt--the fear
-of the police”[133]--left leadership in his hands, but left him a
-leader without followers.
-
-Next to O’Connor stood another Irish orator, James Bronterre O’Brien, a
-man of finer character, and clearer head, but smaller gifts of command.
-
-South Wales, the manufacturing districts of Lancashire and Yorkshire,
-and towns like Birmingham, Leicester, and Northampton, were the
-strongholds of Chartism, and “in the dark days of the late thirties and
-early forties it was a real and dangerous power.”[134] Feargus O’Connor
-never advocated an armed rising, and advised the abandonment of the
-huge torchlight processions; but pikes were being fashioned and men
-were being drilled in preparation for a revolution that was to end the
-Whig rule, and give the working classes the reins of government. The
-circulation of the _Northern Star_, O’Connor’s weekly paper, stood at
-50,000 in those days.
-
-Riots at Newport (Monmouth) and Birmingham in 1839, followed by several
-arrests and imprisonments of the Chartist leaders the following year,
-ended for the time all notions of a successful revolution. Lord John
-Russell declared strongly against manhood suffrage when the question
-was raised in the House of Commons, and on a division in the House the
-petition for the Charter was rejected by 237 to 48 votes.
-
-The outbreak at Birmingham, provoked, in the first place, by the
-interference of a body of London police with an orderly meeting in
-the Bull Ring, was put down in two days by the soldiers; but not till
-many houses had been attacked and a considerable amount of property
-destroyed. No robberies or petty thefts accompanied the riot.
-
-At Newport the harsh prison treatment of Vincent, a Chartist advocate,
-convicted for what was held to be a political offence, brought a crowd
-of 10,000 men, led by Frost, William, and Jones, to demand his release.
-The insurgents had a few rifles and pikes, but were generally unarmed,
-and the fire of the military soon overpowered them. But lives were lost
-on both sides, and Frost and his two lieutenants were sentenced to
-death, though the sentence was at once reduced to transportation for
-life, and some years later to simple banishment from British dominions.
-
-Feargus O’Connor, Bronterre O’Brien, and all the chief speakers of the
-movement were brought to trial for seditious utterance in 1840, and in
-most cases sent to prison either for twelve months or two years.
-
-With these imprisonments and the general election of 1841 came the
-first serious disintegration of the Chartist movement.[135] O’Brien and
-O’Connor differed vigorously on the question of election policy, and
-before they were released from prison were expressing their opinions
-in the _Northern Star_. O’Connor, full of wrath at the repressive
-treatment meted out to Chartists by the Whig Government, was for
-attacking the Whigs at the election, and O’Brien objected to this as a
-pro-Tory policy.[136]
-
-The decision to run independent Chartist candidates for parliament in
-certain constituencies, and the failure of these candidates to get
-returned on the limited franchise of 1832, increased disunion in the
-Chartist ranks and brought demoralisation.
-
-To make matters worse for the movement, several prominent Chartists
-left prison with fresh notions and ideas of reform, which had come to
-them in their long hours of solitude and reflection. Lovett, imprisoned
-in connection with the Birmingham riot, though he was entirely innocent
-of giving any encouragement to violence, on his release was full of
-vast plans for national education, convinced that education must
-precede political democracy. Vincent had become a strong temperance
-advocate, and henceforth must give himself to the work of a teetotal
-lecturer. Other men were for bringing in religion by “Chartist
-Churches.”[137] Antagonism to the anti-corn law league of Cobden and
-Bright, and later his own “National Land Company” experiments, withdrew
-Feargus O’Connor from actual Chartist propaganda.
-
-The movement languished. But in spite of government repression, the
-indifference of parliament, the hostility of the wealthier classes, and
-its own jarring elements of discord, Chartism was not dead.[138]
-
-The misery of the English people kept it from death. With one in
-every eleven of the industrial population a pauper in 1842, general
-satisfaction with the state of government was impossible for men of
-strong social sympathies. Some exerted themselves, like Sadler and
-Oastler, in following Lord Shaftesbury’s entirely disinterested and
-successful crusade against the horrors of factory oppression. Others
-supported the Free Trade agitation.
-
-To one man, Ernest Jones, it seemed, in 1845, that before all else
-must come political enfranchisement, that the social miseries and
-discontents of England were not to be cured save by the people of
-England. The evils might be mitigated by ameliorative legislation, but
-it was not enough that the decencies of life--then very far beyond the
-reach of the mass of town and country labourers--should be secured for
-people; the main thing was that people should have freedom to work out
-their own industrial salvation.
-
-So in 1846, Ernest Jones plunged boldly into Chartism. He quickly
-became a leader, and his reputation has endured: for Ernest Jones was
-the most respected, single-minded, and steadfast of the many who sat in
-Chartist conventions. Chartism for him was the cry of the uncared-for,
-because voteless, multitudes, and Ernest Jones was ready to give his
-life that the cry should move the rulers of the nation.
-
-It was a bad time for England in 1846, that was plain,[139] and
-Ernest Jones, believing with the average Englishman that in politics
-lay the key to necessary change, was henceforth a Chartist advocate
-and till his death the faithful preacher of democracy. Without
-becoming a socialist, Ernest Jones, in his “Songs of Democracy” and
-in his speeches and newspaper writings, is clear that political
-enfranchisement was but the high road to social and economic reform,
-that the Charter was to bring a better distribution of wealth as the
-consequence of a better distribution of political power.[140]
-
-Ernest Jones was twenty-seven when he joined the Chartist movement.
-The son of an army officer--who had been equerry to the Duke of
-Cumberland--and educated on the continent, Ernest Jones came to England
-when he was nineteen, and was duly presented to Queen Victoria (as
-Robert Owen had been) by Lord Melbourne in 1841. He married a Miss
-Atherley, of Cumberland, and settled down in London, writing novels,
-verses, and newspaper articles. In 1844 he was called to the Bar, and
-two years later took the step which separated him from the friends
-and acquaintances of his social order, and placed him on the hard and
-strenuous road of the political agitator.
-
-Averse from faction, realising the fatal folly of internal jealousies
-and strife, and alive to the importance of discipline in the army
-of revolt, Ernest Jones did his best to work with O’Connor--and was
-naturally charged with cowardice by the Chartists who hated O’Connor’s
-supremacy. In 1847 he began writing in the _Northern Star_, and was
-joint editor with O’Connor of _The Labourer_. His “Songs of Democracy”
-were to the Chartists what Ebenezer Elliott’s “Corn-Law Rhymes” were to
-the Free Traders, and his “Song of the Lower Classes” has retained a
-place in the song-books of social democrats to our own day.
-
-At the general election of 1847, when, to everybody’s astonishment,
-Feargus O’Connor was elected member for Nottingham, Ernest Jones stood
-for Halifax, but though immensely popular at the hustings, he only
-polled 280 votes.
-
-1848, the memorable year of revolutions abroad, saw Chartism once
-more a formidable movement in England. An enormous petition was again
-prepared for parliament, and the Chartists decided to carry the
-petition to the House of Commons after a mass meeting on Kennington
-Common on April 10th. Lord John Russell and his Whig government became
-thoroughly alarmed. The Duke of Wellington, as commander-in-chief,
-undertook to guard the safety of London, and garrisoned the city with
-troops, and protected the bridges, while 70,000 special constables
-(of whom Prince Louis Napoleon was one) were quickly enrolled. But on
-the government prohibition of any procession to Westminster, Feargus
-O’Connor at once decided against any collision between the people and
-the authorities. The mass meeting was held, some 50,000 persons were
-present, and O’Connor and Ernest Jones made speeches. Then the petition
-was sent off in a cab to parliament, and all was over.
-
-O’Connor had boasted that the monster petition contained 5,000,000
-signatures, but on investigation it was found that the signatures only
-amounted to 1,975,496, and many of these were duplicates and forgeries.
-Anti-Chartists had signed in several places, using ridiculous names,
-like “Pugnose,” “Punch,” and “Fubbs,” or boldly signing as “Queen
-Victoria” and “Duke of Wellington.”[141] Parliament gladly took
-advantage of O’Connor’s characteristic exaggeration to discredit the
-whole movement. At the same time the government hastily prepared a
-bill to suppress the renewed agitation, and the “Treason Felony” bill
-was passed, making “open and advised speaking with seditious intent”
-a crime. This clause in the act only remained on the statute book for
-two years, but it was sufficient for securing the conviction of all
-prominent Chartist speakers.
-
-Ernest Jones, unlike Feargus O’Connor, believed that the people
-should arm, and that a display of force was necessary for carrying
-the Charter. The failure of April 10th strengthened this belief, and
-for the next two months he was busy speaking in England and Scotland,
-urging the necessity for enrolling a national guard and forming a
-provisional government.
-
-But in spite of great public meetings the movement was already breaking
-up. The Chartist Convention, which met in London on May 1st, dissolved
-on May 13th in hopeless disagreement, and Ernest Jones, who had
-attended as a member of the executive committee, exclaimed that “amid
-the desertion of friends, and the invasion of enemies, the fusee had
-been trampled out, and the elements of their energy were scattered to
-the winds of heaven.” Still he tried to rally the broken ranks, and the
-government decided that the time had come to put the movement down by
-means of the new “Treason Felony” Act. Feargus O’Connor, now a member,
-was no longer dangerous to the authorities. His attendance in the House
-kept him from the agitation in the country, and Ernest Jones was the
-man to be struck at.
-
-On May 29th and 30th Ernest Jones addressed great, but quite orderly,
-meetings in London, on Clerkenwell Green and Bishop Bonner’s Fields,
-and then proceeded to Manchester. Here he was arrested and put on trial
-with five other Chartists--Fussell, Sharpe, Williams, Vernon, and
-Looney. The judge had little patience for the prisoners, and Ernest
-Jones was frequently interrupted in his defence. In the end, he and his
-fellows were all found guilty of seditious speech, and Ernest Jones was
-sentenced to two years’ imprisonment, to find sureties, himself in £200
-and two persons in £150, and to keep the peace for five years.
-
-A number of police spies procured many more arrests and convictions by
-gaining admission to Chartist meetings, joining Chartist unions and
-inciting the members to violent speech and an armed conspiracy. By
-these means at the end of the year 1848 the government had succeeded in
-getting the prominent Chartists into prison, as it had done in 1840.
-That Ernest Jones exhorted his followers to learn to bear arms is
-indisputable; that the success of the revolutionary movements on the
-continent encouraged the belief amongst a certain number of Chartists
-that an armed rising was desirable and could be successful in England
-is equally true. But as no serious attempt was made in 1848 by the
-“physical force” Chartists to organize such a rising, no rising took
-place, and “the conspiracy,” as it was called, was chiefly the work of
-the government’s police spies.
-
-The riots at Newport and Birmingham gave some excuse to the government
-for repression in 1839–40; in 1848 no outbreaks were even threatened
-to justify the sentences on Ernest Jones and other Chartist speakers.
-The government’s chief concern was to end the agitation, even if this
-could only be accomplished by means of a special act of parliament, and
-the unsavoury methods of _agents provocateurs_. Lord John Russell and
-his Whig colleagues were not the men to be kept from their purpose by
-any nice discrimination in the choice of weapons. It was not the time,
-when crowns were falling on the continent, to hesitate about crushing
-a movement which seemed to menace public safety in England. That the
-strength of Chartism was in the sober, law-abiding character of most
-of its adherents the government knew no more than they knew that the
-movement was already doomed for want of cohesion.
-
-The bitter hostility of the government pursued Ernest Jones in prison,
-and left him to be treated as a common felon. Ordered to pick oakum he
-refused, and was put on a diet of bread and water. The struggle between
-the prisoner and his gaolers was at last brought before the House of
-Commons,[142] and in the end Ernest Jones was allowed to purchase
-exemption from the allotted prison tasks by a small payment of money.
-
-On his release from prison the Chartist movement was flickering out. It
-was impossible to work with O’Connor, who, now looking favourably on
-household suffrage, was already failing in health and showing signs
-of the insanity which possessed him two years later. The trade-union
-movement and the co-operative store were attracting the attention of
-intelligent workmen, to whom for the time political enfranchisement
-seemed a lost cause. Contesting Halifax in 1852, Ernest Jones only
-polled 52 votes, and the _People’s Paper_, which he started in that
-year and edited, never had the success of the _Northern Star_.
-
-Feargus O’Connor was led away from the House of Commons hopelessly
-insane, to die in 1855, and Chartism utterly disintegrated could not
-be revived by Ernest Jones. In 1854 the movement was extinct, and from
-that time till his death Ernest Jones gave his political support to
-the advanced Radicals. He contested Nottingham in 1853 and 1857, but
-without success, returned to his old practice at the Bar, and wrote
-novels and poems. In 1868, the year of household suffrage in the
-towns, he was adopted by the Radicals as parliamentary candidate for
-Manchester, and then on January 26, 1869, came a sudden failure of the
-heart, and death ended all earthly hopes and plans for Ernest Jones.
-He was just fifty when he died, and though Chartism had passed away,
-Ernest Jones had not outlived his usefulness or his popularity with all
-those who believed in the ultimate triumph of democracy, and he had
-gained the respect of many earlier foes.
-
-The People’s Charter remains unfulfilled, but two of its points
-have long been granted--the ballot, and the abolition of a property
-qualification for members of parliament. Annual parliaments are no
-longer desired by any section of political reformers, the extension of
-the franchise to the agricultural labourer in 1884 brought manhood
-suffrage appreciably nearer, equal electoral districts were never more
-than a plan of quite reasonable political theorists, and the demand for
-payment of members, never altogether dropped by Radicals, is once more
-heard in the land.
-
-The great contention of Ernest Jones and the Chartists that political
-liberty should precede the granting of reforms by parliament, that the
-people should have the power to control and direct the deliberations of
-parliaments still has its advocates; but government is passing--almost
-unnoticed--once more into the hands of an executive, for that “eternal
-vigilance” which is the price of political liberty is oftentimes
-relaxed.
-
-
-
-
-Conclusion
-
-
-
-
-CONCLUSION
-
-
-Two political movements may be noted to-day in Great Britain by all
-who are interested in such things: the Labour movement and the Women’s
-movement for political enfranchisement.
-
-The efforts of the past twenty-five years to establish a separate
-socialist party in parliament have not been directly successful, but
-the Labour Party has managed to return a group of some thirty workmen
-to the House of Commons, and these men are the responsible and trusted
-leaders of the trade-unions and the Independent Labour Party. Without
-requiring any formal acknowledgment of socialist belief, the Labour
-Party is largely inspired by socialist teaching, and its goal is
-the conquest of government by the labouring people, and a more even
-distribution of wealth by the gradual expropriation of the landlord and
-the capitalist. While adhering strictly to constitutional methods of
-agitation, giving full respect to the procedure of parliament and the
-legal conduct of elections, the leaders of the Labour Party, in their
-speeches at public meetings, use much of the old revolutionary talk
-of John Ball and Robert Ket, and the arguments of Winstanley for the
-popular ownership of the land. To the Labour Party as to the Chartists
-democratic politics are but a stepping-stone to social reform, and as
-in the days of the Chartists the strength of the Labour Party is in
-the industrial districts of the North of England, and in South Wales.
-
-The Women’s movement, on the other hand, while demanding nothing but
-the right to the franchise, and claiming this right to a voice in
-the affairs of the State on the old constitutional ground of Pym and
-Hampden--that those who pay direct taxation to the government must have
-some political control of the expenditure--boldly avows in the face of
-government refusal the necessity for revolutionary methods to acquire
-the franchise. More than 600 women have gone to prison in the last four
-years in the cause of Women’s Suffrage, and the methods adopted have
-startled the public, created an enthusiasm, and generally aroused the
-attention of a formerly indifferent parliament to the claim of women to
-political enfranchisement.
-
-Mary Wollstonecraft, in her _Vindication of the Rights of Women_,
-published in 1792, struck the first note of this movement. In the
-latter half of the nineteenth century it received the support of John
-Stuart Mill and a certain number of parliamentary radicals, and Women’s
-Suffrage societies were formed. Then, five years ago, the Women’s
-Social and Political Union was started at Manchester by Mrs. Pankhurst
-and her daughter Miss Christabel Pankhurst, and the extraordinary
-energy and activity of this union and the daring and resource of its
-members have made the women’s demand for the vote a vital question in
-politics.
-
-Both these movements--the agitation of the Labour Party for a fuller
-and more abundant life for wage-earners, and the agitation of the
-women for political enfranchisement are proceeding in our midst--a
-guarantee that the centuries of struggle for freedom are not fruitless.
-
-“The battle of freedom is never done and the field never quiet,” and
-while ever sun and moon endure and man seeks to dominate his neighbour,
-so long in England shall men and women be found to resist such
-dominance. For “to meet such troubles and overcome them, or to die in
-strife with them--this is a great part of a man’s life.”
-
-
-THE END.
-
-
-
-
-FOOTNOTES
-
-
-[1] “By the mouth of the clergy spoke the voice of the helpless,
-defenceless multitudes who shared with them in the misery of living in
-a time when law was the feeblest and most untrustworthy stay of right,
-and men held everything at the mercy of masters, who had many desires
-and less scruples, were quickly and fiercely quarrelsome, impatient
-of control, superiority and quiet, and simply indifferent to the
-suffering, the fear, the waste that make bitter the days when society
-is enslaved to the terrible fascination of the sword.”--Church, _Saint
-Anselm_.
-
-“Unrestrained by religion, by principle or by policy, with no family
-interests to limit his greed, extravagance and hatred of his kind, a
-foul incarnation of selfishness in its most abhorrent form, the enemy
-of God and man, William Rufus gave to England and Christendom a pattern
-of absolutism.”--Stubbs, _Constitutional History_. Vol. I.
-
-[2] No Archbishop of Canterbury has received the pallium since Cranmer,
-but the sign of it remains in the archiepiscopal arms of Canterbury.
-
-[3] “No one in those days imagined Christianity without Christendom,
-and Christendom without a Pope: and all these bishops understood
-exactly as Anselm did the favourite papal text, ‘Thou art Peter, and
-on this rock I will build my Church.’ Nobody in those days doubted the
-divine authority of the Pope.”--Church, _Saint Anselm_.
-
-[4] “The boldness of Anselm’s attitude not only broke the tradition of
-ecclesiastical servitude, but infused through the nation at large a new
-spirit of independence.”--J. R. Green.
-
-[5] “When in Anglo-Norman times you speak of the ‘King’s Court,’ it is
-only a phrase for the king’s despotism.”--Sir F. Palgrave, _History of
-Normandy and England_.
-
-[6] “The see of St. Peter was the acknowledged constitutional centre
-of spiritual law in the West.... It was looked upon as the guide and
-regulator of teaching, the tribunal and court from which issued the
-oracles of right and discipline, the judgment seat to which an appeal
-was open to all, and which gave sentence on wrong and vice without
-fear or favour, without respect of persons, even the highest and
-the mightiest.... If ever there was a time when the popes honestly
-endeavoured to carry out the idea of their office, it was just at this
-period of the Middle Ages. They attempted to erect an independent
-throne of truth and justice above the passions and the force which
-reigned in the world around.”--Church, _Saint Anselm_.
-
-“Under the rule of William the Red, law had become unlaw, and in
-appealing from him to the apostolic throne Anselm might deem he was
-appealing from mere force and fraud to the only shadow of right that
-was still left on earth.”--Freeman, _Norman Conquest_, Vol. V.
-
-[7] “In England Anselm had stood only for right and liberty; he, the
-chief witness for religion and righteousness, saw all round him vice
-rampant, men spoiled of what was their own--justice, decency, honour
-trampled under foot. Law was unknown, except to ensnare and oppress.
-The King’s Court was the instrument of one man’s selfish and cruel
-will, and of the devices of a cunning and greedy minister. The natural
-remedies of wrong were destroyed and corrupted; the king’s peace, the
-king’s law, the king’s justice, to which men in those days looked for
-help, could only be thought of in mocking contrast to the reality.
-Against this energetic reign of misrule and injustice, a resistance
-as energetic was wanted; and to resist it was felt to be the call and
-bounden duty of a man in Anselm’s place. He resisted, as was the way
-in those days, man to man, person to person, in outright fashion and
-plain-spoken words. He resisted lawlessness, wickedness, oppression,
-corruption. When others acquiesced in the evil state, he refused; and
-further, he taught a lesson which England has since largely learned,
-though in a very different way. He taught his generation to appeal from
-force and arbitrary will to law. It was idle to talk of appealing to
-law in England; its time had not yet come.”--Church, _Saint Anselm_.
-
-[8] “No discipline restrained them (the king’s attendants); they
-plundered, they devastated, they destroyed. What they found in the
-houses which they invaded and could not consume, they took to market to
-sell for themselves or they burnt it. If it was liquor they would bathe
-the feet of their horses in it or pour it on the ground. It shames
-me to recall the cruelties they inflicted on the fathers of families
-and the insults on their wives and daughters. And so, whenever the
-king’s coming was known beforehand, people fled from their houses and
-hid themselves and their goods, as far as they could, in the woods or
-wherever safety might be found.”--Eadmer.
-
-[9] “If the Church had continued to buttress the thrones of the king’s
-whom it annointed, or if the struggle had terminated in an undivided
-victory, all Europe would have sunk down under a Byzantine or Muscovite
-despotism.”--Acton, _History of Freedom in Christianity_.
-
-[10] “By the surrender of the significant ceremony of delivering the
-bishopric by the emblematic staff and ring, it was emphatically put
-on record that the spiritual powers of the bishop were not the king’s
-to give; the prescription of feudalism was broken.”--Church, _Saint
-Anselm_.
-
-[11] “With regard to Thomas’ dealings with the Church, if one thing
-is clear it is this--that he was not in the least a man who pushed
-his Order at the expense of his loyalty. More than once he refused to
-listen to an ecclesiastical claim against the king, even when his old
-friend Theobald was behind it: he was perfectly impartial: he taxed
-churchmen as he taxed laymen, and in fact, so loyal and reasonable
-was he that Henry, when he made him archbishop, seems to have thought
-that he was wholly on his side. There were innumerable questions to be
-decided between Church and State. Again and again small points came up
-as to the appointment of this man or the other, as to the infliction
-or remission of a fine; and again and again Thomas decided the cause
-and advised the king on the merits of the case.... He was as zealous
-now for the State as he was for the Church afterwards. There he stood
-Chancellor of England; his business was to administer the laws, and he
-knew and did his business.”--R. H. Benson, _St. Thomas of Canterbury_.
-
-[12] “The only instance which has occurred of the chancellorship being
-voluntarily resigned either by layman or ecclesiastic.”--Campbell,
-_Lives of the Chancellors_.
-
-[13] “It must be held in mind that the archbisholp had on his side the
-Church or _Canon Law_, which he had sworn to obey, and certainly the
-law courts erred as much on the side of harshness and cruelty as those
-of the Church on that of foolish pity towards evil-doers.”--F. York
-Powell.
-
-“We have to take ourselves back to a state of society in which a
-judicial trial was a tournament, and the ordeal an approved substitute
-for evidence, to realise what civilization owes to the Canon Law
-and the canonists, with their elaborate system of written law,
-their judicial evidence, and their written procedure.”--Rashdall,
-_Universities of Europe during the Middle Ages_.
-
-[14] W. H. Hutton.
-
-[15] This conversation is reported by Roger of Pontigny, who ministered
-to St. Thomas when the latter was in exile at that place.
-
-[16] Garnier was a poet, and he protests passionately against this law,
-maintaining that God has called us all to His service. Much more worth
-is the villein’s son who is honourable than a nobleman’s son who is
-false.
-
-[17] W. FitzStephen.
-
-[18] W. FitzStephen.
-
-[19] Dean Stanley.
-
-[20] Freeman, _Historical Essays_. First series.
-
-[21] “Hubert was very gracious in the eyes of all the host that lay
-before Acre, and in warlike things so magnificent that he was admired
-even by King Richard. He was in stature tall, in council prudent, and
-though not having the gift of eloquence, he was an able and shrewd wit.
-His mind was more on human than divine things, and he knew all the laws
-of the realm.”--Gervase.
-
-[22] It is notable that in our day only peerages and knighthoods are
-sold, and these by political leaders to their partisans. Government
-offices, the judicial bench and bishoprics are still fortunately not in
-the market, though frequently allotted for partisan reasons.
-
-[23] “Owing to the craft of the richer citizens the main part of the
-burden fell on the poor.”--Matthew Paris.
-
-[24] Some writers say 50,000.
-
-[25] William of Newburgh.
-
-[26] “Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, was a shrewd financier, and
-an honourable, conscientious statesman; but as a prelate he is noted
-chiefly for his quarrels with his chapter.”--W. H. Hutton, _Social
-England_.
-
-[27] Matthew Paris.
-
-[28] “If he was to give up all for which he had been fighting, and
-fighting successfully, against the pope and the Church for the past six
-years, he must make quite sure of gaining such an advantage as would be
-worth the sacrifice. Mere release from excommunication and interdict
-was certainly, in his eyes, not worth any sacrifice at all. To change
-the pope from an enemy into a political friend was worth it, but--from
-John’s point of view--only if the friendship could be made something
-much more close and indissoluble than the ordinary official relation
-between the pope and every Christian sovereign. He must bind the pope
-to his personal interest by some special tie of such a nature that the
-interest of the papacy itself would prevent Innocent from casting it
-off or breaking it.... To outward personal humiliation of any kind John
-was absolutely indifferent, when there was any advantage to be gained
-by undergoing it. To any humiliation which the crown or the nation
-might suffer in his person, he was indifferent under all circumstances.
-His plighted faith he had never had a moment’s hesitation in breaking,
-whether it were sworn to his father, his brother, his allies or his
-people, and he would break it with equal facility when sworn to the
-supreme pontiff.... There seems, in short, to be good reason for
-believing that John’s homage to the pope was offered without any
-pressure from Rome and on grounds of deliberate policy.”--K. Norgate,
-_John Lackland_.
-
-[29] K. Norgate, _John Lackland_.
-
-[30] “By the intervention of the Archbishop of Canterbury, with several
-of his bishops and some barons, a sort of peace (_quasi pax_) was made
-between the king and the barons.”--Ralph of Coggeshall.
-
-[31] Matthew Paris, _Greater Chronicle_, quoted by K. Norgate.
-
-[32] “The Charter was a treaty between two powers neither of
-which trusted, or even pretended to trust, the other.”--Stubbs,
-_Constitutional History_. Vol. II.
-
-[33] Luard. Preface to _Grosseteste’s Letters_. Rolls’ Series. 1861.
-
-[34] A well-known passage in Matthew Paris, vol. v, gives the monk’s
-point of view of Grosseteste, the reformer:--“At this time the Bishop
-of Lincoln made a visitation of the religious houses in the diocese.
-If one were to tell all the acts of tyranny he committed therein, the
-bishop would seem not merely unfeeling but inhuman in his severity.
-For amongst other things when he came to Ramsey he went round the
-whole place, examined each one of the monks’ beds in the dormitory,
-scrutinized everything, and if he found anything locked up destroyed
-it. He broke open the monks’ coffers as a thief would, and if he found
-any cups wrought with decoration and with feet to stand on he broke
-them to pieces, though it would have been wiser to have demanded them
-unbroken for the poor. He also heaped the terrible curses of Moses on
-the heads of those who disobeyed his injunctions and the blessings
-of Moses on those who should observe the same.... And it is believed
-all this he hath done to restrain from sin those over whom he hath
-authority, and for whose souls he must give account.” This was written
-in 1251, when Grosseteste had been sixteen years at Lincoln.
-
-[35] Wright, _Political Songs_. Camden Society, 1839.
-
-[36] Grosseteste had been unable to get his way with the barons on
-the question of legitimacy of children before legal wedlock. By the
-old church law marriage made such children legitimate, and at the
-council of Merton, in 1236, Grosseteste, with the bishops, tried to
-bring the common law into union with the church view on this matter.
-He was defeated, and to this day these children are illegitimate. “It
-would indeed have been better if the independence exhibited by the
-majority who opposed the prelates at Merton had been reserved for
-another occasion; for it cannot be deemed that the perpetuation of a
-law contrary to that which prevails on the subject in almost every
-European country, and which still differentiates Scotland from England
-by abroad, though unintelligible line of demarcation, has been open
-to grave objection on grounds of public convenience, apart from any
-inherent merits or demerits it may possess.”--F. S. Stevenson, _Robert
-Grosseteste_.
-
-[37] “Grosseteste, then, may be regarded in a threefold aspect; first,
-as a reformer who sought to reform the Church from within and not
-from without, by the removal of existing abuses, by the encouragement
-he gave to the great religious revival of the early part of the 13th
-century, and by the example of unflinching fearlessness and rectitude
-which he set in his performance of the episcopal office; secondly,
-as the teacher who guided the rising fortunes of the University of
-Oxford; and thirdly, as the statesman who, applying to new conditions
-the policy associated with the name of Stephen Langton, endeavoured to
-combine into one effort the struggle of the clergy for the liberties
-of the Church with the struggle of the laity for the liberties of
-the nation, imbued Simon de Montfort with principles of ‘truth and
-justice’ which went far beyond the mere maintenance of the privileges
-of his own order, and at the same time, by his effort to reconcile him
-with his sovereign, and by the whole tenour of his actions, showed
-that had he lived a few years longer, his influence would have been
-directed to the task of achieving by peaceful means the constitutional
-advance brought about by those who, taking the sword, perished by the
-sword.”--Stevenson, _Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln_.
-
-[38] See recent article on “Grosseteste” in _Catholic Encyclopædia_.
-
-[39] Yet out of this letter and out of his great knowledge and love
-of the Scriptures a notion has been current that Grosseteste was a
-forerunner of Protestantism, and “a harbinger of the Reformation.” “If
-this implies that he had any tendency towards the doctrinal changes
-brought about in the Church at the Reformation, or that he evidenced
-any idea of a separation of the Church of England from that of Rome, a
-more utterly mistaken statement has never been made.”--Luard, Preface
-to _Grosseteste’s Letters_. (Rolls Series.)
-
-As for Grosseteste’s Scriptural knowledge, “The thorough familiarity
-with the Old Testament is, perhaps, only what we might expect; but the
-use which is made of the actions of all the characters of Scripture,
-and the forced and sometimes outrageous way in which they are
-introduced to illustrate his argument, show how thoroughly ‘biblical’
-the age was, and how completely the Old Testament history was regarded
-rather as the guide of men’s conduct in Christian times, than as a mere
-historical record of past events.”--_Ibid._
-
-[40] “The king acted as if he had sent him abroad simply to ruin his
-fortunes and wreck his reputation.”--Stubbs.
-
-[41] Matthew Paris.
-
-[42] Rishanger, the chronicler for St. Albans, puts the case for the
-national party:--
-
- “The king that tries without advice to seek his people’s weal
- Must often fail, he cannot know the wants and woes they feel.
- The Parliament must tell the king how he may serve them best,
- And he must see their wants fulfilled and injuries redressed.
- A king should seek his people’s good and not his own sweet will,
- Nor think himself a slave because men hold him back from ill.
-
- For they that keep the king from sin serve him the best of all,
- Making him free that else would be to sin a wretched thrall.
- True king is he, and truly free, who rules himself aright,
- And chooses freely what he knows will ease his people’s plight.
- Think not it is the king’s goodwill that makes the law to be,
- For law is steadfast, and a king has no stability.
- No! law stands high above the king, for law is that true light
- Without whose ray the king would stray and wander from the right.
- When a king strays he ought to be called back into the way
- By those he rules, who lawfully his will may disobey
- Until he seeks the path, but when his wandering is o’er,
- They ought to help and succour him and love him as before.”
-
- (Translated by F. York Powell.)
-
-
-[43] “The new form of government bears evidence of its origin; it is
-intended rather to fetter the king than to extend or develop the action
-of the community at large. The baronial council clearly regards itself
-as competent to act on behalf of all the estates of the realm, and the
-expedient of reducing the national deliberations to three sessions
-of select committees, betrays a desire to abridge the frequent and
-somewhat irksome duty of attendance in parliament rather than to share
-the central legislative and deliberative power with the whole body of
-the people. It must however be remembered that the scheme makes a very
-indistinct claim to the character of a final arrangement.”--Stubbs.
-
-[44] A board of twenty-four--half chosen by the king and half by the
-barons--had laid a body of resolutions before the Oxford Parliament,
-and the first of these resolutions declared that all castles and
-estates alienated from the crown should be at once resumed.
-
-[45] “The first time, as far as we know, English was used in any public
-document.”--Blaauw, _The Barons’ War_.
-
-[46]
-
- “End, O Earl of Gloster, what thou hast begun!
- Save thou end it fitly, we are all undone.
- Play the man, we pray thee, as thou hast promised,
- Cherish steadfastly the cause of which thou wast the head.
- He that takes the Lord’s work up, and lays it down again,
- Shamed and cursed may he be, and all shall say Amen.
-
- Earl Simon, thou of Montfort, so powerful and brave,
- Bring up thy strong companies thy country now to save,
- Have thou no fear of menaces or terrors of the grave,
- Defend with might the nation’s cause, naught else thine own
- needs crave.”
-
- --Rishanger, _Political Songs_.
-
-
-[47] Stubbs.
-
-[48] “The Song of Lewes”--_Political Songs_.
-
-[49] I am indebted to my friend Fr. Bede Jarrett, O.P., for this
-interesting and, I believe, hitherto unpublished suggestion.
-
-[50] It was to a Dominican Convent at Montargis that Simon’s widow, the
-Princess Eleanor, retired after the fatal battle of Evesham.
-
-[51] An appeal was lodged at Rome by several English bishops against
-the threatened excommunication, but the papal legate himself became
-pope early in 1265, and, as Pope Clement V., was the strongest enemy of
-Simon and the national cause. It was only after Evesham and the death
-of Simon that Clement urged a wise policy of mercy on Henry and the
-royalists.
-
-[52] “In this year, while Edward, the king’s son, was still held in
-ward in the Castle of Hereford, dissension arose between Simon, Earl of
-Leicester, and Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester....
-
-“For which cause the old friendship was turned into hate, so much so
-that neither the consideration of his oath nor former devotion could
-thenceforth pacify the said Gilbert.... An endeavour was made by
-certain prelates to restore the Earls of Leicester and Gloucester to
-their former union; but they could in no wise succeed.”--W. Rishanger.
-
-[53] J. R. Green, “The Ban of Kenilworth,” _Historical Studies_.
-
-[54] “The triumph over Earl Simon had been a triumph over the religious
-sentiment of the time, and religion avenged itself in its own way.
-Everywhere the earl’s death was viewed as a martyrdom, and monk and
-friar, however they might quarrel on other points, united in praying
-for the souls of the dead as for ‘soldiers of Christ.’”--J. R. Green,
-“The Ban of Kenilworth,” _Historical Studies_.
-
-[55] _Chronicles of Melrose._
-
-[56] _Ibid._
-
-[57] Wright, _Political Songs_.
-
-[58] See J. R. Green, “Annals of Osney and Wykes,” _Historical Studies_.
-
-[59] “The project was clearly to set up a new order of things
-founded on social equality--a theory which in the whole history of
-the Middle Ages appears for the first time in connection with this
-movement.”--Gairdner.
-
-[60] It may be said that to-day the idea of political and social
-equality is generally accepted and that of brotherhood denied. In
-the fourteenth century brotherhood was esteemed, but equality was a
-strange, intruding notion.
-
-[61] “The bias of Wyclif in theory and practice is secular, and
-aristocratic, and royalist: it is not really socialistic or politically
-revolutionary,”--Figgis, _Studies of Political Thought_. Nevertheless,
-many writers have tried to discredit Lollardy by associating it with
-social revolt, just as others have tried to discredit John Ball by
-making him out a “heretic,” and a follower of Wycliff.
-
-[62] Froissart seems to be mainly responsible for the belief that this
-John Tyler became the great leader of the movement, confusing him with
-Wat Tyler, of Maidstone, the real leader. Several writers allege the
-indecency of the tax-collectors.
-
-[63] “Tyler, according to Walsingham, was a man of ready ability and
-good sense. Save in some excesses, which, perhaps, were politic,
-possibly unavoidable, and certainly exaggerated, the rebels under him
-are admitted to have kept good order, and to have readily submitted to
-discipline.”--Thorold Rogers. To Froissart Tyler appears merely as “a
-bad man, and a great enemy of the nobility.”
-
-[64] “Fearful lest their voyage should be prevented, or that the
-populace should attack them, they heaved their anchors and with some
-difficulty left the harbour, for the wind was against them, and put to
-sea, when they cast anchor for a wind.”--Froissart.
-
-[65] Two names at least have been preserved--Squire Bertram Wilmington
-of Wye and John Corehurst of Lamberhurst.
-
-[66] Seven years later this Earl of Salisbury, fleeing from Henry
-Bolingbroke, was hanged in the streets of Cirencester at the hands of
-the people.
-
-[67] This law of Winchester was the statute of Edward I., 1285, which
-authorised local authorities to appoint constables and preserve the
-peace. Tyler’s aim was to strengthen local government in the counties,
-making them as far as possible self-governing communes.
-
-[68] “It was in the preaching of John Ball that England first listened
-to the knell of feudalism, and the declaration of the rights of
-man.”--J. R. Green.
-
-[69] “Observe how fortunate matters turned out, for had the rebels
-succeeded in their intentions they would have destroyed the whole
-nobility of England, and after their success other countries would have
-rebelled.”--Froissart.
-
-[70] See Durrant Cooper--_John Cade’s Followers in Kent_.
-
-[71] “These two bishops were wonder covetous men, evil beloved among
-the common people and holden suspect of many defaults; assenting and
-willing to the death of the Duke of Gloucester, as it were said.”--(_A
-Chronicle of Henry VI_). According to Gasgoigne--_Loci e Libro
-Veritatum_--the people said of Ayscough: “He always kept with the king
-and was his confessor, and did not reside in his own diocese of Sarum
-with us, nor maintain hospitality.”
-
-[72] “He himself asserted that he had been a captain under the Duke
-of York, and that his real name was Mortimer, which may possibly have
-been true, for there were several illegitimate branches of the house of
-March.”--Professor Oman, _Political History of England_.
-
-[73] “A young man of a godly nature and right pregnant of
-wit.”--Holinshed. Shakspeare’s farcical account of the rising in _King
-Henry VI._, Part II., is, of course, entirely misleading.--See the
-author’s _True Story of Jack Cade_.
-
-[74] See the letter of John Payn in the _Paston Letters_. But Payn
-wrote fifteen years afterwards, and seems to have been a person of no
-very scrupulous honesty.
-
-[75] A special act of parliament was passed in 1452 to cancel all that
-Cade had accomplished.
-
-[76] Cocke was a well-known supporter of Henry VI. and a man of note.
-He was sheriff of London 1453, alderman in 1456, and mayor and M.P.
-1462–3. Knighted by Henry in 1465, he fell from his high estate when
-Edward IV. was king, and languished in prison on a charge of high
-treason, only escaping with his life on payment of £8,000.
-
-[77] “What answer to this demand was returned I find not, but like
-it is the same was granted and performed; for I find not the said
-captain and Kentishmen at their being in the city to have hurt any
-stranger.”--Stow.
-
-[78] When, by order of the Privy Council, the Exchequer seized all
-Cade’s goods, these jewels were sold with the rest. They fetched £114,
-and a payment of £86 7s. was subsequently made to the Duke of York.
-So the crown made some profit on the transaction, but Malpas was
-unrecompensed.--See Devon’s _Exchequer Rolls_.
-
-[79] “Whereof he lost the people’s favour and hearts. For it was to be
-thought if he had not executed that robbery he might have gone far and
-brought his purpose to good effect.”--Fabyan.
-
-[80] This church has long been pulled down. It was absorbed into St.
-Saviour’s parish the following year. St. Margaret’s Hill is now part of
-High Street, Borough, and the present St. George’s Church stands near
-the site of old St. Margaret’s Church.
-
-[81] _Acts of Privy Council_, 1451.
-
-[82] “In the interests of truth, I must declare at the outset that
-I cannot find the very slightest foundation for the assertion of
-Stapleton, copied by Cresacre More and many others, that in the course
-of time their friendship cooled. Abundant proofs of the contrary will
-appear.”--Rev. T. E. Bridgett, _Life and Writings of Sir Thomas More_.
-
-[83] “Indeed, it was he who pushed me to write the _Praise of Folly_,
-that is to say, he made a camel frisk.”--Erasmus to Ulrich von Hutten,
-1519.
-
-[84] “He had a purpose to be a priest, yet God had allotted him for
-another estate, not to live solitary, but that he might be a pattern
-to married men: how they should carefully bring up their children,
-how dearly they should love their wives, how they should employ their
-endeavour wholly for the good of their country, yet excellently perform
-the virtues of religious men, as piety, charity, humility, obedience
-and conjugal chastity.”--Cresacre More.
-
-[85] Erasmus to Ulrich von Hutten.
-
-[86] “It is clear that Sir Thomas had a little Utopia of his own in his
-family. He was making an experiment in education, and he was delighted
-with its success. The fame of his learned daughters became European
-through the praises of Erasmus, and was so great in England that in
-1529, when they were all married ladies, they were invited by the
-king to hold a kind of philosophical tournament in his presence....
-More will ever stand foremost in the ranks of the defenders of female
-culture.”--Rev. T. E. Bridgett, _Life and Writings of Sir Thomas More_.
-
-[87] “He most warily retired from every opposition but that which
-conscience absolutely required. He displayed that very peculiar
-excellence of his character, which, as it showed his submission to be
-the fruit of sense of duty, gave dignity to that which in others is apt
-to seem to be slavish.”--Sir James Mackintosh, _Life of More_.
-
-[88] “Parliament is discussing the revocation of all synods and other
-constitutions of the English clergy, and the prohibition of holding
-synods without express license of the king. This is a strange thing.
-Churchmen will be of less account than shoemakers, who have the power
-of assembling and making their own statutes.”--Chapuys, _Letters and
-Papers of Henry VIII._ (Rolls Series).
-
-[89] Chapuys, _Letters and Papers of Henry VIII._ (Rolls Series).
-
-[90] _Lives of the Chancellors._
-
-[91] _Letters and Papers of Henry VIII._ (Rolls Series).
-
-[92] Roper.
-
-[93] “To More a heretic was neither a simple man erring by ignorance,
-nor a learned man using his freedom in doubtful points: he was a man
-whose heart was ‘proud, poisoned, and obstinate,’ because he denied
-the Divine guidance of the Church while he claimed special Divine
-inspiration for himself.”--Rev. T. E. Bridgett.
-
-[94] More’s _English Works--Apology_. It is only thirty years after his
-death that Foxe suggests More as a persecutor. All the evidence is in
-the opposite direction.
-
-[95] Sir James Mackintosh, _Life of More_.
-
-[96] See Dr. Jessop, _The Great Pillage_.
-
-[97] _See State Papers, Domestic, Edward VI._
-
-[98] The common lands engrossed in the 15th and 16th centuries were the
-farm lands cultivated in common by the peasants. The enclosure of the
-commons was left to a later date, and took place between 1760 and 1830.
-
-[99] This Flowerdew had distinguished himself at the destruction of
-the abbey at Wymondham by Henry VIII., by tearing off the lead from
-the roof of the church and pulling down the choir, for the sake of the
-stones, after the people had raised a large sum of money for the king
-in order to save the church.
-
-[100] “By bearing a confident countenance in all his actions the
-vulgars took him (Ket) to be both valiant and wise and a fit man to be
-their commander.”--Sir John Hayward, _Life of Edward VI._
-
-“This Ket was a proper person to be a ringleader of mischief, for he
-was of a bold, haughty spirit, and of a cankered mind against the
-Government.”--John Strype, _Ecclesiastical Memorials_.
-
-[101] These two “were partly fain to agree, lest they being out of
-favour and place, others might come to bring all out of frame that
-now might partly be well framed, and the rather they assented to keep
-the people in better order during answer from the prince.”--Nicholas
-Sutherton.
-
-[102] “That a populous and wealthy city like Norwich should have been
-for three weeks in the hands of 20,000 rebels, and should have escaped
-utter pillage and ruin speaks highly for the rebel leaders.”--W. Rye,
-_Victoria County History of Norfolk_.
-
-[103] A few years later, and John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, now
-Duke of Northumberland, again visited East Anglia to proclaim his
-daughter-in-law, Lady Jane Grey, Queen of England. No one rose at his
-call. Neither peasant nor landowner responded to the proclamation;
-and John Dudley, Earl of Warwick and Duke of Northumberland, died, as
-his father before him had died, convicted of treason, beheaded by the
-executioner’s axe on Tower Hill. It was August 22nd, 1553, just four
-years after the suppression of the peasants’ rising in Norfolk when
-Northumberland was put to death.
-
-[104] “Robert Ket was not a mere craftsman: he was a man of substance,
-the owner of several manors: his conduct throughout was marked by
-considerable generosity: nor can the name of patriot be denied to him
-who deserted the class to which he might have belonged or aspired, and
-cast in his lot with the suffering people.”--Canon Dixon, _History of
-the Church of England_.
-
-In 1588 a grandson of Robert Ket was burnt as a Nonconformist heretic
-by order of Elizabeth.
-
-[105] The three were Oxford men. Sir John Eliot was at Exeter (1607),
-Hampden at Magdalen (1609) and Pym at Broadgate Hall, afterwards called
-Pembroke (1599).
-
-[106] “In Eliot’s composition there was nothing of the dogmatic
-orthodoxy of Calvinism, nothing of the painful introspection of the
-later Puritans. His creed, as it shines clearly out from the work of
-his prison hours, as death was stealing upon him--_The Monarchy of
-Man_--was the old heathen philosophic creed, mellowed and spiritualised
-by Christianity. Between such a creed and Rome there was a great gulf
-fixed. Individual culture and the nearest approach to individual
-perfection for the sake of the State and the Church, formed a common
-ground on which Eliot could stand with the narrowest Puritan.”--S. R.
-Gardiner.
-
-[107] Eliot’s argument “was a claim to render ministerial
-responsibility once more a reality, and thereby indirectly to make
-parliament supreme.”--S. R. Gardiner.
-
-[108] “He (Eliot) was to the bottom of his heart an idealist. To him
-the parliament was scarcely a collection of fallible men, just as the
-king was hardly a being who could by any possibility go deliberately
-astray. If he who wore the crown had wandered from the right path, he
-had but to listen to those who formed, in more than a rhetorical sense,
-the collective wisdom of the nation.”--S. R. Gardiner.
-
-[109] “His (Hampden’s) distinction lay in his power of disentangling
-the essential part from the non-essential. In the previous
-constitutional struggle he had seen that the one thing necessary was to
-establish the supremacy of the House of Commons.”--S. R. Gardiner.
-
-[110] Clarendon.
-
-[111] “The same men who, six months before, were observed to be of very
-moderate tempers, and to wish that gentle remedies might be applied,
-talked now in another dialect both of kings and persons; and said
-that they must now be of another temper than they were in the last
-parliament.”--Clarendon.
-
-[112] The Nineteen Propositions fairly express the views of Pym
-and Hampden at this time on the supremacy of the Commons. The main
-proposals were the authority of parliament: in the _sole_ choice of
-the ministers of the crown, in the regulation of state policy, in the
-management of the militia, in the education of the royal children, in
-the remodeling of the discipline of the Church of England; and the
-guardianship by parliament of all forts and castles. It was of first
-importance in Pym’s mind that parliament should have the control in
-military matters. Without the power of the sword the House of Commons
-could not ensure the personal safety of its members or the privileges
-of free debate against the enmity of the king. To command the army was
-to govern the country.
-
-[113] See G. P. Gooch, _History of Democratic Ideas in the Seventeenth
-Century_.
-
-[114] “By its injudicious treatment of the most popular man in England,
-parliament was arraying against itself a force which only awaited an
-opportunity to sweep it away.”--G. P. Gooch, _History of Democratic
-Ideas in the Seventeenth Century_.
-
-[115] “Advocating direct government by a democratic Parliament and
-the fullest development of individual liberty, the Levellers looked
-with suspicion on the Council of State as a body which might possibly
-be converted into an executive authority independent of parliament,
-and thoroughly distrusted Cromwell as aiming at military despotism.
-Well-intentioned and patriotic as they were, they were absolutely
-destitute of political tact, and had no sense of the real difficulties
-of the situation, and, above all, of the impossibility of rousing the
-popular sympathy on behalf of abstract reasonings.”--S. R. Gardiner,
-_History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate_.
-
-[116] S. R. Gardiner.
-
-[117] The movement “had sprung into existence in response to a widely
-spread apprehension that the victory of the people might be rendered
-fruitless. Its call had found an echo in the ranks of the army, and by
-its admirable organization it had insisted that the leaders should hear
-what it had to say. It had powerfully influenced their conduct and had
-introduced a radical element into their programme. When this had been
-done, the soldiers felt that its _raison d’être_ as a separate party
-had come to an end. The battle had been fought, and the victory, at
-least for the time, had fallen to Ireton.”--G. P. Gooch, _History of
-Democratic Ideas in the Seventeenth Century_.
-
-[118] “In other words, not only Cromwell and Ireton, but also Fairfax,
-who had recently been elected a member of the House, were to be
-summarily cashiered.”--S. R. Gardiner, _History of the Commonwealth_.
-
-[119] See the pamphlet “A Petition of Well-affected Women,” 1649. There
-is something curiously familiar in the exhortation to the women.
-
-[120] “Unfortunately his friends, in petitioning for his release,
-rested their case on the ground that all sentences given by a
-court-martial were made illegal by the Petition of Right and the law
-of the land. Such a doctrine would have dissolved the army into chaos,
-and when Lilburne and Overton wrote to Fairfax, threatening him with
-the fate of Joab and Strafford, all chance of pardon was at an end.
-Lockyer firmly believed himself to be a martyr to the cause of right
-and justice.”--S. R. Gardiner, _History of the Commonwealth_.
-
-[121] See Whitelocke’s _Memorials_, “The Army’s Martyr,” “A True
-Narrative,” and “The Moderate” (1649).
-
-[122] “So die the Leveller corporals. Strong they, after their sort,
-for the liberties of England; resolute to the very death.”--Carlyle.
-
-[123] Lilburne’s attitude to Winstanley’s propaganda was similar to
-the attitude of the political Chartists in the 19th century to Robert
-Owen’s socialism.
-
-[124] “Then ensued a scene, the like of which had in all probability
-never been witnessed in an English court of justice, and was never
-again to be witnessed till the seven bishops were freed by the verdict
-of a jury from the rage of James II.”--S. R. Gardiner.
-
-“In a revolution, where others argued about the respective rights of
-king and parliament, he spoke always of the rights of the people. His
-dauntless courage and his power of speech made him the idol of the
-mob.”--Professor C. H. Firth, “Lilburne,” _Dictionary of National
-Biography_.
-
-[125] See L. A. Berens, _Digger Movement in the Days of the
-Commonwealth_.
-
-[126] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii.
-
-[127] Government rarely distinguishes between different schools of
-agitators.
-
-[128] Between 1710 and 1867 the number of acres so enclosed was
-7,660,439.
-
-[129] _Clarke Papers_, vol. ii.
-
-[130] See Graham Wallas, _Life of Francis Place_.
-
-[131] “Disappointment bitter and wide-spread was following closely upon
-the inevitable failure of the extravagant expectations and overheated
-hopes which the agitation for parliamentary reform had kindled.”--F.
-York Powell, _The Queen’s Reign: a Survey_.
-
-[132] See Graham Wallas, _Life of Francis Place_.
-
-[133] Herbert Paul, _History of Modern England_.
-
-[134] _Ibid._
-
-[135] “Want of leaders and organization, and the great difference in
-objects among the Chartists themselves, led to their failure. For a
-while Chartism was stayed.”--Professor T. F. Tout, _England from 1689_.
-
-[136] The differences between the two became more acute when Feargus
-O’Connor started his land colonization schemes a few years later.
-O’Brien opposed these schemes, which all ended in heavy financial
-losses, and urged sticking to political reform. From 1842 O’Brien was
-practically outside the Chartist movement, though it was not till 1848
-he formally retired. He died in poverty in 1864, after giving some help
-to the middle-class radical movement for household suffrage.
-
-[137] A similar impulse fifty years later brought “Labour Churches”
-into existence.
-
-[138] “The ministers had met the Chartist outbreaks with strong,
-repressive measures, and here they had the concurrence of parliament,
-which had no sympathy with the movement. The House of Commons,
-indeed, had little understanding of the processes that were maturing
-outside its walls. The industrial and the social evolution went on
-almost unnoticed by statesmen and politicians absorbed in the party
-controversy.”--Sidney Low and Lloyd Sanders, _Political History of
-England_, 1837–1901. See also Hansard’s _Parliamentary Debates_ for
-these years.
-
-[139] “The least satisfactory feature of English life in 1846 was the
-condition of the labouring classes. Politically they were dumb, for
-they had no parliamentary votes. Socially they were depressed, though
-their lot had been considerably improved by an increased demand for
-labour and by the removal of taxes in Peel’s great Budget of 1842. That
-was the year in which the misery of the English proletariat reached its
-lowest depth.”--Herbert Paul, _History of Modern England_.
-
-[140] Stephens, a “hot-headed” Chartist preacher, put the case as
-he, a typical agitator of the day, saw it in 1839: “The principle of
-the People’s Charter is the right of every man to have his home, his
-hearth, and his happiness. The question of universal suffrage is after
-all a knife-and-fork question. It means that every workman has a right
-to have a good hat and coat, a good roof, a good dinner, no more work
-than will keep him in health, and as much wages as will keep him in
-plenty.”--See R. G. Gamage, _History of the Chartist Movement_.
-
-[141] Charles Kingsley, who is said to have signed the petition, gives
-his view of April 10th in _Alton Locke_.
-
-[142] See Hansard, June, 1849.
-
-
-
-
-INDEX
-
-
- Adam of Marsh, Franciscan friar, friend of Grosseteste and
- de Montfort, 120, 130
-
- Aldrich, an Alderman of Norwich, 229, 231
-
- Alexander III., Pope, 45, 56
-
- Anselm, Abbot of Bec, 8;
- called to court of William II., 8;
- appointed Archbishop of Canterbury, 9;
- refuses to give up church lands, 11;
- firm attitude at Council of Rockingham, 15;
- semblance of peace with the king, 16;
- leaves England, 18;
- returns at request of Henry I., 19;
- his services to the king, 21;
- dispute with the king, 23;
- reconciliation, 26;
- his death and character, 27–30;
- his birthplace, 30
-
- Appleton, William, 161
-
- Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury, impeached for treason, 174;
- murdered at Erdington, 175
-
-
- Bailey, John, hanged by Cade, 184
-
- Ball, John, itinerant priest from York, preaches social
- revolution, 143;
- released from Maidstone prison by Wat Tyler, 153;
- preaches to Tyler’s followers at Blackheath, 153;
- hanged as a rebel, 167
-
- Barton, Elizabeth, “Holy Maid of Kent,” 206
-
- Becket, Thomas, his parentage, 33;
- early years, 34;
- appointed Chancellor of Canterbury, 34;
- ordained priest and appointed to Archbishopric, 38;
- dispute with the king, 41–45;
- yields to king’s demands at Council of Clarendon, 47;
- refutes charges at Council of Northampton, 49;
- leaves England and appeals to the pope, 55;
- reconciliation with the king, 57;
- lands at Sandwich, 57;
- ill-will of the bishops, 58;
- Henry’s sudden rage, 59;
- his murder, 63;
- his canonisation, 64
-
- Belknap, Chief Justice, 147, 148
-
- Berksted, Stephen, Bishop of Chichester, 128
-
- Bigod, Hugh of Norfolk, 121
-
- Bigod, Roger, 126
-
- Boniface of Savoy, Archbishop of Canterbury, 110, 131
-
- Bradshaw, John, 297
-
- Buckingham, Duke of, 249, 250, 251, 252
-
- Burdett, Sir Francis, 313
-
- Burley, Sir Simon, 148, 163
-
-
- Cade, Jack, leader of the revolt of Kentish commons, 1450, 173;
- uncertainty as to real name and family, 176;
- marches to Blackheath at head of 46,000 followers, 177;
- draws up and presents petition to Henry VI., 178;
- no answer returned, 178;
- withdraws to Sevenoaks and defeats small body of Henry’s
- troops, 180;
- gathers reinforcements in Kent, 181;
- Henry VI. treats with him fruitlessly, 181;
- enters London without opposition, 182;
- preserves strict discipline in his force, 184;
- forced to levy toll for support of his followers, 185;
- after first good reception London turns against him, 187;
- unsuccessful fight for London Bridge, 187;
- treats with Henry’s representatives, 188;
- many of his adherents return to their homes, 189;
- refuses to lay down arms till parliament issues legal pardon, 189;
- proclaimed a traitor, 189;
- defeated at Queenborough, 189;
- dies fighting as a fugitive, in Sussex, 189;
- head exposed on London Bridge, 190
-
- Cartwright, John, enters Navy and begins promising career, 308;
- it is cut short by his siding with the Americans at outbreak of
- war, 1776, 308;
- trains the Nottinghamshire Militia, 309;
- pioneer of political reform, 310;
- writes and speaks on the subject, 310;
- unsuccessful efforts to enter parliament, 312;
- at age of 80 charged with sedition and fined, 313;
- known as “Father of Reform,” 315
-
- Catherine of Aragon, 203
-
- Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, 122, 126, 133
-
- Cantilupe, Thomas, Chancellor, 128
-
- Cave, Robert, 148
-
- Chalton, Sir John, Lord Mayor of London, 183
-
- Charles I., 250 _et seq._, 280, 282
-
- Church, Corporal, 286
-
- Clarendon, Earl of (quoted), 262
-
- Clarendon, Council of, 46
-
- Clarkson, Thomas, 313
-
- Cocke (or Cooke) Thomas, friend to both Henry VI. and Cade, 182
-
- Cod, Thomas, Mayor of Norwich, 228, 229, 231, 232, 233
-
- Coke, Lord Justice, 252
-
- Colet, Dean of St. Paul’s, 199, 212
-
- Conyers, Dr., Vicar of St. Martin, Norwich, 231
-
- Cranmer, Archbishop, 204
-
- Cromwell, Oliver, 279 _et seq._
-
- Cromwell, Thomas, 208
-
- Crowmer, Sheriff of Kent, 180;
- arrested and sent to Tower, 181;
- beheaded by Cade’s orders, 184
-
- Curtis (Girste, or Ghirstis) City Merchant, 186
-
-
- De Burgh, Hubert, 95, 107
-
- De Gray, John, Bishop of Norwich, 81, 82
-
- De Morville, Hugh, 59–63
-
- Derby, Henry, Earl of (afterwards Henry IV.), 157, 163, 170
-
- Despenser, Henry, Bishop of Norwich, 168
-
- Des Roches, Peter, Bishop of Winchester, 82, 94, 107, 108
-
- De Tracy, William, 59–63
-
- De Valence, William, 123, 132
-
-
- Eadmer (quoted), 6, 7, 14, 17, 26
-
- Edward, Prince, son of Henry III., afterwards King-Edward I.;
- takes oath of reform to barons, 123;
- takes Gloucester in civil war, 126;
- taken prisoner at Battle of Lewes, 127;
- escapes to Welsh marshes, 132;
- intercepts de Montfort’s relief force at Evesham, 133
-
- Eliot, John, enters parliament as member for St. Germans, 249;
- knighted and becomes Vice-Admiral of Devon, 249;
- captures the pirate Nutt, but eventually finds himself in Marshalsea
- prison over the affair, 250;
- released and is returned for Newport, 1624, 250;
- quarrels with Buckingham and insists upon his impeachment, 251;
- imprisoned in Tower in connection therewith, but soon released, 251;
- refuses forced loan and again imprisoned and deprived of
- Vice-Admiralship, 252;
- carries Petition of Right, 252;
- attacks policy of Laud, 252;
- supports John Rolle in refusing payment of taxes, 253;
- summoned before Privy Council, imprisoned for fourth time,
- and fined, 255;
- remains passionately loyal to House of Commons, 256;
- health gives way in confinement, 257;
- dies in the Tower, 1632, 257;
- his son’s appeal for his burial at Port Eliot, Cornwall,
- refused, 257
-
- Erasmus, 193, 194, 197, 202, 211, 212
-
- Essex, Earl of, 267
-
- Ethelmar, half-brother to Henry III., 106
-
- Everard, 297, 298
-
-
- Fairfax, General, 298, 299
-
- Falkland, Lord, 265, 266
-
- Finch, Chief Justice, 262
-
- Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, 206, 207, 208
-
- FitzOsbert, William, called Longbeard; his early life, 72;
- lays his grievances before Richard I., 72;
- defies Archbishop Hubert, 73;
- his arrest and death, 75
-
- FitzStephen, W. (quoted), 35, 49, 53, 59
-
- FitzUrse, Reginald, 59–63
-
- Flowerdew, Sergeant, 222, 223
-
- Frost, 321
-
- Fulke, follower of Ket, 235
-
- Fussell, 328
-
-
- Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester, 126, 128, 131, 132
-
- Gough, Matthew, 186
-
- Green, J. R. (quoted), 91, 92
-
- Green, Squire of Wylby, 222
-
- Gregory IX., Pope, letter to, from Grosseteste, 102
-
- Grindcobbe, William, supporter of John Ball in Hertford, 143, 146;
- follows Wat Tyler, 149;
- at Mile End, 159;
- hanged at St. Albans, 167
-
- Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, born in Suffolk of humble parentage,
- goes to Oxford, rises to foremost honours there, and becomes
- bishop, at sixty, 101;
- institutes reforms at Oxford, 102;
- befriends Dominican and Franciscan friars, 102;
- withstands Henry III.’s rapacity, 104;
- attends council in London, recites grievances of Henry III.’s
- misrule, 107;
- resists seizure of English Church revenues by Innocent IV., 108–111;
- refuses canonry of Lincoln to pope’s nephew, 111;
- Cardinals uphold Grosseteste against Innocent IV., 112;
- makes appeal to whole realm on behalf of rights of English
- Church, 113;
- dies, 1235, and is buried in Lincoln Cathedral, 113;
- Edward I.’s application for canonization refused, 113
-
- Gunnell, Tutor in Sir Thomas More’s family, 199
-
-
- Hales, Sir Robert, Treasurer to Richard II., 146;
- advises no conference with Tyler’s followers, 154;
- beheaded on Tower Hill, 160
-
- Hampden, John, refuses to pay ship-money, 258;
- case decided against him, 259;
- acts with Eliot against Buckingham, 261;
- strong influence in House of Commons, 262;
- prominent work in Long Parliament, 263;
- impeached for high treason, 265;
- takes refuge from Charles in city, 266;
- prepares for war, 266;
- raises regiment of infantry in Bucks, 267;
- mortally wounded at Chalgrove, 268
-
- Hazlerig, 265, 288
-
- Henry I., 19–26
-
- Henry II.; appoints Thomas Becket Chancellor of England, 34;
- their close friendship, 35;
- determines to appoint Thomas to the archbishopric, 36;
- his dispute with Thomas, and its cause, 41;
- draws up the Constitutions of Clarendon, 46;
- his dissatisfaction with the result, 48;
- charges Thomas with corrupt practices, 48–54;
- his sudden rage and hasty words, resulting in the murder of the
- archbishop, 63
-
- Henry III.; appeals for money at Council of Westminster, 1244, 104;
- confronts bishops with Innocent IV.’s letter exhorting them to give
- liberally, 104;
- bishops evade coercion, 105;
- king again tries in 1252, 106;
- bishops, led by Grosseteste, refuse, 106;
- his miserable misrule, 108;
- dealings with Simon of Montfort in Gascony, 118–120;
- his financial difficulties reach climax, 1257, 120;
- continued quarrels with barons, 122;
- obtains dispensation from promises to barons, 124;
- civil war is declared, 126;
- defeated by Simon of Montfort, and peace made, 1264, 127;
- war again breaks out, 132;
- is victorious, 137
-
- Henry VIII., 197, 201, 202, 203, 207, 208
-
- Holland, Sir John, 159
-
- Holles, 265
-
- Horne, Alderman, 182
-
- Horne, Alderman, supports Tyler, and welcomes him to London, 156
-
- Hotham, Sir John, 267
-
- Howe, Lord, 308
-
- Hugh of Lincoln, 77
-
- Herbert of Bosham (quoted), 38, 58
-
-
- Iden, Alexander, 189, 190
-
- Innocent III., Pope, 77, 81, 83, 95
-
- Innocent IV., Pope, 104, 106, 110, 111, 113
-
- Ireton, General, 280, 286
-
- Islip, Archbishop of Canterbury, 144
-
-
- John, King, refuses to acknowledge Stephen Langton’s appointment to
- archbishopric, 81;
- seizes estates of Canterbury, and drives chapter into exile, 82;
- is excommunicated, 83;
- meets primate at Winchester and is formally absolved, 85;
- strife with barons, 86;
- his campaign to recover lost Angevine provinces, 87;
- capitulation to the barons, 90;
- signs the Great Charter, 91;
- his death, 95
-
- John of Gaunt, calls parliament at Northampton, 147;
- his unpopularity with the people, 151;
- his palace of the Savoy and its valuable contents destroyed, 157
-
- John of Salisbury (quoted), 56
-
- Jones, Ernest, 324;
- joins Chartist movement at 27, 325;
- son of an officer and educated abroad, 325;
- works with Feargus O’Connor, 325;
- attends Chartist convention, 327;
- addresses large meetings in London, 328;
- arrested, tried, found guilty of seditious speech and
- imprisoned, 328;
- on his release Chartist movement declining, 329;
- contests Halifax unsuccessfully, 330;
- gives support to advanced radicals, 330;
- stands twice unsuccessfully for Nottingham, 330;
- dies suddenly at the age of 50, 330
-
-
- Kemp, Cardinal, Archbishop of York, Chancellor to Henry VI.,
- 187, 188, 190
-
- Kent, Earl of, 159
-
- Ket, Robert, landowner in Norfolk, a tanner by trade, 223;
- sympathies on the side of the people, 223;
- offers to lead the movement against enclosures of land, 224;
- he is eagerly accepted as captain, and leads large army towards
- Norwich, 224;
- issues manifesto attacking landlords, 225;
- advances to Mousehold, and his force increases to 20,000, 228;
- sends statement to Edward VI., 229;
- king replies by herald, 229;
- sets about organising and victualling his followers, as he is not
- content with vague promises, 230;
- arrests landowners, 231;
- repudiates king’s “pardon” as being a just and innocent man, 232;
- his arrest ordered by king’s messenger, but impossible in the
- presence of his followers, 232;
- friction arises between Norwich authorities and the rebels, 232;
- fight ensues, Norwich in his hands, 233;
- unsuccessfully opposed by Marquis of Northampton, 234;
- commands in Norwich for three weeks, 235;
- disappointed at rising not becoming general, 236;
- negotiates with Earl of Warwick, sent to suppress revolt, 237;
- abrupt conclusion, and battle follows, 238;
- his mistaken tactics and defeat, 239;
- his followers surrender to Warwick, 239;
- his flight and capture, 239;
- tried, found guilty of high treason and condemned to death, 241;
- hanged in chains in Norwich, 241
-
- Ket, William, 223, 239, 240, 241
-
- Knolles, Sir Robert, 156
-
- Knyvett, Sir Edmund, 236
-
-
- Langham, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury, 144
-
- Langland, Robert, 145
-
- Langton, Stephen, appointed to archbishopric of Canterbury against
- King John’s wishes by Innocent III., 81, 82;
- is driven into exile by the king, 82;
- returns six years later, 85;
- starts the movement for the Great Charter, 86;
- frames articles for the Charter, 90;
- disagreement with papal legate, 94;
- works for preservation of peace during early years of Henry
- III.’s reign, 95;
- his character and place in history, 96
-
- Laud, Archbishop, 252, 253, 256, 257, 260, 262, 272
-
- Legge, John, 147, 160
-
- le Despenser, Hugh, Justiciar, 126, 128, 134
-
- Lilburne, John, apprenticed to a cloth merchant in London and becomes
- friend of Prynne, 278;
- charged before Star Chamber with circulating unlicensed books, and
- sentenced to be whipped, pilloried, and imprisoned, 278;
- released by order of Long Parliament, 278;
- fights at Edgehill and Marston Moor, where he is taken
- prisoner, 278;
- leaves army in 1645 rather than take the Covenant, 279;
- resists the tyranny of parliamentary government, 279;
- heads the party in the army called the Levellers, 281;
- again imprisoned and released in 1649, 282;
- writes pamphlets against the government and is again
- imprisoned, 284;
- petition presented to parliament for his release, 284;
- tried for treasonable writings, 287;
- fined and banished, 288;
- goes to Holland, and returns, without permission, to London,
- in 1653, 289;
- arrested and acquitted, 289;
- again imprisoned by Cromwell for two years, 290;
- converted to Quakerism, 290;
- released and pensioned, 290;
- dies at Eltham, 290
-
- Litster, Geoffrey, follower of John Ball in Norfolk, 143, 146;
- his death, 168, 217
-
- Looney, 328
-
- Lovett, 319, 322
-
- Luard (quoted), 101–2
-
- Lyons, Richard, 161
-
-
- Macaulay, Lord (quoted), 264
-
- Malpas, Philip, 185
-
- Martin, Papal Legate, 110
-
- Matthew of Westminster (quoted), 127
-
- Maurice, C. E. (quoted), 95
-
- Mendall, John, a name by which Jack Cade was known, 175
-
- Moleyns, Bishop of Chichester, supporter of Duke of Suffolk, killed at
- Portsmouth, 174
-
- Montfort, Henry of, eldest son of Earl of Leicester, 133, 134
-
- Montfort, Simon of, second son of Earl of Leicester, 132, 133
-
- Montfort, Simon of, Earl of Leicester, son of first Earl of Leicester,
- marries Eleanor, sister of Henry III., and widow of Earl of
- Pembroke, 117;
- boyhood passed in France, 117;
- leaves for crusades, distinguished career in Palestine, 118;
- returns in 1242, 118;
- works with Grosseteste in his reforms, 118;
- goes to Gascony for five years (1248–53) and deals with turbulent
- nobles, 118;
- saves Gascony for English crown, and restores order in the
- province, 119;
- Henry III.’s ingratitude, 119;
- recognized leader of the barons on his return to England, 120;
- successful in “Mad Parliament,” 1258, 122;
- as “foreigner” yields castles of Kenilworth and Odiham, 123;
- fresh difficulties with Henry III. in carrying out Provisions of
- Oxford, 124;
- civil war imminent, 1264;
- and many bishops and barons desert Simon, 125;
- offers £30,000 to king to make peace and adhere to Provisions of
- Oxford--proposal rejected, 126;
- Battle of Lewes won by Simon, 126;
- peace made, 127;
- draws up new scheme of reform, the precursor of later representative
- government, 129;
- fresh disturbances and defections, followed by renewal of war, 132;
- Battle of Evesham, and death of Simon, 134;
- interred in Evesham Abbey, 134
-
- More, Sir Thomas, born 1478, member of Cardinal Morton’s household,
- leaves there for Oxford, and later studies law in Lincoln’s
- Inn, 193;
- friendship with Erasmus, 194;
- spends four years with Carthusians, 195;
- leaves Charterhouse, marries and enters parliament, 195;
- opposes Henry VII.’s exactions, 195;
- Under-Sheriff for the City, 196;
- embassies to Flanders and Calais, 197;
- enters Henry VIII.’s service, and rises rapidly to highest offices
- of State, 197;
- happy domestic life, 198;
- withholds support from king on his divorce from Catherine of
- Aragon, 203;
- resigns chancellorship, 205;
- declines to be present at Anne Boleyn’s coronation, 206;
- unsuccessful attempt to implicate him in the “treason” of Holy Maid
- of Kent, 206;
- finds himself unable to take oath denying papal supremacy, and is
- sent to Tower, 207;
- indicted for treason, 208;
- sentenced to death, 209;
- beheaded on Tower Hill, 210;
- beatified, 213
-
- Mortimer, name by which Jack Cade was popularly known, 176
-
- Mortimer, Roger, 132
-
-
- Newton, Sir John, Governor of Rochester Castle, taken prisoner
- by Tyler, 149;
- sent with message from Tyler to the king, 154
-
- Nicholas, papal legate, 86
-
- Norfolk, Duke of, 202
-
- Northampton, Council of, 48
-
- Northampton, Marquis of (William Parr), 234
-
-
- Oastler, 323
-
- O’Brien, James Bronterre, 320, 321, 322
-
- O’Connor, Feargus, 320, 323, 329, 330
-
- Otho, papal legate, 109, 110
-
- Overton, Richard, 284
-
-
- Palgrave, Sir Francis (quoted), 22, 23
-
- Pandulf, papal legate, 83, 94
-
- Pankhurst, Mrs., 336
-
- Pankhurst, Christabel, 336
-
- Paris, Matthew (quoted), 100, 105, 108, 113, 117, 124
-
- Parker, Matthew, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, 231, 232
-
- Perkins, Corporal, 286
-
- Petibone, John, 232
-
- Place, Francis, 314, 319, 320
-
- Powell, Professor York (quoted), 30, 65, 91, 121, 135
-
- Prince, 284
-
- Pym, John, enters House of Commons, 1614, 260;
- conspicuous in “Short Parliament,” 260;
- supports Eliot in Buckingham’s impeachment, 261;
- becomes leader of parliamentary party, 261;
- canvasses England on horseback before “Long Parliament,” 261;
- opens charge of impeachment against Strafford, 262;
- active work in parliament, 263, 264;
- makes overtures to the queen, 263;
- impeached for high treason, 265;
- takes refuge in city from Charles, 266;
- secures Portsmouth and Hull for the parliament, 266;
- his “solemn league and covenant” accepted by parliament, 269;
- dies, 1643, and buried in Westminster Abbey, 269
-
-
- Rich, Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury, 106;
- retires to Pontigny, 1240, and dies, 109
-
- Richard II., agrees to interview with Tyler, 154;
- allows himself to be dissuaded, 155;
- sends to Tyler for written statement of grievances, 157;
- agrees to a meeting at Mile End, 159;
- assents to Tyler’s requests, 160;
- second meeting at Smithfield, 162;
- again agrees to Tyler’s demands, 164;
- after Tyler’s death personally disperses his followers, 166;
- the danger passed, rebels fiercely punished, 167;
- formally annuls charters granted to Tyler, 168;
- his death, 170
-
- Richard the Breton, 59–63
-
- Richard, Earl of Cornwall, half brother to Henry III., became King of
- the Romans, 118
-
- Richard, Earl of Gloucester, 121, 122, 124
-
- Rishanger, Chronicler for St. Albans (quoted), 121, 134
-
- Rockingham, Council of, 13, 15
-
- Roger of Wendover (quoted), 88
-
- Roper, William, son-in-law to Sir Thomas More, 195, 196, 202
-
- Roper, Margaret (his wife), 198
-
- Russell, Lord John, 321, 326, 329
-
-
- Sadler, 323
-
- Salisbury, Earl of, counsels Richard II. not to interview Tyler, 155;
- at Smithfield, 163;
- his death, 170
-
- Sanders, Henry, 297
-
- Say-and-Sele, Lord, treasurer to Henry VI., impeached for
- treason, 174;
- arrested and taken to Tower, 181;
- beheaded by Cade’s order, 184
-
- Scales, Lord, guardian of prisoners in Tower, 182;
- in conjunction with mayor and corporation opposes Cade, 186
-
- Seldon, 252
-
- Shaftesbury, Lord, 323
-
- Sharpe, 328
-
- Sheffield, Lord, 234
-
- Sibley, Alderman, 156
-
- Somerset, Protector, 221, 236
-
- Stafford, Archbishop of Canterbury, Chancellor to Henry VI.,
- 181, 187, 188
-
- Stafford, Sir Humfrey, 180
-
- Stafford, Sir William, 180
-
- Standish, Ralph, 165, 166
-
- Steward, Augustine, 234, 235
-
- Strafford, Earl of, 252, 256, 262, 263
-
- Straw, Jack, priest in Essex, follower of John Ball, 143;
- acts as lieutenant to Wat Tyler, 149;
- hanged without trial, 167
-
- Strode, 265
-
- Sudbury, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury, 144;
- his palace at Canterbury ransacked by Tyler, 152;
- Lambeth palace stormed by Tyler and records destroyed, but building
- uninjured, 156;
- beheaded by Tyler, on Tower Hill, 161
-
- Suffolk, Duke of, chief minister to Henry VI., 173;
- impeached as a traitor, 174;
- beheaded, 174
-
- Suffolk, Earl of, President of Richard II.’s council, 155,
- 163, 167, 170
-
- Sutherton, Leonard, 232
-
-
- Tonge, Alderman, 156
-
- Theobald, Archbishop, 33, 34, 36
-
- Thompson, Corporal William, 285
-
- Thompson, Cornet, 286
-
- Tressilian, Sir Robert, 167, 170
-
- Tyler, John, 148, 149
-
- Tyler, Wat, chosen captain of peasants at Maidstone, 149;
- his recorded history can be followed for eight days only, 150;
- his followers at first moderate, 151;
- at Canterbury, 152;
- bursts open gaol at Maidstone and releases Ball and other
- prisoners, 153;
- sets out for London at head of 30,000 men, 153;
- encamps at Blackheath, 153;
- sends Sir John Newton with message to Richard II., 154;
- interview refused, 155;
- he marches on London Bridge, and destroys adjacent property, 155;
- keeps his followers under strict discipline, 156;
- demands interview with the king, 158;
- conference at Mile End, 159, 160;
- invites king to meet him again, at Smithfield, 162;
- his demands agreed to, 164;
- in sudden scuffle draws dagger, strikes Walworth, and is mortally
- wounded in return, 165;
- his head exposed on London Bridge, 166
-
-
- Urban, Pope, 18, 19
-
-
- Vernon, 328
-
- Vincent, 321
-
- Von Hutten, Ulrich, 193
-
-
- Warwick, Earl of, High Chamberlain to Henry VIII., 236–240
-
- Walter, Hubert, Bishop of Salisbury, afterwards Archbishop of
- Canterbury, 69, 70, 73, 76, 77, 81
-
- Walter of Coventry (quoted), 85
-
- Walworth, William, Mayor of London, owns London houses of
- ill-fame, 155;
- the same destroyed by Tyler, 155;
- attempts to fortify London Bridge, 155;
- urges king and council to action, 157;
- at Smithfield, 163;
- wounds Tyler mortally, 165;
- knighted by Richard, 166
-
- Walwyn, 283
-
- Warham, Archbishop, 197
-
- Watson, a Norwich preacher, 229
-
- Waynfleet, William, Bishop of Winchester, 188
-
- Wellington, Duke of, 326
-
- Wentworth (see Strafford, Earl of).
-
- Weston, Chancellor of the Exchequer, 252
-
- Wilberforce, William, 313
-
- William I., his character, 3;
- condition of country under, 3–5;
- death, 5
-
- William II., his character, 5;
- condition of England under, 6;
- appoints Anselm to Archbishopric of Canterbury, 10;
- his quarrel with Anselm, 11–13, _et seq._;
- his death, 19
-
- Williams, 328
-
- Windebank, 262
-
- Winstanley, Gerrard, 286;
- leader of the “Digger” movement, 293;
- born in Lancashire, but settled in London as a trader, 294;
- fails, and retires to the country, 294;
- publishes pamphlets, social and religious, 295;
- first action of the “Diggers,” 297–8;
- appeals to General Fairfax against interference, 299;
- receives little notice, 300;
- makes further active efforts, 300;
- movement suppressed, 300;
- little known of him later, 301
-
- Wollstonecraft, Mary, 336
-
- Wolsey, Cardinal, 197, 201, 202, 203, 208, 217, 222
-
- Wraw, John, supporter of Ball in Suffolk, 143, 146;
- follows Wat Tyler, 149;
- at Blackheath, 153;
- returns to Suffolk to announce rising, 153;
- is hanged as rebel, 167
-
-
-_The Westminster Press (Gerrards Ltd.), Harrow Road, London, W._
-
-
-
-
-Transcriber’s note:
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-Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made consistent when a
-predominant preference was found in the original book; otherwise they
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-<body>
-<h1 class="pgx" title="">The Project Gutenberg eBook, Leaders of the People, by Joseph Clayton</h1>
-<p>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 <a
-href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. 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.</p>
-<p>Title: Leaders of the People</p>
-<p> Studies in Democratic History</p>
-<p>Author: Joseph Clayton</p>
-<p>Release Date: February 1, 2021 [eBook #64437]</p>
-<p>Language: English</p>
-<p>Character set encoding: UTF-8</p>
-<p>***START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK LEADERS OF THE PEOPLE***</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<h4 class="pgx" title="">E-text prepared by deaurider, Charlie Howard,<br />
- and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team<br />
- (https://www.pgdp.net)<br />
- from page images generously made available by<br />
- Internet Archive<br />
- (https://archive.org)</h4>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<table border="0" style="background-color: #ccccff;margin: 0 auto;" cellpadding="10">
- <tr>
- <td valign="top">
- Note:
- </td>
- <td>
- Images of the original pages are available through
- Internet Archive. See
- https://archive.org/details/leadersofpeoples00clayiala
- </td>
- </tr>
-</table>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<div class="body"><div class="transnote">
-<p class="center large bold">Transcriber’s Note</p>
-<p>Larger versions of most illustrations may be seen by right-clicking them
-and selecting an option to view them separately, or by double-tapping and/or
-stretching them.</p>
-</div></div>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<hr class="pgx" />
-<div class="body"><p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-<p>&nbsp;</p>
-
-<div id="i_frontis" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_f001.jpg" width="1545" height="1989" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p><i>John Hampden.</i></p>
-
-<p><i>From a print by J. Houbraken 1740.</i></p></div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="newpage p1 center wspace tpnarrow">
-<h1>
-LEADERS OF<br />
-THE PEOPLE</h1>
-
-<p class="larger p0 b0">STUDIES IN DEMOCRATIC HISTORY</p>
-
-<p class="larger gesperrt1"><i>By</i> JOSEPH CLAYTON <span class="in2">❦</span> <span class="in2">❦</span></p>
-
-<p class="b1">WITH A FRONTISPIECE IN PHOTOGRAVURE<br />
-<span class="gesperrt1">AND NUMEROUS OTHER ILLUSTRATIONS</span></p>
-
-<hr class="thick" /><hr class="thin" />
-
-<div class="ptp"> </div>
-
-<hr class="thin" /><hr class="thick" />
-
-<p><span class="larger">NEW YORK:  MITCHELL KENNERLEY</span><br />
-TWO EAST TWENTY-NINTH STREET · MCMXI</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="tpnarrow">
-<p class="newpage p4 center vspace">
-<span class="wspace">To the Memory of</span></p>
-
-<p class="p1 center wspace larger">FREDERICK YORK POWELL</p>
-
-<p class="p1 center">Regius Professor of Modern History<br />
-at the University of Oxford<br />
-1894–1904</p>
-
-<p class="p1 center smaller">“I loved him in life and I love him<br />
-none the less in death: for what<br />
-I loved in him is not dead.”</p>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_i">i</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak left" id="CONTENTS">CONTENTS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="toc" summary="Contents">
-<tr class="smaller">
- <td> </td>
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdc"><i>Page</i></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Preface</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#PREFACE">xi</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">I.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Archbishop Anselm and Norman Autocracy</span>, 1093–1130</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_1">3</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">II.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Thomas of Canterbury, the Defender of the Poor</span>, 1162–1170</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_2">33</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">III.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">William FitzOsbert, the First English Agitator</span>, 1188–1189</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_3">69</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Stephen Langton and the Great Charter</span>, 1207–1215</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_4">81</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">V.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Bishop Grosseteste, the Reformer</span>, 1235–1253</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_5">99</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VI.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Simon of Montfort and the English Parliament</span>, 1258–1265</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_6">117</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Wat Tyler and the Peasant Revolt</span>, 1381</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_7">141</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">VIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Jack Cade, the Captain of Kent</span>, 1450</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_8">173</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">IX.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Sir Thomas More and Freedom of Conscience</span>, 1529–1535</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_9">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">X.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Robert Ket and the Norfolk Rising</span>, 1549</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_10">217</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XI.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Eliot, Hampden, and Pym and the Supremacy of the Commons</span>, 1626–1643</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_11">245</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">John Lilburne and the Levellers</span>, 1647–1653</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_12">277</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIII.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Winstanley the Digger</span>, 1649–1650</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_13">293</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XIV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Major Cartwright, the Father of Reform</span>, 1776–1820</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_14">307</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdr top">XV.</td>
- <td class="tdl"><span class="smcap">Ernest Jones and Chartism</span>, 1838–1868</td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#hdr_15">319</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Conclusion</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#CONCLUSION">335</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">Index</span></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#INDEX">339</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_ix">ix</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak left" id="LIST_OF_ILLUSTRATIONS">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS</h2>
-</div>
-
-<table id="loi" summary="List of Illustrations">
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JOHN HAMPDEN<br /><cite>From the Engraving by Jacob Houbraken</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#i_frontis"><i>Frontispiece</i></a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr class="smaller">
- <td> </td>
- <td class="tdr">facing p.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">ARCHBISHOP ANSELM<br /><cite>From an Old French Engraving in the British Museum</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_3">3</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">THOMAS À BECKET<br /><cite>From an Engraving after Van Eyck</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_33">33</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">KING RICHARD II.<br /><cite>From the Panel Painting in the Sanctuary in Westminster Abbey</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_141">141</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">SIR THOMAS MORE<br /><cite>From the Drawing by Hans Holbein</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_193">193</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">SIR JOHN ELIOT<br /><cite>From a Steel Engraving by William Holl</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_245">245</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">JOHN PYM<br /><cite>From the Engraving by Jacob Houbraken</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_257">257</a></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
- <td class="tdl">MAJOR CARTWRIGHT<br /><cite>From a Contemporary Drawing</cite></td>
- <td class="tdr"><a href="#ip_307">307</a></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_xi">xi</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak left b05" id="PREFACE">PREFACE</h2>
-</div>
-
-<div class="blockquot left p0">
-
-<p class="p0 in0 larger">“<i>Let us now praise famous men, and our<br />
-fathers who begat us.</i>”</p></div>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> names of the seventeen men, here
-named “Leaders of the People,” are for
-the most part familiar in our mouths as
-household words. Those who triumphed, like
-Anselm and Stephen Langton; or whose cause
-triumphed, like Simon of Montfort, Eliot, Pym and
-Hampden, are beyond any loss of fame. Those
-who in high place quitted themselves like men and
-died game (if the phrase may be permitted), as did
-Thomas Becket and Sir Thomas More, have, for all
-time, deservedly their reward. The unsuccessful
-rebels, FitzOsbert (called Longbeard), Wat Tyler,
-Jack Cade and Robert Ket, are hard put to get rid
-of the obloquy heaped upon them by contemporary
-authority; while the later rebels, equally unsuccessful,
-Lilburne, Winstanley, Major Cartwright and
-Ernest Jones, relying on the pen rather than the
-sword, escaped the hangman, and in so doing
-narrowly escaped oblivion. Good Bishop Grosseteste,
-living out his long life, thwarted often, but
-unmartyred, enjoys the reputation commonly awarded
-to conscientious public servants who die in harness.</p>
-
-<p>On the whole, re-perusing the records of these
-seventeen men, who would altogether reverse the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xii">xii</span>
-verdicts of time? The obloquy may be removed
-when the work of the rebels is fairly seen, and it
-may be judged that they deserved better of the State
-than appeared when they troubled its peace. The
-rebels of the pen, too, should be worthy of recollection
-in this age, for they wrought manfully with the
-weapon now at once so powerful and so popular.
-The greater men of our series stand out higher as
-the distance increases. So far readjusted, the
-awards of history may be accepted.</p>
-
-<p>But with all the differences of character, one common
-quality binds these men whose stories are here
-retold—a resolute hatred of oppression. And one
-common work, successful or unsuccessful, was theirs—to
-labour for the liberties of England and the
-health of its people. The value of each man’s work
-can only be stated approximately: it is difficult to
-make full allowance for the vastly different parts our
-heroes, statesmen and rebels alike, were called to
-play. The great thing is, that whatever the part,
-they played it faithfully, as they read it, to the end.
-We may admit the degrees of service given: it is
-impossible to do otherwise. Some of these Leaders
-shone as great orbs of light in their day and
-generation, lighting not only England, but all western
-Europe—and still their light burns true and clear
-across the centuries. Others were but flickering
-rush-lights—long extinct now. But none were will-o’-the-wisps,
-for all helped to show the road to be
-travelled by English men and women seeking free<span class="pagenum" id="Page_xiii">xiii</span>dom,
-and moving ever towards democracy. At the
-least, we—enjoying an inheritance won at a great
-price, and only to be retained on terms no easier—can
-keep the memory green of some few valiant servants
-of our liberties. What is wanted is a real history of
-the growth of the idea of freedom and of popular
-liberty in this country; and these rough biographical
-sketches may be accepted as a contribution to the
-materials for such a book. “Biography is a department
-of history, and stands to it as the life-history
-of a plant or an animal does to general biology.”</p>
-
-<p>I have gone back to all the original sources to get
-once more at the lives of these “Leaders of the
-People,” and to see them as they were seen by their
-contemporaries; but I have also done my best to
-read what the historians of our own day have written
-concerning them, and in mentioning my authorities
-I have, in each case, given a list of the modern
-books that seem to me valuable.</p>
-
-<p class="sigright">J. C.</p>
-
-<p><i>September, 1910.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_1">Archbishop Anselm and Norman Autocracy<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1093–1109</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Eadmer—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Historia Novorum</cite> and <cite>Life
-of Anselm</cite>; Orderic of St. Evroul; <cite>The English
-Chronicle</cite>; Florence of Worcester; William of Malmesbury;
-(Rolls Series); Sir Francis Palgrave—<cite>England
-and Normandy</cite>; Freeman—<cite>Norman Conquest</cite>, Vol. V.,
-<cite>Reign of William Rufus</cite>; Dean Church—<cite>St. Anselm</cite>.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_3" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p002.jpg" width="1573" height="1905" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>ARCHBISHOP ANSELM</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From an old French Engraving in the British Museum.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_3">3</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">ARCHBISHOP ANSELM AND<br />NORMAN AUTOCRACY
-<span class="subhead">1093–1109.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> first real check to the absolutism of
-Norman rule in England was given by
-Anselm, Archbishop of Canterbury.</p>
-
-<p>The turbulent ambition of Norman
-barons threatened the sovereignity of William the
-Conqueror and of his son, the Red King, often
-enough, but these outbreaks promised no liberty for
-England. The fires of English revolt were stamped
-out utterly five years after Senlac, and the great
-Conqueror at his death left England crushed; but he
-left it under the discipline of religion, and he left it
-loyal to the authority of the crown, grateful for
-the one protection against the lawless rule of the
-barons.</p>
-
-<p>The English Chronicler, writing as “one who
-knew him and once lived at his court,” summed up
-the character of the Conqueror’s life and work in
-words that have been freely quoted through the
-<span class="locked">centuries:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“King William was wiser and mightier than any
-of his forerunners. He built many minsters, and was
-gentle to God’s servants, though stern beyond all
-measure to those who withstood his will.... So
-stark and fierce was he that none dared resist his will.
-Earls that did aught against his bidding he put in
-bonds, and bishops he set off their bishoprics, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_4">4</span>
-abbots off their abbacies, and thanes he cast into
-prison. He spared not his own brother, called Odo,
-who was the chief man next to the king, but set him
-in prison. So just was he that the good peace he
-made in this land cannot be forgotten. For he
-made it so that a man might fare alone over his realm
-with his bosom full of gold, unhurt; and no man
-durst slay another man whatsoever the evil he hath
-done him; and if any man harmed a woman he was
-punished accordingly. He ruled over England, and
-surveyed the land with such skill that there was not
-one hide but that he knew who held it, and what
-it was worth, and these things he set in a written
-book. So mighty was he that he held Normandy
-and Brittany, won England and Maine, brought
-Scotland and Wales to bow to him, and would,
-had he lived two years longer, have won Ireland
-by his renown, without need of weapons. Yet
-surely in his time men had much travail and very
-many sorrows; and poor men he made to toil hard
-for the castles he had built. He fell on covetousness,
-and the love of gold; and took by right and
-by unright many marks of gold and more hundred
-pounds of silver of his people, and for little need.
-He made great deer-parks, and ordered that whoso
-slew hart or hind, him men should blind; and
-forbade men to slay deer or boar, and made the
-hare go free; he loved the big game as if he were
-their father. And the poor men that were oppressed
-he recked nought of. All must follow the king’s
-will if they would live, or have land, or even a quiet
-life.”</p>
-
-<p>But now, in September, 1087, the great King
-William was dead, with his life-work done; and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_5">5</span>
-from the tyranny of a strong and just ruler, England
-passed to the despotism of his fearless son, William
-the Red, who was “terrible and mighty over his
-land and his men and towards all his neighbours;”
-in whose reign “all that was loathsome in the eyes
-of God and righteous men was of common use;
-wherefore he was loathed by well-nigh all his
-people, and hateful to God as his end showed.”</p>
-
-<p>There was much of the later Puritan in William I.
-in the steadfastness of purpose, the suppression of
-“malignants,” and determination to have justice
-done, no less than in the sincerity for Church
-reform, and the deep respect for the ordinances
-of religion. No king of England worked more
-harmoniously with a strong archbishop than
-William I. with Lanfranc—save, perhaps, Charles I.
-with Laud.</p>
-
-<p>Then on the death of William I., followed less
-than two years later by Lanfranc’s, came the
-reaction in Church and State from the efforts after
-law, religion, and social decency under the Conqueror’s
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>The Red King had all his father’s sternness and
-strength, but was without any of that belief in
-justice, that faith in the Sovereign Power of a
-Living God, that desire for law and order, and
-that grave austerity in morals, which saved the
-Conqueror from baseness in his tyranny.</p>
-
-<p>William II., unmarried, made the wildest and
-most brutish profligacy fashionable at court. To
-pay for his debaucheries and extravagances he
-plundered all who could pay, in especial the Church,
-enjoying the revenues of all vacant sees and abbeys,
-and declining to fill up the vacancies so that this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_6">6</span>
-enjoyment might remain. After Lanfranc, as the
-king’s chief adviser, came Ranulf (nicknamed the
-Torch, or Firebrand), a coarse, unscrupulous bully,
-with the wit of a criminal lawyer. This man was
-made Bishop of Durham, and Justiciar. For him
-government meant nothing but the art of getting
-money for his royal master, and silencing all
-opposition.</p>
-
-<p>For over three years there was no Archbishop
-of Canterbury, and the Red King refused to fill
-up the vacancy caused by Lanfranc’s death, preferring
-to enjoy the revenues and possessions of
-the see; a thing that was shocking to all lovers
-of religion, and scandalous to those who cared for
-public decency and the good estate of the country.</p>
-
-<p>Eadmer, a contemporary, describes the condition
-of England in those early years of William <span class="locked">II.:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“The king seized the church at Canterbury, the
-mother of all England, Scotland, and Ireland, and
-the neighbouring isles; he bade his officers to make
-an inventory of all that belonged to it, within and
-without; and after he had fixed an allowance for
-the support of the monks who served God in that
-place, he ordered the remainder to be disposed of
-at a rent and brought under his domain. So he
-put up the Church of Christ to sale; giving the
-power of lordship over it to anyone who, however
-hurtful he might be, would bid the highest price.
-Every year, in wretched succession, a new rent
-was set; for the king would allow no bargain to
-remain settled, and whoever promised more ousted
-him who was paying less, unless the former tenant,
-giving up his original bargain, came up of his own
-accord to the offer of the later bidder: and every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_7">7</span>
-day might be seen, besides, the most abandoned
-of men on their business of collecting money for
-the king, marching about the cloisters of the
-monastery, heedless of the religious rule of God’s
-servants, and with fierce and savage looks giving
-their orders on all sides; uttering threats, lording
-it over every one, and showing their power to the
-utmost. What scandals and quarrels and irregularities
-arose from this I hate to remember. Some
-of the monks of the church were dispersed at the
-coming of this misfortune, and sent to other houses,
-and those who remained suffered many tribulations
-and indignities. What shall I say of the church
-tenants, ground down by such wasting and misery,
-that one might doubt, but that worse followed,
-whether escaping with bare life they could have
-been more cruelly oppressed. Nor did all this
-happen only at Canterbury. The same savage
-cruelty raged in all her daughter churches in
-England, which, when bishop or abbot died, at
-that time fell into widowhood. And this king,
-too, was the first who ordered this woeful oppression
-against the churches of God; he had inherited
-nothing of this sort from his father, but was alone
-in keeping the vacant churches in his own hands.
-And thus, wherever you looked, there was wretchedness
-before your eyes; and this distress lasted for
-nearly five years over the Church of Canterbury,
-always increasing, always, as time went on, growing
-more cruel and evil.”</p>
-
-<p>There is no word of exaggeration in this pitiful
-lament of Eadmer’s. England under William II.
-was at the mercy of a Norman whose notion of
-absolute monarchy was to bleed the land as a subject<span class="pagenum" id="Page_8">8</span>
-province. Courageous in battle he was, and skilful
-in arms, but utterly heedless of the welfare of the
-people he ruled. It was enough for the Red King
-if his demands for money were met. There was no
-one strong enough to gainsay his will, or stand
-before him as the prophets of old stood before the
-kings of Israel, until Anselm came to Canterbury.
-It is only in the utterances of men like Eadmer we
-learn something of the misery of the nation.<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">1</a></p>
-
-<p>The king was with his court at Gloucester at
-Christmas, 1092, and Anselm, then abbot of the
-famous monastery of Bec in Normandy, was in
-England at that time; partly to comfort his friend,
-Earl Hugh of Chester, who was sick, and partly to
-attend to the English affairs of his monastery.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm was known as the friend of Lanfranc.
-He had been a welcome guest at the court of the
-Conqueror and in the cloisters at Canterbury. His
-character stood high above all contemporaries in
-England or Normandy. Anselm was surely the right
-man to be made archbishop, and so put an end to a
-state of things which even to the turbulent barons
-was discreditable to the country.</p>
-
-<p>The Red King bade Anselm come to his court,
-and received him with great display of honour.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_9">9</span>
-Then came a private interview, and Anselm at once
-told the king how men spoke ill of his misrule:
-“Openly or secretly things were daily said of him
-by nearly all the men of his realm which were not
-seemly for the king’s dignity.” They parted, and
-Anselm was busy for some time in England. When
-the abbot wished to return to Bec William refused
-him leave to quit the country.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of Lent, March, 1093, the king
-was lying sick at Gloucester. It was believed the
-sickness was mortal. Certainly the king thought
-himself dying. Anselm was summoned to minister
-to him, and on his arrival bade the king “make a
-clean confession of all that he knows that he has
-done against God, and promise that, should he
-recover, he will without pretence amend in all things.
-The king at once agreed to this, and with sorrow of
-heart engaged to do all that Anselm required, and to
-keep justice and mercy all his life long. To this he
-pledged his faith, and made his bishops witnesses
-between himself and God, sending persons in his
-stead to promise his word to God on the altar. An
-Edict was written and sealed with the king’s seal
-that all prisoners should be set free in all his dominions,
-all debts forgiven, all offences heretofore committed
-pardoned and forgotten for ever. Further,
-good and holy laws were promised to the whole
-people, and the sacred upholding of right and such
-solemn inquest into wrongdoing as may deter
-others.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Eadmer.</p>
-
-<p>Florence of Worcester puts the matter more
-briefly. “When the king thought himself about to
-die he vowed to God, as his barons advised him, to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_10">10</span>
-amend his life, to sell no more churches nor farm
-them out, but to defend them by his kingly
-might, and to end all bad laws and to establish just
-laws.”</p>
-
-<p>There was still the vacant archbishopric to be
-filled, and the king named Anselm for Canterbury.</p>
-
-<p>In vain Anselm pleaded that he was an old man—he
-was then sixty—and unfit for so great a responsibility,
-that he was a monk and had shunned the
-business of the world.</p>
-
-<p>The bishops assembled round the sick king’s bed
-would not hear the refusal. Here was religion well
-nigh destroyed in England, and evil rampant, and
-the Church of God stricken almost to death, and at
-such a time was Anselm to prefer his own ease and
-quiet to the call to deliver Canterbury from its
-bondage? By main force they placed a pastoral
-staff within his hands, and while the crowd shouted
-“Long live the bishop!” he was “carried rather
-than led to a neighbouring church.” The king at
-once ordered that Anselm should be invested with
-all the temporal rights of the see, as Lanfranc had
-held them, and in September, 1093, Anselm was
-enthroned at Canterbury, and in December he was
-consecrated.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm warned the bishops and nobles when they
-forced the archbishopric upon him that they were
-making a mistake. “You have yoked to the plough
-a poor weak sheep with a wild bull,” he said. “This
-plough is the Church of God, and in England it has
-been drawn by two strong oxen, the king and the
-Archbishop of Canterbury, one to do justice and
-to hold power in the things of this world, the other
-to teach and govern in the things eternal. Now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_11">11</span>
-Lanfranc is dead, and with his untamed companion
-you have joined an old and feeble sheep.”</p>
-
-<p>That the king and the archbishop were unevenly
-yoked was manifest on William’s recovery, but it
-was no poor sheep with whom Rufus had to deal,
-but a man as brave and steadfast as he was gentle
-and wise.</p>
-
-<p>Trouble began at once when William rose from
-his sick-bed. Anselm was now enthroned and no
-attempt was made to revoke the appointment. But
-the king’s promises of public amendment were
-broken without hesitation. The pardoned prisoners
-were seized, the cancelled debts redemanded and the
-proceedings against offenders revived.</p>
-
-<p>“Then was there so great misery and suffering
-through the whole realm that no one can remember
-to have seen its like in England. All the evil
-which the king had wrought before he was sick
-seemed good by the side of the wrong which he did
-when he was returned to health.”</p>
-
-<p>The king wanting money for his expedition
-against his brother, Robert of Normandy, tried
-to persuade Anselm to allow the Church lands,
-bestowed since Lanfranc’s death on vassals of the
-crown on tenure of military service, to remain with
-their holders. He was answered by steady refusal.
-Had Anselm yielded, he would have been a party to
-the alienation of lands, that, as part of the property
-of the see, he was bound to administer for the
-common good; he would have been a party not
-only to the spoiling of the Church, but to the
-robbery of the poor and needy, whose claims, in
-those days, to temporal assistance from Church
-estates were not disputed. Any subsequent restitution<span class="pagenum" id="Page_12">12</span>
-of such lands was impossible, he foresaw, if it
-was shown that the archbishop had confirmed what
-the king had done.</p>
-
-<p>Then came the question of a present of money to
-the king. Anselm brought five hundred marks,
-and, but for his counsellors and men of arms, who
-told him the archbishop ought to have given twice
-as much, William would have taken the gift gladly
-enough. As it was, to show his dissatisfaction, the
-money was returned. Anselm went boldly to the
-king and warned him that money freely given was
-better than a forced tribute. To this frank rebuke
-of the extortion practised by the king’s servants,
-William answered that he wanted neither his money,
-nor his preaching, nor his company. Anselm retired
-not altogether displeased at the refusal, for too
-many of the clergy bought church offices by these
-free gifts after they were instituted. In vain his
-friends urged him to seek the king’s favour by
-increasing his present, Anselm gave the five hundred
-marks to the poor, and shook his head at the idea of
-buying the king’s favour.</p>
-
-<p>But if Anselm declined to walk in the path of
-corruption to oblige the king, William was equally
-resolute to make the path of righteousness a hard
-road for the archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>In February, 1094, when the Red King was at
-Hastings waiting to cross to Normandy, Anselm
-appealed to him to sanction a council of bishops,
-whose decisions approved by the crown should have
-the authority of law. There were two things for
-such a council to do: (1) stop the open vice and
-profligacy which ravaged the land; (2) find abbots
-for the many monasteries then without heads. In<span class="pagenum" id="Page_13">13</span>
-Anselm’s words, the council was “to restore the Christian
-religion which was well-nigh dead in so many.”</p>
-
-<p>William treated the request with angry contempt,
-and when Anselm sent bishops to him asking why
-the king refused him friendship, an evasive answer
-was returned.</p>
-
-<p>“Give him money,” said the bishops again to
-Anselm, “if you want peace with him. Give him the
-five hundred marks, and promise him as much more,
-and you will have the royal friendship. This, it
-seems to us, is the only way out of the difficulty.”</p>
-
-<p>But it was not Anselm’s way. He would not even
-offer what had been rejected. “Besides, the greater
-part of it was spent on the poor.”</p>
-
-<p>William burst out into wrathful speech when he
-was told of this reply. “Never will I hold him as
-my father and archbishop, and ever shall I hate him
-with bitter hatred. I hated him much yesterday,
-and to-day I hate him still more.”</p>
-
-<p>A year later (March, 1095) at a great council of
-bishops and nobles, held at the castle of Rockingham,
-the king’s hatred had full vent. From the first
-the Archbishop of Canterbury received from the
-Pope a <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">pallium</i>, the white woollen stole with four
-crosses, which was “the badge of his office and
-dignity,”<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> and Anselm was anxious to journey to
-Rome to obtain his pallium from Pope Urban. William
-objected to this on the ground that there was
-another claimant to the papacy, and that until he
-had decided who was the rightful pope no one in
-England had a right to do so. In vain Anselm<span class="pagenum" id="Page_14">14</span>
-pointed out that he, with all Normandy, had acknowledged
-Urban before he had become archbishop.
-William retorted angrily that Anselm could only
-keep his faith to the Apostolic See by breaking his
-faith to the king.</p>
-
-<p>The council of Rockingham met to settle the
-question—not the question of the supremacy of
-Rome in Western Christendom<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">3</a>—but the question
-whether, in England, there was any higher authority
-than the crown. William did not pretend to
-dispute the papal supremacy in the Church. His
-claim was that the king alone must first acknowledge
-the pope before any of his subjects could do
-so. In reality the king’s one desire was “to take
-from Anselm all authority for maintaining the
-Christian religion. For as long as any one in all
-the land was said to hold any power except through
-him, even in the things of God, it seemed to him
-that the royal dignity was diminished.” (Eadmer.)
-William acknowledged Pope Urban readily enough,
-but he would have Archbishop Anselm understand
-that the papacy must be acknowledged by permission
-of the king of England. That was the
-real ground of contention between these two men:
-was there any power on earth higher in England
-than the English crown? According to William, to
-appeal to Rome was to dispute the absolutism of the
-crown. Anselm maintained that in all things of
-God he must render obedience to the Chief
-Shepherd and Prince of the Church, to the Vicar<span class="pagenum" id="Page_15">15</span>
-of St. Peter; and in matters of earthly dignity he
-must render counsel and service to his lord the king.</p>
-
-<p>The bishops at Rockingham were the king’s
-men. Many of them had bought their bishoprics,
-all were afraid of the royal displeasure. The stand
-made by Anselm, unsupported though he was, did
-something to inspire a better courage in the ranks of
-the clergy<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">4</a>; but in that Lent of 1095 there was no
-sign of support for the archbishop. William only
-wanted to break the will of this resolute old man,
-the one man in all the kingdom who dared to have
-a mind and utterance of his own, and the mitred
-creatures of the king supported their lord even to
-the point of recommending the forcible deposition
-of Anselm from his see, or at least of depriving him
-of the staff and ring of office. With one consent
-the bishops accepted the king’s suggestion of
-renouncing all obedience to Anselm.</p>
-
-<p>But the barons were not so craven. To the
-king’s threat, “No man shall be mine, who will be
-his” (Anselm’s), the nobles said bluntly that not
-having taken any oath of fealty to the archbishop
-they could not abjure it. And Anselm was their
-archbishop. “It is his work to govern the Christian
-religion in this land, and we who are Christians
-cannot deny his guidance while we live here.”</p>
-
-<p>The three days’ conference at Rockingham ended
-in disappointment to the hopes of William of absolute
-autocracy, and in general contempt for the prelates
-whose abject servility had availed nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm alone stood higher in the eyes of the men<span class="pagenum" id="Page_16">16</span>
-of England, and greater was the ill-will of William.
-For another two years Anselm held his ground
-against the king. The pallium was brought from
-Rome by Walter, Bishop of Albano, and placed on
-the altar at Canterbury, and Anselm was content
-to take it from the altar. William had written in
-vain to Pope Urban praying for the deposition of
-Anselm, and promising a large annual tribute to
-Rome if his prayer was granted. The pope, of
-course, declined to do anything of the sort, and
-William had to make the best of the situation. He
-wanted money for his own purposes, and his barons
-were now against him in his quarrel with the archbishop.
-For a time William adopted a semblance
-of peace with Anselm, but his anger soon blazed
-out again. The ground of complaint this time was
-that the soldiers whom the archbishop had sent to
-the king for his military expedition against Wales
-were inadequate—without proper equipment, and
-unfit for service. The archbishop was summoned to
-appear before the King’s Court to “do the king right.”</p>
-
-<p>From the time of his acceptance of the archbishopric,
-Anselm had been hoping against hope
-that the king would support him, as the Conqueror
-had supported Lanfranc, in the building up of the
-Christian religion in England—this summons to
-the King’s Court was the death-blow to all these
-hopes. The defendant in the King’s Court was at
-the mercy of the king, who could pronounce whatever
-judgment he pleased.<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> Anselm returned no
-answer to the summons, but his mind was made up.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_17">17</span></p>
-
-<p>“Having knowledge that the king’s word ruled
-all judgment in the King’s Court, where nothing was
-listened to except what the king willed, it seemed to
-Anselm unbecoming that he should contend, as if
-disputing, as litigants do, about a matter of words,
-and should submit the justice of his cause to the
-judgment of a court where neither law, nor equity,
-nor reason prevailed. So he held his peace, and
-gave no answer to the messenger.” (Eadmer.)</p>
-
-<p>From the despotism of the Red King Anselm
-would turn for justice to the centre of Christendom.
-In England he was impotent to stem the evil that
-flowed from the savage absolutism of the throne.
-All that one man could do to resist the royal
-tyranny Anselm had done, and now this summons to
-the King’s Court was the final answer to all his
-efforts to restrain a lawless king, and to promote the
-Christian religion in England. He would not go
-through the farce of pleading in the King’s Court,
-where judgment was settled by the unbridled caprice
-of the king, self-respect forbade the archbishop from
-that; he would appeal to the only court on earth
-higher than the courts of kings—the court whose
-head, in those days, was the head of Christendom.<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">6</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_18">18</span></p>
-
-<p>William dropped the summons to the King’s
-Court, and for a time refused permission to Anselm
-to leave the country. Bishops and barons now
-urged Anselm not to persist in his appeal to Rome.
-But the archbishop was resolute, and in the autumn
-of 1097 the king yielded, and Anselm left the
-country.<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">7</a></p>
-
-<p>The first campaign against despotism in England
-was over—the battle was to be renewed when
-Henry I. wore the crown.</p>
-
-<p>At Rome Pope Urban, with all the goodwill in
-the world, and with a very real affection and regard
-for Anselm, could do nothing against the Red King
-except rebuke his envoys, and do honour to the
-much-tried archbishop. Anselm himself prevented
-the excommunication of William when it was proposed
-at the Council of Bari, October, 1098.</p>
-
-<p>But Pope Urban would not allow Anselm to
-resign his archbishopric, and this in spite of all
-Anselm’s entreaties.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1099 came a General Council at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_19">19</span>
-Rome—at which Anselm assisted—a council remarkable
-for its decision against allowing clergy to
-receive investiture of churches from the hands of
-laymen, and by so doing to become the vassals of
-temporal lords. Excommunication was declared to
-be the penalty for all who gave or received Church
-appointments on such conditions.</p>
-
-<p>It was at the close of this council that an outspoken
-Bishop of Lucca called attention to Anselm’s
-case. “One sits amongst us in silence and meekness
-who has come from the far ends of the earth.
-His very silence cries aloud. His humility and
-patience, so gentle and so deep, as they rise to God
-should set us on fire. This one man has come here,
-wronged and afflicted, seeking judgment and justice
-of the Apostolic See. And now this is the second
-year, and what help has he found?”</p>
-
-<p>Pope Urban answered that attention should be
-given, but nothing further was done.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm left Rome and went to Lyons, remaining
-in France until the death of William in August,
-1100. Henry was at once chosen king in his room,
-and crowned at Westminster three days after his
-brother’s death. Six weeks later, at Henry’s earnest
-request—he prayed him “to come back like a father
-to his son Henry and the English people”—Anselm
-landed at Dover and returned to take up the task
-allotted to him on his consecration as archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>Henry at the outset of his reign promised “God
-and all the people” that the old scandals of selling and
-farming out the Church lands should be stopped,
-and “to put down all unrighteousness that had been
-in his brother’s time, and to hold the best laws that
-ever stood in any king’s day before him.” That this<span class="pagenum" id="Page_20">20</span>
-charter was of value may be taken from the verdict
-on the king by the Chronicler of the time. “Good
-man he was and great awe there was of him. No
-man durst misdo against another in his day. He
-made peace for man and beast. Whoso carried a
-burden of gold and silver no man durst do him
-wrong.”</p>
-
-<p>Two evils that pressed very hardly on the mass
-of hard-working people, the devastation that attended
-the king’s progress through the land<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">8</a>, and the coining
-of false money, were at Anselm’s instigation
-checked by the king.</p>
-
-<p>But with all Henry’s desire for the restoration of
-religion and law in the land, he was the Conqueror’s
-son, and for Anselm the struggle against absolutism
-in government was not yet over. Only now the
-battle was not with a fierce, untamed despot like the
-Red King, but with an autocrat of an even more
-formidable type, a stern man of business, in whose
-person alone must be found the source of all law
-and order, and who would brook no questioning of
-the royal will.</p>
-
-<p>At the beginning of his reign Henry found the
-archbishop’s loyalty and good sense invaluable. As
-Lanfranc had stood by the Conqueror in a marriage
-which was objectionable from the point of view of
-Church law, so Anselm stood by his son when he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_21">21</span>
-sought the hand of Edith, daughter of the sainted
-Queen Margaret of Scotland. Here the objection
-to the marriage was not on the grounds of affinity or
-consanguinity, but in the fact that Edith was an
-inmate of the convent at Romsey, and, it was alleged,
-a professed nun. Edith insisted that she had but
-taken refuge in the convent to obtain the protection
-of her aunt Christina, the abbess, and she had worn
-the habit of a nun as a safeguard against the brutal
-passions of the Red King and his courtiers. The
-fear of violence at the hands of the Normans had
-driven women to take the veil, and Lanfranc had
-been known to grant release from vows taken under
-such mortal pressure. Anselm was not the man to
-exalt the letter of the law above the spirit of liberty.
-He was content that a council of the great men in
-Church and State should hold an inquiry, and on
-their verdict declaring Edith free of her vows, the
-archbishop gave his blessing on the marriage.</p>
-
-<p>The same great qualities of loyalty and good
-sense made Anselm stand by the king when the
-Norman lords, pricked on by Ranulf the Torch, the
-rascally Bishop of Durham (who had escaped from
-imprisonment in the Tower by making his gaolers
-drunk), and hating Henry for “his English ways,”
-proposed to back up Robert of Normandy in his
-attempts to seize the crown. According to Eadmer,
-but for Anselm’s faithfulness and labours, which
-turned the scale when so many were wavering, King
-Henry would have lost the sovereignty of the realm
-of England at that time.</p>
-
-<p>But Anselm’s services to the king are of small
-account by the side of his services to English liberty,
-and Anselm’s resistance to Henry’s demands for an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_22">22</span>
-absolute monarchy was of lasting influence in the
-centuries that followed.<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">9</a></p>
-
-<p>The struggle began when Henry called upon
-Anselm for a new declaration of homage to the
-crown, and required him to receive the archbishopric
-afresh by a new act of investiture. This was a
-claim that had never been made before. “It imported
-that on the death of the sovereign the archbishop’s
-commission expired, that his office was subordinate
-and derivative, and the dignity therefore reverted to
-the crown.” (Sir F. Palgrave.)</p>
-
-<p>Anselm met the demand with the answer that
-such a course was impossible. Nay, the very ecclesiastical
-“customs” which for some time past had given
-the appointment of bishops and abbots to the crown,
-and had made the bishops “the king’s men” by obliging
-them to do homage and to receive investiture of
-their office with ring and staff at the royal hands, were
-now impossible for Anselm. The Council at the
-Lateran, at which Anselm had been present, had
-forbidden the bishops of the Church to become the
-vassals of the kings of the earth, and Anselm was
-not the man to question this decision. He had seen
-only too much, under William the Red, of the curse
-of royal supremacy in the Church. He had stood up
-alone against the iniquities of misrule, just because
-the bishops, who should have been pastors and overseers
-of a Christian people, were the sworn creatures
-of the king. Henceforth it was forbidden by the
-authority that rested in the seat of St. Peter at Rome
-for a bishop to receive consecration as a king’s vassal.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_23">23</span></p>
-
-<p>But if Anselm would be no party to what had
-become an intolerable evil, Henry would not give
-up the rights his father had exercised without a
-contest. He was willing to do his best for the
-Church, but it must be in his own way. “Pledging
-himself in his own heart and mind not to abate a
-jot of his supremacy over the clergy, he would
-exercise his authority in Church affairs somewhat
-more decently than his father, and a great deal
-more than his brother; but that was all.” (Sir F.
-Palgrave.)</p>
-
-<p>Both Henry and Anselm recognized the gravity
-of the issue. Were the bishops and abbots to
-continue to receive investiture from the king they
-were “his men,” and his autocracy was established
-over all. Stop the investiture and the bishops were
-first and chiefly the servants of the Most High,
-acknowledging a sovereignty higher than that
-exercised by the princes of this world, and preferring
-loyalty to the Church Catholic and its
-Father at Rome, to blind obedience to the crown.</p>
-
-<p>In brief, the question in dispute really was—Was
-there, or was there not, any power on earth greater
-than the English crown?—a question which no
-English king before Henry VIII. answered successfully
-in the negative. In contending for the freedom
-of the bishops of the Church from vassalage to the
-crown, Anselm was contending for the existence of
-an authority to which even kings should pay
-allegiance. It was not the rights of the clergy
-that were at stake, for the terrors of excommunication
-did not prevent bishops from receiving
-consecration on Henry’s terms, and Anselm stood
-alone now, as in the days of the Red King, in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_24">24</span>
-resistance to despotism. It was the feeling and
-the knowledge, which Anselm shared with the best
-churchmen of his day, that great as the power of
-the king must be, it was a bad thing for such power
-to exist unchecked, and that it were well for the
-world that its mightiest monarchs should know
-there was a spiritual dominion given to the successor
-of St. Peter, and to his children, a dominion
-of divine foundation that claimed obedience even
-from kings.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm put it to the king that the canons of
-the Church, and the decrees of a great council
-had forbidden the “customs” of investiture which
-the king claimed; and he pleaded that he was an
-old man, and that unless he could work with the
-king on the acceptance of the Church canons, it
-was no use his remaining in England, “for he
-could not hold communion with those who broke
-these laws”: Henry, for his part, was much disturbed.
-It was a grave matter to lose the investiture
-of churches, and the homage of prelates; it
-was a grave matter, too, to let Anselm leave the
-country while he himself was hardly established
-in the kingdom. “On the one side it seemed
-to him that he should be losing, as it were,
-half of his kingdom; on the other, he feared lest
-Anselm should make his brother Robert King of
-England,”—for Robert might easily be brought to
-submit to the Apostolic See if he could be made
-king on such terms.</p>
-
-<p>Henry suggested an appeal to the pope on the
-question of the right of the crown to “invest” the
-bishops, and Anselm, who all along was anxious
-for peace—if peace could be obtained without<span class="pagenum" id="Page_25">25</span>
-acknowledgment of royal absolutism—at once
-agreed.</p>
-
-<p>The pope, of course, could not grant Henry’s
-request. To allow the high offices of the Church
-to be disposed of at the caprice of kings and princes,
-without any recognition of the sacredness of these
-offices, to admit that the chief ministers of religion
-were first and foremost “the king’s men,” seemed
-to Pope Paschal, as it seemed to Anselm, a concession
-to evil, and the establishment of a principle
-which experience had proved thoroughly vicious
-and mischievous.</p>
-
-<p>Then for nearly three years a correspondence
-dragged on between Henry and the pope, neither
-wishing for an open rupture, and in the meantime,
-Henry, backed by most of the bishops and nobles
-in setting at nought the canons which had forbidden
-investiture, proposed to go on appointing and investing
-new bishops as before.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, the king appealed to Anselm to go to
-Rome “and try what he could do with the pope,
-lest the king by losing the rights of his predecessors
-should be disgraced.”</p>
-
-<p>Anselm was now (1103) an old man of seventy,
-but he agreed to go; only “he could do nothing
-to the prejudice of the liberty of the Church or his
-own honour.” What Henry hoped for was that the
-pope would grant some personal dispensation in the
-matter of the royal “customs,” and he had tried to
-persuade Anselm that such dispensation was sure
-to be granted. Anselm did not believe the dispensation
-possible or desirable, but left the decision
-with the acknowledged head of Christendom at
-Rome; and though for another three years Henry<span class="pagenum" id="Page_26">26</span>
-urged his suit, no dispensation could be wrung from
-the pope. All that the pope would grant was that
-the bishops might do “homage” to the crown for
-their temporal rights.</p>
-
-<p>At last, in April, 1106, Anselm returned to
-England. The bishops themselves, who had sided
-with the king against him, implored him to return,
-so wretched had become the state of religion in
-England in his absence. They promised to do his
-commands and to fight with him the battle of the
-Lord.</p>
-
-<p>Henry, fresh from the conquest of Normandy,
-sent word of his good-will, and of his desire for
-the archbishop’s presence. The long drawn-out
-battle was over, and the king had to be content with
-“homage,” and to resign the claim to investiture.</p>
-
-<p>“On August 1st (1107) an assembly of bishops,
-abbots, and chief men of the realm, was held in
-London, in the king’s palace, and for three days
-the matter of the investiture of churches was fully
-discussed between the king and the bishops in
-Anselm’s absence. Then, in the presence of
-Anselm and before the whole multitude, the king
-granted and decreed that henceforth and for ever
-no one should be invested in England with bishopric
-or abbey by staff and ring, either by the king or the
-hand of any layman; while Anselm allowed that no
-one chosen for a bishopric should be refused consecration
-for having done homage to the king.
-This having been settled, the king, by the counsel
-of Anselm and the chief men of the realm, appointed
-priests in nearly all those churches in England
-which had long been widowed of their pastors.”
-(Eadmer.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_27">27</span></p>
-
-<p>Victory rested with Anselm. The old archbishop
-had done his best for the liberty of religion, and by
-contending for this liberty he had wrought for
-common freedom.<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">10</a> Later ages and struggles were
-to bring out more clearly that some measure of
-political and social liberty must follow the demand
-for freedom in religion. “Religious forces, and
-religious forces alone, have had sufficient influence
-to ensure practical realisation for political ideas.”
-(Figgis, <cite>Studies of Political Thought</cite>.)</p>
-
-<p>Anselm’s life was nearly over, his work was accomplished,
-a philosophical treatise “Concerning the
-agreement of Foreknowledge, Predestination and
-the Grace of God with Free Will” was written with
-difficulty in the last years. Then his appetite failed
-him, and all food became loathsome. At last he was
-persuaded to take to his bed, and on April 21st, 1109—the
-Wednesday of Holy Week—at daybreak
-Anselm passed away.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm’s name has long been enrolled in the
-calendar of the saints of the Church Catholic, no less
-is it to be cherished by all who love liberty. Well
-may it be said of him, “he was ever a close follower
-of Truth, and walked in noble companionship with
-Pity and Courage.” Anselm’s plain good sense and
-charity were conspicuous in his benediction of the
-marriage of Henry and Edith, but these great
-qualities were earlier displayed when Lanfranc consulted
-him as to the claims of the English Archbishop
-Ælphege to be canonised as a martyr.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_28">28</span>
-Ælphege had been slain by the Danes for refusing
-to ransom his life at the expense of his tenants;
-and Anselm replied to Lanfranc that he who would
-die rather than oppress his tenants dies for justice’
-sake, and he who dies for justice dies a martyr for
-Christ.</p>
-
-<p>His sympathy and humaneness shone out a
-thousand times. There is the story Eadmer tells of
-an abbot, who came to Anselm at Bec, and deplored
-that he could do no good with the boys at his
-monastery. “In spite of all we do they are perverse
-and incorrigible,” said the abbot, despondently.
-“We are always beating them, but they only get
-worse: and though we constrain them in every way
-we can, it’s all of no use.” “<em>Constrain</em> them!”
-answered Anselm. “Tell me, my lord abbot, when
-you plant a tree in your garden, do you so tie it up
-that it cannot stretch forth its branches? And if
-you did so, what sort of tree would it become a few
-years hence when you released it? But this is just
-what you do with your boys. You cramp them in
-with terrors and threats and blows, so that it is quite
-impossible for them to grow or enjoy any freedom.
-And kept down in this way their temper is spoilt by
-evil thoughts of hatred and suspicion against you,
-and they put down all you do to ill-nature and dislike.
-Why are you so harsh with them? Are they not
-human beings of the same nature as yourself? How
-would you like to be treated as you treat them?”
-The abbot was finally persuaded that he had been
-all wrong. “We have wandered,” he said, “from
-the way of truth, and the light of discretion hath not
-shone on us.”</p>
-
-<p>There is another story which gives Anselm’s pity<span class="pagenum" id="Page_29">29</span>
-and feeling of kinship with the whole animal
-creation. It was when he was archbishop, and was
-riding one day from Windsor to Hayes that a hare
-chased by the dogs of some of his company took
-refuge under the feet of his horse. Anselm at once
-pulled up and forebade the hare to be molested, and
-when his escort laughed gleefully at the capture, the
-archbishop said: “You may laugh, but it is no
-laughing matter for this poor unhappy creature,
-which is like the soul of a departing man pursued
-by evil spirits. Mortal enemies attack it, and it
-flies to us for its life: and while it turns to us
-for safety we laugh.” He rode on, and in a loud
-voice forbade the dogs to touch the hare; which,
-glad to be at liberty, darted off to the fields and
-woods.</p>
-
-<p>That Anselm never wavered in his tenderness for
-the weak and oppressed may be learnt from the
-great Church Synod held at Westminster in
-1102—a council summoned on the strong request
-of the archbishop. The slave trade was specially
-denounced at this council as a “wicked trade used
-hitherto in England, by which men are sold like
-brute animals,” and a canon was drawn up to that
-effect.</p>
-
-<p>Anselm’s enduring courage and desire for truth
-are conspicuous all his life. He fought single-handed
-against both William and Henry, and no
-weight of numbers, no world-wise talk from other
-prelates could make him budge. If he withstood
-the Red King and his court at Rockingham, equally
-firm was he in withstanding the Norman barons
-who were inclined to break away from their sworn
-allegiance to Henry. No Englishman by birth or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_30">30</span>
-blood was Anselm, for he was born at Aosta, and
-spent the greater part of his life on the Continent,
-but he brought to England the finest gifts of life,
-and gave them freely in service to England’s liberty.
-He withstood an absolutism that threatened the
-total enslavement of the nation, and the witness he
-bore to liberty was taken up and renewed in the
-centuries that followed. “Anselm was truly a great
-man. So good that he was held a saint in his very
-lifetime, so meek that even his enemies honoured
-him, so wise that he was the foremost thinker of his
-day, and the forerunner of the greatest philosophers
-of ours.” (F. York Powell.)</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_2">Thomas of Canterbury<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">The Defender of the Poor</span>
-<span class="subhead">1162–1170</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Benedict of Peterborough; Garnier;
-William FitzStephen; John of Salisbury; Herbert of
-Bosham; Alan of Tewkesbury; Edward Grim; Roger
-of Pontigny; William of Canterbury; Robert of Cricklade—<cite>Materials
-for the History of Thomas Becket</cite>,
-7 vols.; <cite>Thomas Saga</cite> (Icelandic), translated by Magnusson;
-Giraldus Cambrensis; Gervase of Canterbury;
-William of Newburgh; Roger of Hoveden, III.; Ralph
-Diceto (Rolls Series); Froude, R. H.—<cite>Remains</cite>,
-Vol. 3; <cite>Life of Becket</cite>, by Canon J. C. Robertson;
-<cite>Life of St. Thomas Becket</cite>, by John Morris, S.J.;
-Stubbs—<cite>Constitutional History</cite>, Vol. I; Freeman—<cite>Historical
-Essays</cite>, 1st Series; W. H. Hutton—<cite>English
-History by Contemporary Writers</cite>—<cite>St. Thomas
-of Canterbury</cite>.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_33" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p032.jpg" width="1745" height="2640" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>THOMAS A BECKET</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From an old Engraving after Van Eyck.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_33">33</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">THOMAS OF CANTERBURY<br />
-THE DEFENDER OF THE POOR
-<span class="subhead">1162–1170</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">Fifty</span> years after the death of Anselm the
-struggle with absolute monarchy had to
-be renewed in England, and again the
-Archbishop of Canterbury was the antagonist
-of the crown, standing alone for the most part, as
-Anselm stood, in his resistance to autocracy.</p>
-
-<p>The contrast is great between the upbringing and
-character of Anselm and of Thomas; but both men
-gave valiant service in the cause of liberty in
-England, and both are placed in the calendar of
-the saints. For Thomas and Anselm alike the
-choice was between the favour of the King of
-England, the safe broad road of passive obedience,
-and the following of the call of conscience on the
-craggy way of royal displeasure; and to the everlasting
-honour of these two men, and of the religion
-they professed, they chose the steep and narrow
-path with no faltering step, and followed the gleam,
-heedless of this world’s glory, heedless of life itself.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas was no monk as Anselm was, when the
-king nominated him for the archbishopric of Canterbury.
-His early life was not spent in the cloister
-but in the employment of a wealthy London sheriff,
-in the office of Archbishop Theobald, at Lambeth,
-and as Chancellor of England.</p>
-
-<p>The son of gentle parents—his father Gilbert<span class="pagenum" id="Page_34">34</span>
-sometime sheriff—“London citizens of the middle
-class, not usurers nor engaged in business, but living
-well on their own income,” according to FitzStephen,
-Thomas was the first Englishman to be made archbishop.
-His gifts marked him out for high office.
-Theobald had sent him abroad to study law at the
-great school at Bologna, and at the age of 36 made
-him archdeacon of Canterbury, at that time “the
-dignity in the Church of England next after the
-bishops and abbots, and which brought him an
-hundred pounds of silver.” A year later, 1155, the
-young newly crowned king, Henry II., on the advice
-of old Archbishop Theobald, made Thomas the
-Chancellor. Theobald, anxious about the present,
-and apprehensive for the future—for the king was
-very young, and those about him were known to
-be hostile to the freedom of the Church and willing
-to treat England as a conquered land—sought to
-prevent the evils which seemed to be at hand by
-making Thomas a partner of the King’s counsels.
-He could say, after ten years’ experience, that
-Thomas was high-principled and prudent, wisely
-zealous for justice, and whole-hearted for the freedom
-of the Church, and he held forth to the king on
-the wisdom, the courage and the faithfulness of his
-archdeacon, “and the admirable sweetness of his
-manners.”</p>
-
-<p>The appointment was made, nor could anyone
-say that it was ill done, or that Theobald in his
-recommendation, or Henry II. in his acceptance, of
-Thomas for the chancellorship could have done
-better for England.</p>
-
-<p>The chancellor was magnificent, and his dignity
-was accounted second from the king. Nobles sent<span class="pagenum" id="Page_35">35</span>
-their children to Thomas to be trained in his service.
-The king commended to him his son, the heir to
-the throne. Barons and knights did homage to
-him. On his embassy to the French king never
-had been seen such a retinue of followers, and such
-a lavish display of the wealth and grandeur of
-England. The proud and mighty he treated with
-harshness and violence. Yet it was said, by those
-who knew him intimately, that he was lowly in his
-own eyes, and gentle and meek to those who were
-humble in heart. And in the courts of kings, where
-chastity is never commonly extolled, or purity of
-life the fashion, Thomas, the chancellor, was known
-for his cleanness of living and his unblemished
-honour. Many enemies he had, many who hated
-him for his power; but never was breath of scandal
-uttered against the chancellor’s private life, or
-suggestion made that the carnal lusts and appetites
-which, unbridled, play havoc with men great and
-small, could claim Thomas for their subject.</p>
-
-<p>He might be reproached by a monk for that he,
-being an archdeacon, lived so secular a life, wearing
-the dress of a courtier, and charging on the field
-with knights in France, but it could not be alleged
-that church or realm suffered neglect from the
-chancellor. “By divine inspiration and the
-counsel of Thomas, the lord king did not long
-retain vacant bishoprics and abbacies, so that the
-patrimony of the Crucified might be brought into
-the treasury, as was afterwards done, but bestowed
-them with little delay on honourable persons, and
-according to God’s law.” (W. FitzStephen.)</p>
-
-<p>The close friendship and warm affection of the
-king for his chancellor were known to all. When<span class="pagenum" id="Page_36">36</span>
-the day’s business was done “they would play together
-like boys of the same age.” They sat together
-in church and hall and rode out together. “Never
-in Christian times were there two men more of one
-mind or better friends.” It was natural on the
-death of Archbishop Theobald, in 1161, that people
-should point to Thomas as his successor, though the
-chancellor shrank, as Anselm had done, from the
-post.</p>
-
-<p>“I know three poor priests in England any one
-of whom I would rather see advanced to the archbishopric
-than myself,” he declared earnestly, when
-his friend the prior of Leicester (who also remonstrated
-with him for his unclerical dress) told him
-the rumours of the court. “For as for me, if I was
-appointed, I know the king so through and through
-that I should be forced either to lose his favour or,
-which God forbid, to lay aside the service of God.”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas uttered the same warning to Henry
-when the king proposed the primacy to him. “I
-know certainly,” he said, “that if God should so dispose
-that this happen, you would soon turn away
-your love, and the favour which is now between us
-would be changed into bitterest hate. I know that
-you would demand many things in Church matters,
-for already you have demanded them, which I could
-never bear quietly, and the envious would take occasion
-to provoke an endless strife between us.”</p>
-
-<p>But Henry’s mind was made up. Residing
-largely in France, he would have Thomas, Archbishop
-of Canterbury and Chancellor, to rule England
-as his vice-regent. Six years had Thomas been
-the king’s friend and chancellor, but the king did
-not know at all the real character of his man, or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_37">37</span>
-rather it was inconceivable to the royal mind that
-Thomas, whom the king had raised from a mere
-nobody, from Archdeacon of Canterbury, an important
-ecclesiastic at best, to the chief man in the
-realm, should ever dare set himself at variance with
-the king’s will. Henry, with his untiring energy,
-was earnest enough for good government in Church
-and State under an absolute monarchy, and he
-counted on greater co-operation with Thomas in
-carrying out his plans, were the latter archbishop.
-Hitherto, more than once the chancellor had succeeded
-in moderating the king’s outbursts of wrath
-against some hapless offender, but he had never
-shown himself a partisan of the clergy at the expense
-of the commonwealth,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">11</a> and his lack of pride in his
-order had even incurred rebuke, so little of the
-ecclesiastic did this statesman appear.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas understood the king better than the king
-understood his chancellor. But his protests were in
-vain. He was as surely marked for the archbishopric
-as Anselm had been. Bishops of the
-province approved and the monks of Canterbury
-duly voted for the king’s chancellor in common consent,
-Gilbert Foliot, the Bishop of Hereford, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_38">38</span>
-afterwards of London, and the archbishop’s enemy
-to the end, alone opposing the election.</p>
-
-<p>“Then the archbishop-elect was by the king’s authority
-declared free of all debts to the crown and given
-free to the Church of England, and in that freedom
-he was received by the Church with the customary
-hymns and words of praise.” (Herbert of Bosham.)</p>
-
-<p>On June 2nd, 1162, the Saturday after Whit
-Sunday, Thomas was ordained priest and on the
-following day consecrated bishop. (The new archbishop
-instituted the festival of Trinity Sunday to
-commemorate his consecration, and some 200 years
-later the festival was made of general observance in
-the Catholic Church.) The king realised the mistake
-he had made within a year of the consecration.
-The brilliant chancellor was no sooner archbishop
-than he turned from all the gaieties of the world,
-and while no less a statesman, adopted the life of his
-monks—though never himself a monk—at Canterbury.
-Henceforth Archbishop Thomas was the
-unflinching champion of the poor and them that had
-no helper, the resolute defender of the liberties of
-the Church against all who would make religion
-subject to the autocracy of the king of England.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas was forty-four years old, in the full
-strength of his manhood, when he was made archbishop,
-and for eight years he did battle with the
-crown, only laying down his charge at the call of
-martyrdom.</p>
-
-<p>The first disappointment to Henry was the resignation
-of the chancellor’s seal.<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">12</a> It was clear to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_39">39</span>
-Thomas that he could no longer serve the crown and
-do the work of a Christian bishop at the same time,
-and he had accepted with full sense of responsibility
-the see of Canterbury. There was no room for the
-egotism that loves power, the vaulting ambition
-that o’erleaps itself, or even the self-deception that
-persuades a man holding to high position at sacrifice
-of principle that his motive is disinterested, in St.
-Thomas of Canterbury. More than once England
-was to see in later years men who strove vainly to
-serve with equal respect the Christian religion and
-the royal will—the service always ended in the
-triumph of the latter. Thomas was far too clearly-sighted
-to imagine such joint service possible, and
-for him, elected and consecrated to the primacy of
-the English Church, there was no longer any choice.
-As chancellor, keeping his conscience clear, he had
-done the best he could for law and order as the
-king’s right hand man. As Archbishop of Canterbury
-his duty, first and foremost, was to maintain
-the Christian religion and defend the cause of the
-poor and needy.</p>
-
-<p>But to Henry the resignation of the chancellorship
-was an act of desertion, a declared challenge to
-the royal supremacy. Henry II. was no more the
-man than his grandfather Henry I. had been to brook
-anything that threatened resistance to the king’s
-rule.</p>
-
-<p>Courtiers who hated Thomas were always at hand
-to poison the ears of the king by defaming the archbishop,
-and this, says William FitzStephen, was the
-first cause of the trouble. Another cause was the
-hatred of the king for the clergy of England, hatred
-provoked by the notoriously disreputable lives of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_40">40</span>
-more than one clerk in holy orders. The battle
-between Henry and Thomas began on this matter of
-criminous clerks.</p>
-
-<p>William the Conqueror and Lanfranc recognizing
-that the Church, strong and well ordered, made for
-national well-being, had set up ecclesiastical courts
-wherein all matters affecting church law and discipline
-were to be dealt with by the clergy, to the
-end that the clergy should not be mixed up in lawsuits
-and should be excluded from the lay courts.
-Henry II. was not satisfied that criminous clerks
-were adequately dealt with in these ecclesiastical
-courts, where no penalty involving bloodshed might
-be inflicted, and where the savage punishments of
-mutilation had no place. Thomas was as anxious as
-the king for the Church to be purged of abuses, but
-he was resolved not to hand over offenders to the
-secular arm. The archbishop was an ardent
-reformer. “He plucked up, pulled down, scattered
-and rooted out whatever he found amiss in the vineyard
-of the Lord,” wrote a contemporary; but he
-would shelter his flock as far as he could by the
-canon law from the hideous cruelties of the King’s
-Courts.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">13</a> It was not for the protection of the clergy
-alone the archbishop was fighting in the councils
-summoned by the king at Westminster in 1163, and
-at Clarendon in 1164.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_41">41</span></p>
-
-<p>“Ecclesiastical privileges were not so exclusively
-priestly privileges as we sometimes fancy. They
-sheltered not only ordained ministers, but all ecclesiastical
-officers of every kind; the Church Courts
-also claimed jurisdiction in the causes of widows and
-orphans. In short, the privileges for which Thomas
-contended transferred a large part of the people,
-and that the most helpless part, from the bloody
-grasp of the King’s Courts to the milder jurisdiction
-of the bishop.” (Freeman, <cite>Historical Essay</cite>, First
-Series.)</p>
-
-<p>Before the climax of the dispute between Henry
-and Thomas was reached at Clarendon, the archbishop
-had resisted the king in a matter of arbitrary
-taxation—“the earliest recorded instance of resistance
-to the royal will in a matter of taxation”<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">14</a>—and
-had fallen still further in the king’s disfavour.</p>
-
-<p>Henry was at Woodstock, on July 1st, 1163, with
-the archbishop and the great men of the land, and
-among other matters a question was raised concerning
-the payment of a two shillings land tax on
-every hide of land. This was an old tax dating
-from Saxon times, which William the Conqueror
-had increased. It was paid to the sheriffs, who in
-return undertook the defence of the county, and
-may be compared with the county rates of our own
-day. The king declared this tax should in future be
-collected for the crown, and added to the royal
-revenue; and no one dared to question this decision
-until Archbishop Thomas arose and told the king to
-his face that the tax was not to be exacted as
-revenue, but was a voluntary offering to be paid to
-the sheriffs only “so long as they shall serve us<span class="pagenum" id="Page_42">42</span>
-fitly and maintain and defend our dependants.” It
-was not a tax that could be enforced by law.</p>
-
-<p>Henry, bursting with anger, swore, “By God’s
-Eyes” it should be given as revenue, and enscrolled
-as a king’s tax.</p>
-
-<p>The archbishop replied with quiet determination,
-“aware lest by his sufferance a custom should come
-in to the hurt of his successors,” that, “by the
-reverence of those Eyes,” by which the king had
-sworn, not one penny should be paid from his lands,
-or from the rights of the Church. The king was
-silenced, no answer was forthcoming to the objector,
-and the tax was paid as before to the sheriffs. But
-“the indignation of the king was not set at rest,”
-and in October came the Council of Westminster.</p>
-
-<p>The king at once demanded that criminous clerks
-should not only be punished in the Church Courts
-by the sentence of deprivation, but should further
-be handed over to the King’s Courts for greater
-penalties, alleging that those who were not restrained
-from crime by the remembrance of their
-holy orders would care little for the loss of such
-orders.</p>
-
-<p>The archbishop replied quietly that this proposed
-new discipline was contrary to the religious liberty of
-the land, and that he would never agree to it. The
-Church was the one sanctuary against the barbarities
-of the law, and Thomas to the end would maintain
-the security it offered. More important it seemed to
-him that clerical offenders should escape the king’s
-justice, than that all petty felons who could claim
-the protection of the Church should be given over
-to mutilation by the king’s officers. The bishops
-silently supported the primate in this matter, though<span class="pagenum" id="Page_43">43</span>
-they told him plainly, “Better the liberties of the
-Church perish than that we perish ourselves. Much
-must be yielded to the malice of the times.”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas answered this pitiful plea by admitting
-the times were bad. “But,” he added, “are we to
-heap sin upon sin? It is when the Church is in
-trouble, and not merely when the times are peaceful,
-that a bishop must cleave to the right. No greater
-merit was there to the bishops of old who gave their
-blood for the Church than there is now to those who
-die in defence of her liberties.”</p>
-
-<p>But the bishops were wavering, fearful of defying
-the king’s will. And when Henry, defeated for the
-moment by the archbishop’s stand, angrily called
-upon them to take an oath to observe in future
-“the royal customs” of the realm as settled by his
-grandfather, Henry I., they all agreed to do so,
-adding the clause “saving the rights of their order.”
-The king objected, calling for the promise to be
-made “absolutely and without qualifications,” until
-Thomas reminded him that the fealty the bishops
-swore to give the crown “in life and limb and
-earthly honour” was sworn “<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">salvo ordine suo</i>,” and
-that the “earthly honour” promise, which included
-all the royal “customs” of Henry I., was not to be
-given by bishops in any other way.</p>
-
-<p>It was now late at night, and the king broke up
-the council in anger, leaving the bishops to retire as
-they would.</p>
-
-<p>Henry was resolved to abolish the Church Courts
-and destroy the protection they afforded. He would
-have all brought under the severity of his law, in
-spite of the archbishop. He knew the bishops were
-wavering and were fearful of the royal displeasure.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_44">44</span>
-Thomas Becket, and Thomas Becket alone, was the
-obstruction to the king’s schemes, and firm as Becket
-might stand, the king would break down his opposition.</p>
-
-<p>The very day after Westminster the king demanded
-the resignation of all the fortresses and
-honours Thomas had held under the crown since
-he had been made chancellor, and these were
-surrendered at once.</p>
-
-<p>Then Henry tried a personal appeal, and once
-more the two met together in a field near Northampton.
-Henry began by reminding Thomas of
-all he had done for him.</p>
-
-<p>“Have I not raised you from a mean and lowly
-state to height of honour and dignity? How is it
-after so many benefits and so many proofs of my
-affection, which all have seen, you have forgotten
-these things, and are now not only ungrateful, but
-my opponent in everything?”</p>
-
-<p>The archbishop answered: “Far be it from me,
-my lord. I am not forgetful of the favours which
-God has conferred upon me at your hands. Far be
-it from me to be so ungrateful as to resist your will
-in anything so long as it is in accord with God’s
-will.” St. Thomas, enlarging on the necessity of
-obedience to God rather than to men, should the
-will of man clash with the will of God, the king at
-last interrupted him impatiently with the intimation
-that he did not want a sermon just then.</p>
-
-<p>“Are you not my man, the son of one of my
-servants?”</p>
-
-<p>“In truth,” the archbishop answered, “I am not
-sprung from a race of kings. Neither was blessed
-Peter, the prince of the apostles, to whom was committed
-the leadership of the Church.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_45">45</span></p>
-
-<p>“And in truth Peter died for his Lord,” said the
-king.</p>
-
-<p>“I too will die for my Lord when the time comes,”
-replied the archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>“You trust too much to the ladder you have
-mounted by,” said the king.</p>
-
-<p>But the archbishop answered: “I trust in God,
-for cursed is the man that putteth his trust in man.”
-Then the archbishop went on to remind Henry of
-the proofs he had given of his fidelity in the years
-when he was chancellor, and warned him that he
-would have done well to have taken counsel with his
-archbishop concerning spiritual things than with
-those who had kindled the flame of envy and vengeance
-against one who had done them no wrong.</p>
-
-<p>The only reply the king gave was to urge that
-the Archbishop should drop the words “saving
-their order” in promising to obey the royal customs.</p>
-
-<p>The archbishop refused to yield, and so they
-parted.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">15</a></p>
-
-<p>At the close of the year the archbishop’s difficulties
-had been increased by appeals on all sides to
-yield to the king. The bishops were for peace at
-any price, and the Pope, Alexander III., threatened
-by an anti-pope, and anxious for the good will of the
-king of England, sent an abbot to Thomas urging
-him to give way, on the ground that Henry only
-wanted a formal assent to the “customs” for the
-sake of his dignity, and had no intention of doing
-anything harmful to the Church.</p>
-
-<p>Under these circumstances Thomas decided to
-yield. He went to the king at Woodstock and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_46">46</span>
-declared that the obnoxious phrase, “saving our
-order,” should be omitted from the promise to observe
-the “customs.”</p>
-
-<p>Without delay the king ordered his justiciar,
-Richard of Lucy, and his clerk, Jocelin of Balliol, to
-draw up a list of the old “customs” and liberties of
-his grandfather Henry I., and on the 29th of January,
-1164, a great council was held at Clarendon to ratify
-the agreement between the bishops and the king.</p>
-
-<p>Sixteen constitutions or articles were drawn up,
-and Thomas, over-persuaded by the prayers of the
-bishops and the desire for peace, gave his promise
-unconditionally to observe them. But no sooner
-had he done so, and the articles were placed before
-him in black and white, than he repented.</p>
-
-<p>The very first article declared that all disputes
-about Church patronage were to be tried in the
-King’s Court, and was intolerable, because while the
-State held it was a question of the rights of property,
-the Church view was that the main point was the
-care of souls, a spiritual matter for churchmen, not
-lawyers, to decide.</p>
-
-<p>The other articles which Thomas objected to, and
-which the pope subsequently refused to ratify, decreed:
-(1) That clerks were to be tried in the King’s
-Courts for offences of common law. (2) That neither
-archbishops, bishops, nor beneficed clerks were to
-leave the kingdom without the king’s license. (This,
-said St. Thomas, would stop all pilgrimages and
-attendance at councils at Rome, and turn England
-into a vast prison. “It was right enough to apply
-for the king’s leave before the departure, but to bind
-one’s-self by an oath not to go without it was against
-religion and was evil.”) (3) That no member of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_47">47</span>
-king’s household was to be excommunicated without
-the king’s permission. (4) That no appeals should
-be taken beyond the archbishop’s court, except to be
-brought before the king. (This was a definite
-attempt to prohibit appeals to Rome, and Thomas
-pointed out that the archbishop on receiving the
-pallium swore expressly not to hinder such appeals.
-The acceptance of this article left the king absolute
-master.)</p>
-
-<p>The last article, declaring that serfs or sons of
-villeins were not to be ordained without the consent
-of the lord on whose land they were born, was not
-opposed by the pope, and the only contemporary
-objection seems to have been raised by Garnier, a
-French monk and a biographer of Thomas Becket.<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">16</a></p>
-
-<p>Thomas had promised obedience to these constitutions,
-but he would not put his seal to them. It
-seemed to him that it was not only the old “customs”
-that had been drawn up, but rather a new
-interpretation of these customs. The great Council
-of Clarendon was over. Thomas received a copy of
-the constitutions and rode off, and the king had to
-be content for the time with the promises delivered.</p>
-
-<p>In abject remorse Thomas wrote to the pope
-confessing his assent to the Constitutions of Clarendon,
-and for forty days he abstained from celebrating
-the mass. The pope, still anxious to prevent any
-open rupture between the king and the archbishop,
-wrote in reply that “Almighty God watches not the
-deed, but considers rather the intention and judges
-the will,” and that Thomas was absolved by apostolic<span class="pagenum" id="Page_48">48</span>
-authority. All the same, Pope Alexander III., without
-in any way censuring Thomas, throughout the
-long struggle with Henry never stands up roundly
-for the archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>Neither Henry nor Thomas could rest satisfied
-with Clarendon. The archbishop had compromised
-for the sake of peace, but his quick revulsion had
-provoked a keener hostility in the king. To Henry
-it seemed the time had come to drive Thomas out
-of public life by compelling him to resign the see
-of Canterbury. With Thomas out of the way
-Henry could carry out his plans for a strong
-central government, for bringing all under the
-pitiless arm of the law. Thomas was the one
-man in the kingdom who dared offer resistance,
-and if Thomas was no longer archbishop and some
-supple creature of the king was in his place, the
-royal power would be absolute, for there seemed
-no fear of any interference from Pope Alexander III.</p>
-
-<p>There were plenty of the archbishop’s enemies
-among the nobles at the court ready to fan the
-king’s anger against Thomas, and by October, 1164,
-Henry was ready to crush the primate.</p>
-
-<p>Another council was summoned to meet at
-Northampton, and now Archbishop Thomas was
-to learn the full significance of the Constitutions
-of Clarendon.</p>
-
-<p>The first charge against Thomas was that he had
-refused justice to John, the Treasurer-Marshal, who
-had taken up some land under the see of Canterbury.
-John had taken his suit to the King’s Court,
-and Thomas was further charged with contempt of
-the majesty of the crown for not putting in a
-personal appearance at this court. The king now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_49">49</span>
-pressed for judgment against the archbishop for
-this contempt, and the council ordered that he
-should be condemned to the loss of all his moveable
-property, and 500 pounds of silver was accepted as
-an equivalent fine.</p>
-
-<p>“It seemed to all that, considering the reverence
-due to the king and by the obligation of the oath of
-homage, which the archbishop had taken, and by
-the fealty to the king’s earthly honour which he had
-sworn, he was in no way to be excused, because
-when summoned by the king he had neither come
-himself, nor pleaded infirmity, or the necessary
-work of his ecclesiastical office.” (W. FitzStephen).</p>
-
-<p>It was not easy to get the sentence pronounced
-against Thomas. Barons and bishops were willing
-enough to stand well with the king, and they agreed
-without contradiction to the fine. But the barons
-declined to act as judge on a spiritual peer, and
-insisted that one of the bishops must do this
-business. Henry, Bishop of Winchester, at last,
-on the king’s order, pronounced the sentence.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas protested. “If I were silent at such a
-sentence posterity would not be. This is a new
-form of sentence, no doubt in accordance with the
-new laws of Clarendon. Never has it been heard
-before in England that an Archbishop of Canterbury
-has been tried in the King’s Court for such a cause.
-The dignity of the Church, the authority of his
-person, the fact that he is the spiritual father of
-the king and of all his subjects, require that he
-should be reverenced by all.” For an archbishop
-to be judged by his suffragans was, he declared,
-for a father to be judged by his sons.</p>
-
-<p>The bishops implored him to bow to the decree<span class="pagenum" id="Page_50">50</span>
-of the council, and Thomas yielded, “not being
-willing that a mere matter of money should cause
-strife between the king and himself.”</p>
-
-<p>The next day, Friday, October 9th, the king
-pressed Thomas more fiercely, calling upon him
-to give account for large sums spent during his
-chancellorship, and for various revenues of vacant
-churches during that period. The total amount
-was 30,000 marks.</p>
-
-<p>In vain the archbishop urged that this demand
-was totally unexpected; that he had not been
-summoned to Northampton to render such an
-account; and that the justiciar, Richard, had
-declared that he was free of all claims when he
-laid down the chancellorship. The king demanded
-sureties, “and from that day barons and knights
-kept away from the archbishop’s house—for they
-understood the mind of the king.”</p>
-
-<p>All Saturday Thomas was in consultation with
-the bishops, most of whom expressed themselves
-strongly on the king’s side. Henry of Winchester
-suggested the present of 2,000 marks to the king as
-a peace-offering, and this was done. But the king
-would not have it. Hilary, of Chichester, said,
-addressing the archbishop, “You ought to know
-the king better than we do, for you lived with him
-in close companionship and friendship when you
-were chancellor. Who is there who could be your
-surety for all this money? The king has declared,
-so it is said, that he and you cannot both remain
-in England as king and archbishop. It would be
-much safer to resign everything and submit to his
-mercy. God forbid lest he arrest you over these
-moneys of the chancellorship, or lay hands on you.”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_51">51</span>
-One or two less craven urged the archbishop to
-stand firm, as his predecessors had done, in the
-face of persecution.</p>
-
-<p>“Oh, that you were no longer archbishop and
-were only Thomas,” said Hilary, putting the matter
-briefly.</p>
-
-<p>All Sunday was spent in consultations. On
-Monday the archbishop was too ill to attend the
-council, but on Tuesday his mind was made up,
-and when he entered the council it was with the
-full dignity of an archbishop, carrying the cross of
-the archbishop in his hand.</p>
-
-<p>The bishops were in despair. There were all
-sorts of rumours in the air. It was known the king
-was full of anger, and it was said that the archbishop’s
-life was in danger. The bishops implored
-him to resign, or else to promise complete submission
-to the councils of Clarendon. They said he would
-certainly be tried and condemned for high treason
-for disobedience to the king, and asked him what
-was the use of being archbishop when he had the
-king’s hatred.</p>
-
-<p>Gilbert Foliot, Bishop of London, declared contemptuously
-of Thomas, when someone asked him
-why he did not carry the archbishop’s cross for him,
-“He always was a fool, and always will be.”</p>
-
-<p>Thomas had now only one answer to the bishops.
-He forbad them to take any part in the proceedings
-against him, announced that he had appealed to
-“our Mother, the Church of Rome, refuge of all
-the oppressed,” to prevent any of them taking part,
-and ordered them to excommunicate any who should
-dare lay secular hands upon the primate.</p>
-
-<p>Then, holding his cross, the archbishop took his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_52">52</span>
-usual place in the council-chamber, while the king
-sat in an inner room.</p>
-
-<p>In the face of personal danger all the strength
-and courage of Thomas Becket were aroused. He
-had yielded at Clarendon for the sake of peace, and
-no good had come of it. He had submitted to be
-fined rather than be involved in a miserable dispute
-about money, and now he was threatened with
-demands for money which were beyond his resources.
-There was nothing to prevent the king piling up
-greater and greater sums against him, till hopeless
-ruin had been reached. He was powerless to withstand
-such an onslaught. To Rome, “the refuge of
-all the oppressed,” would Thomas appeal, and then,
-if it seemed well to the pope, he would retire from
-Canterbury. But he would not surrender his post,
-however great the wrath of the king, unless it were
-for the welfare of the Christian Church.</p>
-
-<p>In the council-chamber Thomas sat alone, with
-one or two clergy attending him, including Herbert
-of Bosham and William FitzStephen, while the
-bishops went in to the king’s chamber. Among
-the nobles the cry was going up that the archbishop
-was a perjurer and a traitor, because, after signing
-at Clarendon, he now, in violation of those constitutions,
-forbad bishops to give judgment in a case
-that did not involve bloodshed, and had further
-made appeal to Rome.</p>
-
-<p>Then the king sent to know whether the archbishop
-refused to be bound by the Constitutions of
-Clarendon, and whether he would find sureties to
-abide by the sentence of the court regarding the
-accounts of his chancellorship.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas again pointed out that he had not been<span class="pagenum" id="Page_53">53</span>
-called there to give an account of his chancellorship,
-that on his appointment to the archbishopric he had
-been declared by the king free of all secular claims,
-and that he had forbidden the bishops to take part
-in any judgment against him, and had appealed to
-Rome, “placing his person and the church of
-Canterbury under the protection of God and the
-pope.”</p>
-
-<p>At the end of this speech the barons returned in
-silence to the king, pondering the archbishop’s
-words.</p>
-
-<p>But hostile murmuring soon broke the silence,
-and Thomas could overhear the barons grumbling
-that, “King William, who conquered England,
-knew how to tame his clerks. He had put his own
-brother Odo in prison, and thrown Stigand, Archbishop
-of Canterbury, into a dungeon.”</p>
-
-<p>The bishops renewed their pitiful chorus. Thomas
-had placed them between the hammer and the anvil
-by his prohibition: of disobedience to Canterbury
-on the one hand, and of the king’s anger on the
-other. They had given their word at Clarendon,
-and now they were being forced to go against the
-promises they had made. They, too, would appeal
-to Rome against his prohibition, “lest you injure us
-still more.”</p>
-
-<p>All that Thomas could say was that the Constitutions
-of Clarendon had been sent to the pope for
-confirmation, and had been returned, rather condemned
-than approved. “This example has been
-given for our learning, that we should do likewise,
-and be ready to receive what he receives at Rome,
-and reject what he rejects. If we fell at Clarendon,
-through weakness of the flesh, the more ought we<span class="pagenum" id="Page_54">54</span>
-to take courage now, and in the might of the Holy
-Ghost contend against the old enemy of man.”<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">17</a></p>
-
-<p>So bishops and nobles came and went between
-the king and the archbishop, and the day drew on.
-Henry allowed the bishops to stand apart from the
-judgment, and demanded sentence from the barons,
-and Earl Robert of Leicester advanced as the
-spokesman of the council to where the archbishop
-was sitting. The earl began to speak of the judgment
-of the court, when Thomas rose and refused to
-hear him.</p>
-
-<p>“What is this you would do?” he cried. “Would
-you pass sentence on me? Neither law nor reason
-permit children to pass sentence on their father.
-You are nobles of the palace, and I am your spiritual
-father. I will not hear this sentence of the king, or
-any judgment of yours. For, under God, I will be
-judged by the pope alone, to whom before you all
-here I appeal, placing the church of Canterbury
-with all thereto belonging under God’s protection
-and the protection of the pope.” Then he turned
-to the bishops. “And you, my brethren, who have
-served man rather than God, I summon to the
-presence of the pope; and now, guarded by the
-authority of the Catholic Church and the Holy See,
-I go hence.”</p>
-
-<p>So he passed out of the hall, no one gainsaying
-his passage, though some plucked rushes from the
-floor and threw at him. There were shouts of
-anger, and again the cries of “traitor” and “perjurer”
-were raised. The archbishop turned on Earl
-Hamelin, the king’s brother, and Randulf of Brok,
-who were calling “traitor,” and said sternly: “If I<span class="pagenum" id="Page_55">55</span>
-were not a priest, my own arms should quickly
-prove your lie. And you, Randulf, look at home
-(his cousin had lately been hanged for felony) before
-you accuse the guiltless!”</p>
-
-<p>His horses were at the gate, and a great crowd
-that were afraid lest the archbishop had been killed.
-St. Thomas mounted, and accompanied by Herbert
-of Bosham, rode back to the monastery of St.
-Andrew, where he had been lodging. The crowd
-thronged him and prayed for his blessing all the
-way until the monastery was reached, and then he
-would have the multitude come in to the refectory
-and dine with him. Of his own retinue of forty
-who had come with him to Northampton, scarce six
-remained; and so the places of those who had
-thought it safer to desert their lord were filled by
-the hungry multitude. It was the archbishop’s farewell
-banquet, and he, the constant champion of the
-poor, had those whom he loved for his guests that
-day.</p>
-
-<p>At nightfall, after compline had been sung and the
-monks dispersed to their cells, the archbishop, with
-three other men in the dress of lay brothers, rode
-out from Northampton by the north gate, and at
-dawn were at Grantham. Three weeks later
-Thomas had reached Flanders, and the exile had
-begun which was only to end six years later when
-death was at hand.</p>
-
-<p>It was useless to remain in England, hopeless as
-Thomas was of any support from the bishops. He
-could but appeal, as Anselm had appealed, to the
-one court that alone was recognised as owning a
-higher authority than that of the kings of this world,
-the court of Rome.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_56">56</span></p>
-
-<p>But Pope Alexander, still harassed by an anti-pope
-set up by the Emperor Frederick, could do as little
-for Thomas as his predecessor had done for Anselm,
-though he refused to allow him to resign the
-archbishopric. Unlike Anselm, Thomas vigorously
-carried on his contest with the king from the
-friendly shelter of King Louis of France, and
-Henry retaliated without hesitation, driving out of
-England all the friends and kinsmen of Thomas, to
-the number of four hundred, and threatening a like
-banishment to the Cistercian monks, because
-Thomas had taken refuge in their monastery at
-Pontigny.</p>
-
-<p>The fear that the pope would allow the archbishop
-to pronounce an interdict against England, and a
-sentence of personal excommunication against its
-king, drove Henry in 1166 to appeal himself to the
-pope. “Thus by a strange fate it happened that
-the king, while striving for those ‘ancient customs,’
-by which he endeavoured to prevent any right of
-appeal (to the pope), was doomed to confirm the
-right of appeal for his own safety.” (John of
-Salisbury.)</p>
-
-<p>Months and years passed in correspondence.
-More than once Henry and Thomas met at the
-court of Louis, but neither would yield. The
-pope, without blaming the archbishop, and without
-sanctioning any extreme step against Henry, did
-what he could to make peace between them.</p>
-
-<p>At last, in the summer of 1170, the king really
-was disturbed by the fear of an interdict, for his last
-act against Archbishop Thomas had been to have his
-son crowned by the Archbishop of York, in defiance
-of all the rights and privileges of the see of Canterbury.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_57">57</span>
-Besides this, Louis was threatening war
-because his daughter, who was married to the young
-King Henry, had not been crowned with her
-husband. Henry hastened over to France and
-made friends with Thomas, and the reconciliation
-took place at Freteral. The king solemnly promised
-that the archbishop should enjoy all the possessions
-and rights of which he had been deprived in his
-exile, and that his friends and kinsmen should all be
-allowed to return home. He even apologised for
-the coronation of his son. It seemed as if the old
-friendship had been revived. “We conversed
-together until the evening as familiarly as in the
-days of our ancient friendship. And it was agreed
-I should arrange my affairs and then make some
-stay with the king before embarking for England;
-that the world might know how thoroughly we are
-restored to his favour and intimacy. We are not
-afraid that the king will not fulfil his promises,
-unless he is misled by evil counsellors.” So Thomas
-wrote to the pope in July, 1170. Yet there were
-many—including King Louis—who doubted the
-sincerity of the reconciliation, for Henry was not
-willing to give the kiss of peace to his archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>On December 1st Thomas landed at Sandwich,
-and went at once to Canterbury. The townspeople
-and the poor of the land welcomed him with enthusiastic
-devotion. “Small and great, old and young,
-ran together, some throwing themselves in his way,
-others crying and exclaiming, ‘Blessed is he that
-cometh in the name of the Lord.’ In the same
-manner the clergy and their parishioners met him in
-procession, saluting their father and begging his
-blessing.... And when all things in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_58">58</span>
-cathedral was solemnly ended, the archbishop went
-to his palace, and so ended that joyful and solemn
-day.” (Herbert of Bosham.)</p>
-
-<p>But against the affection and goodwill of his own
-people at Canterbury, and a similar demonstration of
-rejoicing by multitudes of clergy and people in
-London, Thomas had to face the fact that the
-bishops generally hated his return, that the young
-Prince Henry, recently crowned, who had been his
-pupil, refused to see him and ordered his return to
-Canterbury, and that the nobles openly spoke of
-him as a traitor to the king. “This is a peace for
-us which is no peace, but rather war,” said the
-archbishop bitterly.</p>
-
-<p>The end was not far off. Thomas, as zealous for
-good discipline in the Church as Henry was for
-strong authority in the State, was no sooner returned
-than he was asked to withdraw the sentence of
-excommunication against the Archbishop of York
-and the Bishops of London and Salisbury. He
-promised to do this if the bishops on their part
-would promise to submit to the decision of the pope
-on the matter. London and Salisbury were moved
-to receive absolution on these terms, but Roger, of
-York, who had always been against Becket, dissuaded
-them, urging them to throw themselves on
-the protection of the king, and threatening Thomas
-“with marvellous and terrible things at the hands of
-the king” unless he relented. Naturally, these
-threats left the archbishop undisturbed, and Roger
-of York, with Gilbert Foliot of London and Jocelin
-of Salisbury, at once hastened over to France to lay
-their case before the king.</p>
-
-<p>These bishops were not the only men who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_59">59</span>
-troubled Thomas in these last days. Randulf de
-Broc, with others of his family, and certain
-knights, all known as strong “king’s men,” “sought
-every means to entangle him in a quarrel,” and did
-not stop from robbing a ship belonging to the archbishop
-and from seizing a number of horses, and
-mutilating one of them. Thomas replied by excommunicating
-Randulf and Robert de Broc, the
-boldest of these offenders.</p>
-
-<p>At Christmas more than one of the archbishop’s
-followers warned him that his life was in danger,
-and Thomas seems to have realised that his position
-was hazardous. But he would not fly.</p>
-
-<p>Already his murderers were at hand.</p>
-
-<p>The excommunicated bishops had reached the
-king at Bur, near Bayeux, had told their story, and
-had coloured it with a fanciful description of Thomas
-making a circuit of England at the head of a large
-body of men.<a id="FNanchor_18" href="#Footnote_18" class="fnanchor">18</a> Someone had said, “My lord, as
-long as Thomas lives, you will have neither peace
-nor quiet in your kingdom, nor will you ever see
-good days;” and at this Henry had burst out into a
-terrible rage of bitterness and passion, for such fits
-at times took possession of him, “Here is a man,”
-he cried out, “who came to my court a sorry clerk,
-who owes all he has to me, and insults my kingdom
-and lifts his heel against me. And not one of the
-cowardly sluggish knaves, whom I feed and pay so
-well, but suffers this, nor has the heart to avenge
-me!”</p>
-
-<p>The words were spoken, and four of the king’s
-knights—Reginald FitzUrse, William of Tracy,
-Hugh of Morville, and Richard the Breton—hearing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_60">60</span>
-what was said, and that Roger of York had declared
-“as soon as Thomas is dead all this trouble will be
-ended, and not before,” at once departed. They
-sailed from different ports and met together at
-Saltwood, the castle of the Brocs, on December 28th.
-The following day they rode on to Canterbury,
-taking with them twelve of Randulf’s men and
-Hugh of Horsea, who was called the Evil Deacon.</p>
-
-<p>The king, on finding the four knights had left the
-court, gave orders to have them stopped, but it was
-too late. They were then at Canterbury, and entering
-the hospitable doors of the palace had made
-direct for the archbishop’s private chamber.</p>
-
-<p>It was four o’clock. Dinner had been at three,
-and Thomas was sitting on his bed talking to John
-of Salisbury, Edward Grim, and a few other friends.
-When the knights entered, Thomas recognized
-Reginald, William, and Hugh, for they had served
-under him years before, and waited for them to
-speak.</p>
-
-<p>Reginald FitzUrse was the spokesman. He
-declared they had come from the king, that Thomas
-must take an oath of fealty to the newly-crowned
-prince, and must absolve the excommunicated
-bishops. Thomas answered that the bishops might
-have been absolved on their willingness to obey the
-judgments of the Church, and that the king had
-sanctioned what had been done at their reconciliation.</p>
-
-<p>Reginald denied there had been any reconciliation,
-and swore that Thomas was imputing treachery to
-the king in saying such a thing.</p>
-
-<p>The archbishop pointed out that the reconciliation
-had taken place in public, and that Reginald himself
-had been present.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_61">61</span></p>
-
-<p>Reginald swore he had never been there, and had
-not heard of it. And at this the other knights
-broke in, swearing again and again, by God’s
-wounds, that they had borne with him far too long
-already.</p>
-
-<p>Then Thomas reminded them of the insults and
-losses he had endured, especially at the hands of the
-De Brocs, since his return.</p>
-
-<p>Hugh of Morville answered him that he had his
-remedy in the King’s Courts, and ought not to excommunicate
-men on his own authority.</p>
-
-<p>“I shall wait for no man’s leave to do justice on
-any that wrong the Church and will not give satisfaction,”
-Thomas replied.</p>
-
-<p>“What do you threaten us! Threats are too
-much!” cried Reginald FitzUrse.</p>
-
-<p>Then the knights bit their gloves and angrily
-defied the archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas told them that they could not intimidate
-him. “Once I went away like a timid priest; now
-I have returned, and I will never leave again. If I
-may do my office in peace, it is well: if I may not,
-God’s will be done.” Then he turned to remind
-them they had once sworn fealty to him when he
-was chancellor.</p>
-
-<p>“We are the king’s men,” they shouted out, “and
-owe fealty to no one against the king!”</p>
-
-<p>Bidding his servants keep the archbishop within
-the precincts on peril of their lives, the knights
-withdrew.</p>
-
-<p>“It is easy to keep me,” said Thomas, “for I
-shall not go away. I will not fly for the king or
-for any living man.”</p>
-
-<p>“Why did you not take counsel with us and give<span class="pagenum" id="Page_62">62</span>
-milder answer to your enemies?” said John of
-Salisbury. “You are ready to die, but we are not.
-Think of our peril!”</p>
-
-<p>“We must all die,” the archbishop answered,
-“and the fear of death must not turn us from doing
-justice.”</p>
-
-<p>Word was quickly brought in that the knights
-were putting on their armour in the courtyard, and
-the monks, frightened at the sight of these men with
-drawn swords entering the orchard to the west of
-the cathedral, rushed to the archbishop and implored
-him to fly to the cathedral. Thomas smiled at their
-terror, saying, “All you monks are too cowardly, it
-seems to me.” And not till vespers had begun
-would he leave for the minster. The knights broke
-into the cloisters after him, and reaching St. Benet’s
-chapel began to hammer at the door, which for safety
-the monks had barred behind them.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas at once ordered the door to be unbolted,
-saying, “God’s house shall not be made a fortress on
-my account.” He slipped back the iron bar himself,
-and the angry knights rushed in with cries of
-“Where is the traitor? Where is the archbishop?”</p>
-
-<p>It was five o’clock and a dark winter’s night. Had
-Thomas chosen, he could easily have escaped death
-by concealing himself in the crypt or in one of the
-many hiding places in the cathedral. But he felt his
-hour had come and met it without faltering. John
-of Salisbury and the rest of the monks and clerks
-vanished away and hid themselves, leaving only
-Edward Grim, Robert of Merton and William FitzStephen
-with the archbishop. Soon only Grim was
-left, when the archbishop came out boldly, and
-standing by a great pillar near the altar of St. Benedict,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_63">63</span>
-answered his accusers. “Here I am: no
-traitor, Reginald, but your archbishop.”</p>
-
-<p>They tried to drag him from the church, but he
-clung to the great pillar, with Edward Grim by his
-side. For the last time Reginald called on him to
-come out of the church. “I am ready to die, but
-let my people go, and do not hurt them,” was the
-archbishop’s answer. William Tracy seized hold of
-him, but Thomas hurled him back. Upon that
-FitzUrse shouted, “Strike! strike!” And Tracy
-cut savagely at the head of the archbishop. Grim
-sprang forward and the blow fell on his arm, and he
-fell back badly wounded.</p>
-
-<p>Then Thomas commended his cause and that of
-the Church to St. Denis and the patron saints of the
-cathedral, and his soul to God, and without flinching
-bowed his head to his murderers. FitzUrse, Tracy
-and Richard the Breton struck the archbishop down,
-and Hugh the Evil Deacon mangled in brutal
-fashion the head of St. Thomas before calling out to
-the others: “Let us go now; he will never rise
-again!”</p>
-
-<p>Then they all rushed from the church, and shouting,
-“King’s knights! King’s knights!” proceeded
-to plunder the palace. They fled north that
-night to the castle of Hugh of Morville at Knaresborough,
-where for a time they lived in close
-retirement. Tracy subsequently went on a pilgrimage
-to Rome and Palestine, but all four “within
-two years of the murder were living at court on
-familiar terms with the king.”<a id="FNanchor_19" href="#Footnote_19" class="fnanchor">19</a></p>
-
-<p>Henry and all his court were horrified when the
-news was brought of the archbishop’s martyrdom,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_64">64</span>
-for all the people proclaimed the murdered prelate a
-saint and a martyr, and “a martyr he clearly was,
-not merely to the privileges of the Church or to the
-rights of the see of Canterbury, but to the general
-cause of law and order as opposed to violence.”<a id="FNanchor_20" href="#Footnote_20" class="fnanchor">20</a>
-Had St. Thomas yielded in the matter of the excommunicated
-bishops, and sought favour with the
-king at the expense of the liberties and discipline of
-the Church, and had he given way to the savage,
-lawless turbulence of the king’s knights, he would
-not only have escaped a violent death, but might
-have lived long in the sunshine of the royal pleasure.
-He chose the rougher, steeper road, daring all to
-save the Church and the mass of the English people
-from being brought under the iron heel of a king’s
-absolute rule, and he paid the penalty, pouring out
-his blood on the stones of the minster at Canterbury
-to seal the vows he had taken when he first entered
-the city as archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>In his dying St. Thomas was even stronger than
-in his life. Henry hastened to beg the forgiveness
-of Rome for his rash words that had provoked the
-murder, and in the presence of the pope’s legates
-in Normandy promised to give up the Constitutions
-of Clarendon and to stand by the papacy against the
-emperor. Nor did he make any further attempt in
-his reign to bring the Church under the subjection
-of the crown, but built up a great system of legal
-administration, which in substance exists to-day.</p>
-
-<p>St. Thomas was canonised four years after his
-death. “There was no shadow of doubt in men’s
-minds that here was one who was a martyr as fully
-as any martyr of the catacombs and the Roman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_65">65</span>
-persecutions.” (R. H. Benson, <cite>St. Thomas of Canterbury</cite>.)
-Countless miracles were alleged to prove
-the sanctity of the dead hero, and pilgrims from all
-parts made their way to the shrine of the “blessful
-martyr” at Canterbury. Not only in England, but
-in France and Flanders, and particularly in Ireland
-was there an outburst of devotion to St. Thomas.</p>
-
-<p>The shrine at Canterbury was destroyed by
-Henry VIII., who after a mock trial of the archbishop
-slain more than 300 years earlier, declared
-that “Thomas, sometime Archbishop of Canterbury,
-had been guilty of contumacy, treason and rebellion,”
-and “was no saint, but rather a rebel and traitor to
-his prince.”</p>
-
-<p>But though Thomas, canonised by the pope on
-the prayers of the people of England, could be struck
-out of the calendar of the Church of England by the
-arbitrary will of King Henry VIII., as an enemy of
-princes, and his shrine destroyed, it is beyond the
-power of a king to reverse the sentence of history or
-to blast for ever the fame of a great and courageous
-champion of the poor of this land. Time makes
-little of the insults of Henry VIII. Thomas of
-Canterbury died for the religion that in his day protected
-the people against the despotism of the crown.
-“He was always a hater of liars and slanderers and
-a kind friend to dumb beasts (hence his rage with
-De Broc for mutilating a horse) and all poor and
-helpless folk.” (F. York Powell.)</p>
-
-<p>That Henry II. strove to make law predominant
-in the spirit of a great statesman is as true as that
-Thomas strove to mitigate the harshness of the
-law. As a writer of the twelfth century put it:
-“Nothing is more certain than that both strove<span class="pagenum" id="Page_66">66</span>
-earnestly to do the will of God, one for the sake of
-his realm, the other on behalf of his Church. But
-whether of the two was zealous in wisdom is not
-plain to man, who is so easily mistaken, but to the
-Lord, who will judge between them at the last day.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_3">William FitzOsbert, called Longbeard<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">The First English Agitator</span>
-<span class="subhead">1196</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Roger of Hoveden; William of Newburgh;
-Gervase of Canterbury; Matthew Paris; Ralph
-Diceto; (Rolls Series); <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Rotuli Curiæ Regis</cite> (Sir F. Palgrave.
-Vol. I.).</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_69">69</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">WILLIAM FITZOSBERT<br />
-CALLED LONGBEARD, THE<br />
-FIRST ENGLISH AGITATOR
-<span class="subhead">1196</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">When</span> Richard I., on his accession,
-picked out Hubert Walter, Bishop of
-Salisbury, to be Archbishop of Canterbury,
-he chose a prelate whom he could
-rely upon as his representative. Hubert had been a
-crusader; he was the nephew of Ralph Glanville—who
-sold the justiciarship to William Longchamp,
-Bishop of Ely, for £3,000, and followed Richard to
-Palestine, dying of the plague at Acre in 1191—and
-though a man of little learning he was a capital
-lawyer, a strong administrator and expert at raising
-money for the king.<a id="FNanchor_21" href="#Footnote_21" class="fnanchor">21</a> Hubert was no champion of
-the poor as St. Thomas had been, no preacher of
-righteousness like St. Anselm, no stickler for the
-rights of the Church or the liberties of the people;
-he was “the king’s man,” and “forasmuch as he was
-neither gifted with a knowledge of letters nor endued
-with the grace of lively religion, so in his days the
-Church of England was stifled under the yoke of
-bondage.” (Geraldus Cambrensis.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_70">70</span></p>
-
-<p>Richard Cœur de Lion, occupied with the crusades,
-had no mind for the personal government of
-England. He depended on his ministers for money
-to pay for his military expeditions to Palestine.
-England was to him nothing more than a subject
-province to be bled by taxation. Both William
-Longchamp and Hubert Walter—to whom Richard
-committed the realm when he left England for good
-in 1194—did all that could be done to meet the
-king’s demands. Government offices, earldoms and
-bishoprics were sold to the highest bidder.<a id="FNanchor_22" href="#Footnote_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> Judges
-bought their seats on the bench and cities bought
-their charters. Crown lands already granted to
-tenants were again taken up by the king’s authority,
-and the occupier compelled to pay for readmission
-to his holding. Tournaments were revived, because
-everyone taking part was obliged to take a royal
-license. Even the great seal was broken by the
-justiciar’s authority, and all documents signed by it
-had to be reissued, with the payment of the usual
-fees (or stamp duties) for new contracts. “By these
-and similar inquisitions England was reduced to
-poverty from one sea to the other,” for more than
-£1,000,000 was sent to Richard by Hubert in the
-first two years of his justiciarship.</p>
-
-<p>The only protest against the general distress
-came from London, and not from the aldermen or
-burghers, but from the voteless labouring people
-upon whom the whole burden of raising the city’s
-taxes had been thrown. Against this monstrous
-injustice William Longbeard FitzOsbert stood out<span class="pagenum" id="Page_71">71</span>
-as the spokesman of the poor of London, and died a
-martyr for their cause.</p>
-
-<p>London’s political importance had been seen in
-the struggles against King Cnut and William the
-Conqueror. Its remarkable influence in national
-politics (an influence that endured to the middle
-of the nineteenth century) was manifest when
-London acclaimed Stephen as King of England in
-1135. At the close of the twelfth century, London,
-with the civic charter it had just obtained from
-Richard, with its thirteen convent churches and more
-than a hundred parish churches within its boundaries,
-with its great cattle market at Smithfield and its
-growing riverside trade, was already prosperous and
-overcrowded. “The city was blessed with the healthiness
-of the air and the nature of its site, in the
-Christian religion, in the strength of its towers, the
-honour of its citizens and the purity of its women;
-it was happy in its sports and fruitful of high spirited
-men.” It had its darker side, but at that time “the
-only plagues were the intemperate drinking of foolish
-people and the frequent fires.”</p>
-
-<p>Richard’s charter left to the citizens the business
-of assessing their own taxes, and in 1196 there was
-trouble over this matter; for in that year the city
-fathers decided that the large sums required by
-Archbishop Hubert for the king’s needs should be
-paid in full by the poorer craftsmen and labourers,
-who had no say in the matter.<a id="FNanchor_23" href="#Footnote_23" class="fnanchor">23</a></p>
-
-<p>“And when the aldermen assembled according to
-usage in full hustings for the purpose of assessing
-the taxes, the rulers endeavoured to spare their own<span class="pagenum" id="Page_72">72</span>
-purses and to levy the whole from the poor.” (Roger
-of Hoveden.)</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon up rose William Longbeard, the son
-of Osbert, and made his memorable protest against
-these rascally proceedings, to go down to history as
-the first popular agitator in England.</p>
-
-<p>An exceptional man was this Longbeard, a man
-of commanding stature and great strength, ready
-witted, something of an orator and a lawyer, who
-“burning with zeal for righteousness and fair play
-made himself the champion of the poor,” holding that
-every man, rich or poor, should pay his share of the
-city’s burdens according to his means.</p>
-
-<p>Longbeard was not of the labouring people himself.
-He was a member of the city council, though
-by no means a rich man. He had distinguished
-himself as a crusader in 1190, making the journey to
-Portugal against the Moors; and a vision of St.
-Thomas Becket had appeared to him and his fellow
-Londoners when their ship was beset by storms off
-the coast of Spain.</p>
-
-<p>Longbeard was known to the king, and he was
-already hateful to the ruling class because he had
-declared that Richard was being defrauded by financial
-corruption of the money raised for the crown.
-He had also accused his brother of treason in 1194,
-but the case was not proved.</p>
-
-<p>Richard was in Normandy in 1196, and Longbeard
-having banded together 15,000 men in London,
-under an oath that they would stick by him and
-each other, went to the king and laid their grievances
-before him. Richard heard the appeal sympathetically
-enough, for after all, as long as the money was
-forthcoming, he had no particular desire that the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_73">73</span>
-pockets of rich burghers should be spared at the
-expense of the poor, but left matters in the hands of
-Archbishop Hubert the justiciar. Longbeard returned
-to London, and with his 15,000<a id="FNanchor_24" href="#Footnote_24" class="fnanchor">24</a> workmen in
-revolt, bid an open defiance to the justiciar.</p>
-
-<p>Only a fragment of one of Longbeard’s speeches
-has been preserved, a solitary specimen of popular
-oratory in the twelfth century.<a id="FNanchor_25" href="#Footnote_25" class="fnanchor">25</a></p>
-
-<p>Taking a passage from the prophet Isaiah for his
-text: “Therefore with joy shall ye draw water
-from the wells of the Saviour” (Isaiah xii, 3), the
-agitator delivers his message.</p>
-
-<p>“I am,” he saith, “the saviour of the poor. You
-the poor, who have endured the hard hands of the
-rich, draw ye from my wells the waters of sound
-doctrine, and this with joy, for the time of your
-visitation is at hand. For I will divide the waters
-from the waters, and the People are the waters. I
-will divide the humble and faithful from such as are
-proud and froward. I will divide the just from the
-unjust, even as light from darkness.”</p>
-
-<p>For a time Longbeard was too strong for the
-justiciar. Archbishop Hubert had no force at his
-disposal for the invasion of London, for a battle
-with Longbeard and his league.</p>
-
-<p>At a great gathering of citizens, held in St. Paul’s
-Churchyard, the justiciar’s men sent to arrest Longbeard
-had been driven out of the city with violence.
-All that Hubert could do was to give orders for the
-arrest of any lesser citizens found outside London,
-and two small traders from the city actually were
-taken into custody at the town of Stamford on Mid-Lent
-Sunday, 1196, under this authority.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_74">74</span></p>
-
-<p>But the aldermen grew more and more frightened
-at Longbeard’s bold speeches and his big public
-meetings, and weakness and cowardice began to
-demoralise the league. The people, who had
-risen for “liberty and freedom,” fell away from
-their leader, and FitzOsbert was left with a
-comparatively small band to face the anger of the
-justiciar.</p>
-
-<p>Backed up by the city fathers, Hubert’s officers
-again attempted to seize the agitator. Longbeard,
-hardly pressed, snatched an axe from one of his assailants—a
-citizen named Godfrey—and slew him; and
-then retreated, overwhelmed by numbers, to take
-refuge in the church of St. Mary-le-Bow in Cheapside.
-There was a right of sanctuary in this
-church, a right not to be denied to the commonest
-felon.</p>
-
-<p>But what were rights of sanctuary to the justiciar—bent
-on hunting his prey to the death? He commanded
-Longbeard “to come out and abide by the
-law,” and gave orders to his men that, failing instant
-obedience, he was to be dragged out.</p>
-
-<p>Longbeard’s answer was to climb up into the
-church tower, and thereupon Hubert ordered the
-tower to be set on fire, and this was done. And
-now the only chance of life for William Longbeard
-and his followers was to cut their way through
-the host of their enemies and make a bold rush
-for safety. It was a remote chance at the best,
-but sooner that than to perish in the burning
-tower.</p>
-
-<p>At the very church door Longbeard was struck
-down—some say by Godfrey’s son—and his little
-company were quickly slain or taken prisoners.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_75">75</span>
-Loaded with chains, the once bold advocate of the
-poor of London, now badly hurt, was at once haled
-off to the Tower. Sentence was pronounced without
-delay of the law, William, the son of Osbert,
-was to be dragged to the elms at Tyburn and there
-hanged in chains.</p>
-
-<p>A few days later—it was just before Easter—the
-wounded man was stripped naked, tried to the tail
-of a horse and dragged over the rough stones of the
-streets of London. He was dead before Tyburn
-was reached, but the poor broken body, on whom
-the full vengeance of the rich and mighty had been
-wreaked, was strung up in chains beneath the
-gallows elm all the same. Bravely had Longbeard
-withstood the rulers of the land in the day of his
-strength; now, when life had passed from him, his
-body was swinging in common contempt. And
-with him were nine of his followers hanged.</p>
-
-<p>So died William, called Longbeard, son of Osbert,
-“for asserting the truth and maintaining the cause
-of the poor.” And since it is held that to be faithful
-to such a cause makes a man a martyr, people
-thought he deserved to be ranked with the martyrs.
-For a time multitudes—the very folk who had
-fallen away from their champion in the hour of
-battle and need—flocked to pay reverence to the
-ghastly, bloodstained corpse that hung at Tyburn,
-and pieces of the gibbet and of the bloodstained
-earth beneath were carried off and counted as sacred
-relics. All the great, heroic qualities of the man
-were recalled. He was accounted a saint. Miracles
-were alleged to take place when his relics were
-touched.</p>
-
-<p>Then the dead man’s enemies were aroused, an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_76">76</span>
-alleged death-bed confession was published, wherein
-Longbeard was made out to be a sorry criminal.
-Not the least of the offences laid to his charge
-was that a woman, who was not his wife, had stood
-faithfully by the rebel, even when the church was on
-fire.</p>
-
-<p>The times were rough. It is probable that Longbeard,
-crusader and fighting man, had sins enough
-to confess before death took him. But his traducers
-were silent as to these sins in the man’s lifetime.
-They waited until no answer could be given before
-uttering their miserable libels against the one
-courageous champion of the poor.</p>
-
-<p>Longbeard had roused the common working
-people to make a stand against obvious oppression
-and injustice—there was the head and front of his
-offending, there was his crime; earning for him not
-only a felon’s death, but the loss of character, and
-the branding for all time with the contemptuous
-title “Demagogue.”</p>
-
-<p>Yet in the slow building up of English liberties
-William FitzOsbert played his part, and laid down
-his life in the age-long struggle for freedom, as many
-a better has done.</p>
-
-<p>In 1198, two years after the death of Longbeard,
-Hubert was compelled to resign the justiciarship.
-His monks at Canterbury, to whom the Church of
-St. Mary, in Cheapside, belonged, and who had no
-love for their archbishop,<a id="FNanchor_26" href="#Footnote_26" class="fnanchor">26</a> indignant at the violation
-of sanctuary and the burning of their church,
-appealed to the king and to the pope, Innocent III.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_77">77</span>
-to make Hubert give up his political activities and
-confine himself to the work of an archbishop. In
-the same year a great council of the nation, led by
-St. Hugh of Lincoln, flatly refused a royal demand
-for money made by Hubert.</p>
-
-<p>Innocent III. was against him, the great barons
-were against him, and Hubert resigned. But he
-held the archbishopric till 1205.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_4">Stephen Langton and the Great Charter<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1207–1228</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Roger of Wendover and Matthew
-Paris; Walter of Coventry; Ralph of Coggeshall (Rolls
-Series); <cite>Letters of Innocent III.</cite>; Rymer’s <cite>Fœdera</cite>; K.
-Norgate—<cite>John Lackland</cite>; Stubbs—<cite>Select Charters</cite>;
-Mark Pattison—<cite>Stephen Langton</cite> (Lives of the English
-Saints); C. E. Maurice—<cite>Stephen Langton</cite>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_81">81</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">STEPHEN LANGTON AND<br />
-THE GREAT CHARTER
-<span class="subhead">1207–1228</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">When</span> Hubert Walter, Archbishop of
-Canterbury—the old Justiciar of
-Richard I.—ended his long life of
-public service on July 12th, <span class="allsmcap">A.D.</span> 1205,
-King John exclaimed, with frank satisfaction, “Now
-for the first time I am King of England!” As
-long as Hubert was alive there was one man strong
-enough to restrain the king, and the primate and
-William the Marshall together had done something
-to guard England against the foulest and most
-ruthless tyranny of all its kings. To the end
-William the Marshall was a brave and patriotic
-statesman, but he served the crown rather than the
-people.</p>
-
-<p>On Hubert’s death John meant to have for archbishop
-a creature of his will, and he was defeated by
-Pope Innocent III., who, dismissing the appeal of
-the monks of Canterbury for Reginald, their subprior,
-and John’s appeal for his nominee, John de
-Gray, Bishop of Norwich, proposed the English-born
-Cardinal, Stephen Langton, “than whom there
-was no man greater in the Roman court, nor was
-there any equal to him in character and in learning.”
-The monks consented to Stephen’s appointment,
-but John’s reply was a flat refusal, and when<span class="pagenum" id="Page_82">82</span>
-on June 7th, 1207, Pope Innocent proceeded to
-consecrate Stephen Langton Archbishop of Canterbury,
-the king’s rage broke out. Innocent’s wise
-judgment gave England one of its noblest and
-greatest archbishops, and the service wrought by
-Langton for the liberties of England’s people was
-of deep and lasting value. But the immediate price
-to be paid for later profit was heavy.</p>
-
-<p>John met Langton’s consecration by seizing the
-estates of Canterbury, driving the chapter into exile,
-and proclaiming that anyone who acknowledged
-Stephen as archbishop should be accounted a public
-enemy. The remonstrances and warnings of the
-pope were disregarded, and in March, 1208, all
-England was laid under an interdict, and there was
-an end to the public ministrations of religion in the
-country for six years—to the bitter distress of the
-common people.</p>
-
-<p>Immediately the interdict came into force, John
-declared all the property of the clergy, secular or
-monastic, to be confiscated, and there was no one
-to stay his hand from speedy spoliation. For the
-barons were willing enough to see the clergy robbed
-and the king’s treasury filled at the expense of the
-Church, and of the bishops only two were left in
-England—Peter des Roches, of Winchester, and
-John de Gray, of Norwich—and both these were
-willing tools of the king. Never did John enjoy his
-royal will and pleasure with such unhindered ferocity
-as in that year 1209. Had the barons stood by the
-Church they might have saved England unspeakable
-miseries, and as it was the laity were soon in as
-sorry a plight as the clergy, “and it seemed as
-though the king was courting the hatred of every<span class="pagenum" id="Page_83">83</span>
-class of his subjects, so burdensome was he to both
-rich and poor.”<a id="FNanchor_27" href="#Footnote_27" class="fnanchor">27</a></p>
-
-<p>In 1211 came Pandulf from Pope Innocent with
-suggestions for peace. Let the king restore the
-property of the clergy, and receive Archbishop
-Langton, with his kinsmen and friends, and the
-other exiled bishops “fairly and in peace” and the
-interdict should be withdrawn. John declined to
-receive Langton as archbishop, and Pandulf, in the
-presence of the whole council, pronounced the papal
-sentence of excommunication on the king, absolving
-all his subjects from allegiance, and commanding
-their obedience to whomsoever should be sent as
-John’s successor.</p>
-
-<p>John treated the excommunication with cheerful
-contempt, and pursued the evil tenour of his way.
-But his position was precarious, for the barons—especially
-the northern barons—were plotting his
-overthrow, and the pope had decided that Philip of
-France should depose John and reign in his stead.
-John was driven to capitulate to the pope at the end
-of 1212, and in May, 1213, Pandulf arrived, and
-the invasion by Philip was stopped, to the exceeding
-annoyance of the French king.</p>
-
-<p>John met the papal legate at Ewell, near Dover,
-and in the presence of “the great men of the
-realm,” swore to carry out all Innocent’s demands,
-promising that Stephen should be received and
-recompense paid to the clergy for their losses.
-Then the King of England formally surrendered
-“to God and to the Holy Mother Church of Rome,
-and to Pope Innocent and his Catholic successors,”
-the whole realm of England and Ireland, “with all<span class="pagenum" id="Page_84">84</span>
-rights thereunto appertaining, to receive them back
-and hold them thenceforth as a feudatory of God
-and the Roman Church.” He swore fealty to the
-pope for both realms, and added that he would send
-a yearly tribute of 1,000 marks. At the same time
-John declared that the act of homage was voluntary,
-done, “not at the driving of force nor the compulsion
-of fear, but of our own good free will and by
-the common counsel of our barons.”</p>
-
-<p>There is no evidence that the pope asked for this
-abject submission, but there are good reasons why
-John desired that political protection of the papacy
-which he obtained by the act of homage.<a id="FNanchor_28" href="#Footnote_28" class="fnanchor">28</a> (Matthew
-Paris has a story that John was willing to pay
-homage and tribute to the Mohammedan Emir of
-Morocco in order to effect an alliance with some
-foreign power.)</p>
-
-<p>The barons themselves appealed to the pope two
-years later to take their part against John, on the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_85">85</span>
-ground that it was only by their compulsion the king
-had been brought to pay homage to Rome, and
-though they were then to curse the papal overlordship
-they had helped procure, and England was to
-come to regard John’s surrender to the pope as
-“a thing to be detested for all time,” in that year 1213
-the protection of the pope was invaluable to John
-and, as some thought, to the country. “For matters
-were in such a strait, and so great was the fear on
-all sides, that there was no more ready way of avoiding
-the imminent peril—perhaps no other way at all.
-For when once he had put himself under apostolical
-protection and made his realms a part of the patrimony
-of St. Peter, there was not in the Roman
-world a sovereign who durst attack him or would
-invade his lands, in such awe was Pope Innocent
-held above all his predecessors for many years
-past.” (Walter of Coventry.)</p>
-
-<p>The long war being at an end Stephen Langton
-and four of the exiled bishops landed in June, and
-Stephen was now to do the work of archbishop, the
-work he had been solemnly consecrated to six years
-before.</p>
-
-<p>John met the primate at Winchester, and swore
-on the gospels in the cathedral “that he would
-cherish, defend and maintain the holy Church and
-her ordained ministers; that he would restore the
-good laws of his forefathers, especially St. Edward’s,
-rendering to all men their rights; and that before
-the next Easter he would make full restitution of all
-property which had been taken away in connection
-with the interdict.” Then Stephen formally absolved
-the king from excommunication and gave him the
-kiss of peace, to the general rejoicing.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_86">86</span></p>
-
-<p>And now England was to see what sort of archbishop
-it was Pope Innocent had sent to Canterbury.
-With a king as cruel as he was vigorous, and as
-astute as he was unscrupulous, with barons who
-knew neither loyalty nor patriotism. Archbishop
-Stephen, out of such materials, was to win for his
-native land the Great Charter, and to have it written
-in black and white that all who would might read
-the several duties of king and people. In August
-Langton, in St. Paul’s Cathedral, read to the barons
-the old coronation charter of Henry I., and reminded
-them that the liberties promised in that document
-were to be recovered. “With very great joy the
-barons swore they would fight for these liberties,
-even unto death if it were needful, and the archbishop
-promised that he would help with all his
-might.” Thus within three months of his setting
-foot in England Langton had started the movement
-for the Great Charter.</p>
-
-<p>But not with king and barons only had the archbishop
-to deal. There were endless difficulties with
-the clergy concerning the restitution of their property,
-and the payment of compensation to be
-settled. And above all there was Nicholas, the
-papal legate, in England, usurping the primate’s
-functions, filling up vacant bishoprics and churches,
-regardless of the rights of the Church and of the
-archbishop. Nicholas was recalled to Rome when
-the interdict was finally removed, and in November,
-1214, John made a public proclamation that free
-and undisturbed election to all the churches in his
-realm should be allowed henceforth. This was an
-attempt on the king’s part to have the Church on
-his side against the barons, for the battle was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_87">87</span>
-beginning between John and the barons which was
-to be fought to a bitter end.</p>
-
-<p>John’s last campaign to recover the lost Angevine
-provinces for the English crown ended in disaster,
-and he returned to England in 1214 to face the full
-discontent of the barons whom he had harassed and
-insulted from the day he came to the throne, and of
-a country suffering from “the evil customs which
-the king’s father and brother had raised up for the
-oppression of the Church and realm, together with
-the abuses which the king himself had added
-thereto.”</p>
-
-<p>The national grievances were enormous and
-intolerable. The whole administration of justice
-was corrupt, and no one could be sure how the
-arbitrary decisions of the king’s officers would be
-carried out. Liberty of the person was a farce when
-free men could be arrested, evicted from their lands,
-exiled and outlawed without legal warrant or a fair
-trial. “In a word, the entire system of government
-and administration set up under the Norman kings,
-and developed under Henry and Richard, had been
-converted by the ingenuity of John into a most
-subtle and effective engine of royal extortion, oppression
-and tyranny over all classes of the nation, from
-earl to villein.”<a id="FNanchor_29" href="#Footnote_29" class="fnanchor">29</a></p>
-
-<p>Here and there the barons had struck against
-some act of personal injury, and the northern barons
-had been conspicuous in their resentment, refusing
-to follow John as their liege lord in his expeditions to
-France. But there was neither cohesion nor any sense
-of national injury amongst the barons until Stephen
-Langton, with a full sense of the responsibility<span class="pagenum" id="Page_88">88</span>
-laid on the successor of Lanfranc and Anselm,
-of Theobald and Thomas, took the lead, and by
-strong, courageous effort sought to end for all time
-in England such tyranny as the country had endured
-under John’s rule. To Langton this was no mere
-struggle between a despotic king and a set of turbulent
-nobles. It was a struggle to win recognition of
-law for <em>all</em> men, and to restore some measure of
-justice and the enjoyment of fair liberty throughout
-the land. The people had neither spokesman nor
-champion, and no man heeded their wrongs save
-Langton. More than 150 years were to pass before
-John Ball and Wat Tyler would appear at the head
-of a peasant army in revolt. In the reign of John,
-yeomen, peasant and artizan were dumb. It was
-Langton who saw that the barons fighting for their
-own rights could be made to fight for all England.</p>
-
-<p>In November the barons came together at St.
-Edmundsbury, and in the abbey church “they swore
-on the high altar that if the king sought to evade
-their demand for the laws and liberties of the charter
-of King Henry I., they would make war upon him
-and withdraw from fealty to him till he should by a
-charter furnished with his seal confirm to them all
-that they demanded. They also agreed that after
-Christmas they would go all together to the king
-and ask him for a confirmation of these liberties, and
-that meanwhile they would so provide themselves
-with horses and arms that if the king should seek to
-break his oath, they might, by seizing his castles,
-compel him to make satisfaction. And when these
-things were done every man returned to his own
-home.” (Roger of Wendover.)</p>
-
-<p>John kept Christmas at Worcester, but his court<span class="pagenum" id="Page_89">89</span>
-was very small, and he realised that he stood
-alone. All through the years of the interdict the
-pope’s ban had not kept the nobles from attendance
-on the king; it was now when he stood reconciled
-to the Church that John found himself deserted.
-He moved to London at the new year, and there on
-the Epiphany came the confederate barons, making
-display of arms, and praying that the laws and
-liberties of Edward the Confessor written in the
-charter of Henry I. might be confirmed. John
-urged that the question was too big and too difficult
-to be settled off hand, and asked that it should be
-put off till Easter. This was agreed to on condition
-that the king pledged himself by three sureties to
-fulfil his promises. Archbishop Stephen, William
-the Marshall and the Bishop of Ely were accepted
-as sureties, and in accepting the post Langton
-proved his great statesmanship. There was no
-question of going over to the king’s side. The
-barons knew the archbishop as their chief ally, but
-John knew that Langton was to be trusted as implicitly
-as he trusted William the Marshall. Langton’s
-one desire was to see the written enactment
-granting constitutional liberties, and ending the
-worst of the royal abuses.</p>
-
-<p>John did not waste the time allotted to him, but
-worked his hardest to gain friends and supporters
-against the barons, and to break up the confederacy.
-It was all to no purpose. His commissioners to the
-County Courts—in the southern and midland shires,
-sent to explain the king’s cause—met with no
-success. Nobles and churchmen alike stood aloof,
-and all John could do was to write to the knights at
-Poitou to send him mercenaries, and to appeal to<span class="pagenum" id="Page_90">90</span>
-his liege lord, the pope, against his rebellious
-subjects. Finally, he took the cross, hoping for
-the favours awarded to a crusader. These efforts
-were all of no avail. The mercenaries were inadequate.
-The pope’s letters of rebuke to the barons
-for their conspiracies and conjurations were unheeded,
-and at Easter, John (whom the pope had
-warned to harken to “just petitions”) was driven to
-send the primate and the Marshall for a definite
-statement of the laws and liberties demanded.</p>
-
-<p>The barons, who were assembled at Brackley,
-presented “a certain schedule,” probably compiled
-with Langton’s assistance, and this was read to the
-king by the primate. “They might as well ask for
-my kingdom at once,” was John’s reply to the
-various items, and he swore he would never grant
-liberties that would mean his own enslavement.
-Both Langton and the Marshall strove to persuade
-the king to yield, but to no purpose; and all that
-remained was to return to the barons and to state
-that the king refused their demands. Then the
-barons, on hearing this, flew to arms, formally
-renounced their homage and fealty to the king, and
-chose a military leader for themselves—Robert
-Fitz-Walter. London welcomed the insurgents on
-May 24th, and John, with a handful of mercenaries,
-had the whole baronage against him. Capitulation
-was inevitable. From Windsor John sent
-envoys to the barons in London, promising, for the
-sake of peace and for the welfare and honour of his
-realm, to concede the laws and liberties demanded,
-and advising the appointment of time and place for
-a meeting for “the settlement of all these things.”
-The barons at once fixed the meeting for June 15th,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_91">91</span>
-in a meadow called Runnymead, between Staines
-and Windsor, and there, in the presence of well-nigh
-all the baronage of England, of Archbishop
-Stephen, and seven bishops, and “a multitude of
-most illustrious knights,” the Great Charter was
-signed. It was the work of Langton.<a id="FNanchor_30" href="#Footnote_30" class="fnanchor">30</a> It was he
-who had inspired the movement, had framed the
-articles, and had brought the struggle to a successful
-issue.</p>
-
-<p>“One copy of the Great Charter still remains in
-the British Museum, injured by age and fire, but
-with the royal seal still hanging from the brown,
-shrivelled parchment. It is impossible to gaze without
-reverence on the earliest monument of English
-freedom which we can see with our own eyes and
-touch with our own hands, the Great Charter to
-which from age to age patriots have looked back as
-the basis of English liberty.” (J. R. Green.)</p>
-
-<p>Yet the Charter itself was in the main but the
-old charter of Henry I. writ large. It set up no
-new rights and conferred no new privileges. It
-sanctioned no constitutional changes, and proclaimed
-no new liberties. Its real importance is in the fact
-that it was a <em>written</em> document—“this great table
-of laws, won by the people of England from a
-tyrannous king, was the first great act which laid
-down in black and white the main points of the
-constitution and the several rights and duties of
-king and people.” (F. York Powell.)</p>
-
-<p>“The bonds of unwritten custom, which the older
-grants did little more than recognize, had proved too<span class="pagenum" id="Page_92">92</span>
-weak to hold Angevins; and the baronage now threw
-them aside for the restraints of written law. It is in
-this way that the Great Charter marks the transition
-from the age of traditional rights, preserved in the
-nation’s memory and officially declared by the
-primate, to the age of written legislation, of parliaments
-and statutes, which was soon to come.” (J. R.
-Green.)</p>
-
-<p>The first article of the Charter guaranteed the
-freedom of the English Church, and, in especial, the
-freedom of elections, “which was reputed most
-requisite.”</p>
-
-<p>By the Great Charter the feudal rights of the
-king over his vassals were defined and settled,
-and the tenants of the barons were protected
-in similar way from the lawless exactions of their
-lords.</p>
-
-<p>No scutage or aid was to be levied by the crown,
-“save by the common council of the realm”—except
-the three customary feudal aids for the ransoming
-of the king, the knighting of his eldest son, and the
-marriage of his eldest daughter. This common
-council, consisting of bishops, abbots, earls, and
-greater barons, was to be summoned by special writ.
-The free rights of London and the other chartered
-towns were fully admitted.</p>
-
-<p>The Court of Common Pleas (cases between
-subjects) was to sit at Westminster (and not to
-follow the king in his wanderings), and judges of
-assize were to go on circuit four times a year.</p>
-
-<p>No free man was to be seized, imprisoned, ousted
-of his land, outlawed, banished, or in any way
-brought to ruin, save by the legal judgment of his
-peers or by the law of the land.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_93">93</span></p>
-
-<p>To no man was justice to be sold, denied, or postponed
-by the king.</p>
-
-<p>The free right of Englishmen and foreigners to
-pass in and out of the country in time of peace was
-granted.</p>
-
-<p>The king’s mercenaries, “all the gang that came
-with horses and arms to the hurt of the realm,” were
-to be sent out of England.</p>
-
-<p>Finally, by a supplementary document, the barons
-present at Runnymead were to choose out of the
-whole baronage twenty-five sworn guardians of the
-Charter, who, in the event of any violation of its
-articles, were not to hesitate from making war on
-the king till the matter had been put right.</p>
-
-<p>Well might John exclaim, in a wild burst of rage,
-when the Charter was signed, and he was alone with
-his foreign troops, “They have given me five-and-twenty
-over-kings!”</p>
-
-<p>The twenty-five were to ensure the king’s obedience
-to the Charter, but who was to ensure the obedience
-of the twenty-five?—all of whom were of the
-party of revolt against the king. A safeguard was
-obviously necessary, and a second court of barons,
-thirty-eight in number, was chosen—(which included
-William the Marshall)—and these first swore
-obedience to the twenty-five, and then a second
-oath to enforce on king and barons mutual
-respect.<a id="FNanchor_31" href="#Footnote_31" class="fnanchor">31</a></p>
-
-<p>The Great Charter was signed, and within a week
-it was published throughout all England. But the
-“sort of peace” patched up between John and
-the barons was not to last. None of the barons
-believed that the king would abide by the oaths he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_94">94</span>
-had sworn, and they, for their part, prepared for
-war.<a id="FNanchor_32" href="#Footnote_32" class="fnanchor">32</a></p>
-
-<p>To the Continent John looked for aid, “seeking
-to be revenged upon his enemies by two swords,
-the sword of the spirit and the sword of the flesh,
-so that if one failed he could count upon the other
-for success.” He had appealed to the pope in May,
-and Innocent’s reply had been a general condemnation
-of all disturbers of the peace. Pandulf, the
-papal legate, was at Runnymead, and in August,
-when the barons were openly making ready for
-hostilities, he and Peter des Roches, of Winchester,
-called on Stephen Langton to enforce the papal
-sentence of excommunication against certain of the
-barons. Langton, who was about to set out to
-Rome for a general council, declined to do this until
-he had seen the pope and discussed the whole
-question with him. He believed the sentence had
-been drawn up by the pope under a misunderstanding.
-Thereupon Pandulf and Peter des Roches, by
-virtue of their authority, declared Stephen disobedient
-to the papal mandate, and pronounced his
-suspension from his office of archbishop.</p>
-
-<p>Langton made no protest against the sentence but
-went to Rome, and was present at the general
-council in November. His chiefest work for England
-was done when the Charter was signed at Runnymead.
-With the king and the barons at civil war,
-the country ravaged by John’s foreign bands of
-merciless savages, and the barons praying Louis, the
-son of Philip of France, to take the English crown,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_95">95</span>
-what could Archbishop Stephen accomplish? Pope
-Innocent had declared the Charter annulled on the
-ground that both king and barons had made the
-pope the over-lord of England, and that in consequence
-nothing in the government and constitution
-of the country could be altered without his knowledge
-and sanction. But as the legate, the primate,
-and the bishops had all left for Rome, the pope’s
-disallowing of the Charter never got published in
-England at all, though it was known that he had
-sent letters.</p>
-
-<p>The sentence of suspension was removed from
-Langton in February, 1216. A few months later
-the great pope, Innocent III., passed away, and in
-October John was dead.</p>
-
-<p>In 1217 Stephen Langton was back again at
-Canterbury, to remain for eleven more years the
-primate of England. With William the Marshall
-and Hubert de Burgh, Stephen worked for the preservation
-of public peace during those early years of
-Henry III. We find him in 1223 demanding a fresh
-confirmation of the Charter in the council at Oxford,
-and two years later its solemn proclamation is
-required by the archbishop and the barons as the
-price of a new subsidy. Equally resolute is Archbishop
-Stephen for public order, threatening with
-all the pains and penalties of excommunication the
-barons, who (in spite of Hubert de Burgh’s letters
-from the pope declaring Henry to be of age) were
-anxious to keep the royal castles in their own hands.
-“At a time when constitutional freedom was hardly
-known, when insurrection seemed the only possible
-means of checking despotism, he (Langton)
-organized and established a movement for freedom<span class="pagenum" id="Page_96">96</span>
-which by every act and word of his life he showed
-to be in opposition to mere anarchy.” (C. E.
-Maurice.)</p>
-
-<p>Stephen Langton was never canonized, though
-application was made to Rome to that end shortly
-after his death in 1228. His learning had made him
-famous in Paris before Pope Innocent summoned
-him to Rome to become cardinal priest of St.
-Chrysogonus. His wise statesmanship was proved
-by the victory he won for England’s liberties over
-so energetic and ruthless a despot as John, and
-with such material as the barons. His strength of
-character and disinterested patriotism were impaired
-by no taint of baseness or self seeking. If Stephen
-Langton is not numbered with the saints, he ranks
-high in the great list of England’s primates, serving
-religion as faithfully as he served justice and social
-order, and his name is resplendent for all time in the
-charters of English liberty.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_5">Bishop Grosseteste, the Reformer<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1235–1253</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: <cite>Letters of Robert Grosseteste</cite>, edited
-by Luard; <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Monumenta Franciscana</cite>; <cite>Letters of Adam
-of March and Eccleston on the coming of the Friars</cite>,
-edited by Brewer; <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Annales Monastici</cite>—Burton and
-Dunstable; Matthew Paris (Rolls’ Series); Samuel
-Pegge—<cite>Life of Robert Grosseteste</cite>, 1793; F. S. Stevenson,
-M.P.—<cite>Robert Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln</cite>;
-M. M. C. Calthrop—<cite>Victoria County History—Lincolnshire</cite>;
-Gasquet—<cite>Henry III. and the Church</cite>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_99">99</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">BISHOP GROSSETESTE<br />
-THE REFORMER
-<span class="subhead">1235–1253</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> story of Robert Grosseteste’s bishophood
-is the record of eighteen years’ unflinching
-battle with abuses in Church
-and State. From his enthronement as
-Bishop of Lincoln in 1235 till his death in 1253
-Grosseteste is conspicuous as a reformer. Now it is
-the slackness of the clergy he is combatting, enforcing
-discipline on men and women who, vowed
-to religion, preferred an easier way of life. At
-another time he is maintaining the laws and liberties
-of the nation against Henry III., who with all his
-piety knew neither honesty nor truth in his sovereignty.
-Right on till the last year of his life
-Grosseteste is as vigorous in resisting papal encroachments
-on the English Church as he is in
-dealing with his clergy or with the king. As a
-reformer his work is threefold:—(1) The correction
-of current abuses in the Church. (2) Maintenance
-of justice under the misrule of Henry III. (3)
-Resistance to the aggressive claims of the papacy.
-With all this work, fighting enemies of England at
-home and abroad, Grosseteste is busy administering
-his enormous diocese of Lincoln—then the largest
-in the country, including as it did the counties
-of Lincoln, Leicester, Buckingham, Huntingdon,
-Northampton, Oxford and Bedford (Oxford and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_100">100</span>
-Peterborough were afterwards carved out of Lincoln)—and
-is found writing to and advising all
-manner of men, kings, nobles and peasants.</p>
-
-<p>Here is the character of Bishop Grosseteste as
-his contemporary, Matthew Paris, saw it, and
-Matthew was a monk, and the champion of the
-monks, and hated Grosseteste’s stern interference
-with monastic <span class="locked">life:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“He was an open confuter of both pope and
-king, the corrector of monks, the director of priests,
-the instructor of clerks, the support of scholars, a
-preacher to the people, a persecutor of the incontinent,
-the tireless student of the Scriptures, the
-hammer and despiser of the Romans. At the table
-of bodily refreshment he was hospitable, eloquent,
-courteous, pleasant and affable. At the spiritual
-table devout, tearful and contrite. In his episcopal
-office he was sedulous, venerable and indefatigable.”</p>
-
-<p>Six hundred years later the whirligig of time
-leaves this verdict of old Matthew Paris unreversed,
-and finds Grosseteste’s reputation enhanced.</p>
-
-<p>“There is scarcely a character in English history
-whose fame has been more constant, both during
-and after his life, than Robert Grosseteste, Bishop
-of Lincoln from 1235 to 1253. As we find his
-advice sought universally during his lifetime, and
-his example spoken of as that which almost all the
-other prelates of his day followed, so was it also
-after his death. If threats from Rome and excommunications
-from Canterbury fell harmlessly upon
-him while alive, his example nerved others in subsequent
-years—as in the case of Sewal, Archbishop
-of York—to bear even worse attacks without giving
-way. And probably no one has had a greater<span class="pagenum" id="Page_101">101</span>
-influence upon English thought and English literature
-for the two centuries which followed his time; few
-books will be found that do not contain some quotations
-from Lincolniensis, ‘the great clerk, Grostest.’”<a id="FNanchor_33" href="#Footnote_33" class="fnanchor">33</a></p>
-
-<p>A Suffolk man was Grosseteste, and born of
-humble parents. Sent to Oxford by his friends he
-becomes master of the schools and chancellor of the
-university—the foremost scholar of his day—receives
-various ecclesiastical preferments, and at the age of
-sixty is freely elected by the chapter of Lincoln as
-their bishop. If the canons of Lincoln believed
-that Grosseteste’s age would ensure comparative
-quiet for the diocese and a continuance of the loose
-order of his immediate predecessors, they were
-speedily undeceived.</p>
-
-<p>Grosseteste brought into Lincoln an energy for
-religion that disturbed the easy-going monks, with
-their comfortable common-room life, and altogether
-upset the secular clergy with their illegal marriages
-and their parochial revellings. In the first year of
-his authority Grosseteste’s letter to his archdeacons,
-followed by his diocesan constitutions, shows the
-hand of the reformer. He calls attention to the
-neglect of the canonical hours of prayer—certain
-clergy “fearing not God nor regarding man, either
-do not say the canonical hours or say them in
-mutilated fashion, and that without any sign of devotion,
-or at an hour more suitable to their own
-desires than convenient to their parishioners”—to
-the private marriages of many priests, to the strife
-and bloodshed and desecration caused by the miracle
-plays in churchyards, and to the drunkenness and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_102">102</span>
-gluttony attendant on funeral feasts. Grosseteste
-also complains that the parochial clergy oppose the
-preaching friars, “maliciously hindering the people
-from hearing the sermons of the friars, and permitting
-those to preach who make a trade of it, and
-who only preach such things as may draw money.”
-Incidentally, and with a curiously modern touch,
-Grosseteste urges his archdeacons to warn mothers
-and nurses against overlaying their children at night,
-for it seems many infants were suffocated in this way.</p>
-
-<p>Grosseteste relied on the friars, Franciscan and
-Dominican, to revive religion in his diocese.
-From their first coming to England he had befriended
-the little brothers of St. Francis and St.
-Dominic’s order of preachers, and at Oxford had
-been conspicuously their rector. He writes to Pope
-Gregory IX. in the highest praise of the Franciscans:
-“Inestimable benefits have been wrought in my
-diocese by the friars. They enlighten our whole
-land with the bright light of their preaching and
-learning.”</p>
-
-<p>The secular clergy and the monks generally by
-no means shared Grosseteste’s appreciation of the
-preachers of poverty, and when the Bishop of Lincoln
-began to rout up the monasteries in his diocese
-with visitations and enquiries the dismay was
-considerable. The Benedictine monks in England
-were good, easy men in the thirteenth century—Grosseteste
-finds no grave faults against morality to
-rebuke in them—fond of their pleasant social life,
-and enjoying the comfort of an existence that had
-few temporal cares beyond finding money for pope
-and king. At the worst their sloth was culpable.
-Grosseteste charged upon them with his preaching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_103">103</span>
-friars, calling for amendment and the fulfilment of
-duties, attacking old abuses sanctioned by custom,
-and showing no tolerant sympathy for the infirmities
-and shortcomings of middle-aged clerks.<a id="FNanchor_34" href="#Footnote_34" class="fnanchor">34</a> Respect
-him they must, for the learning and high character
-of the bishop were conspicuous in the land, but the
-dislike of all this strenuous exhortation was not concealed.
-The very chapter of Lincoln, which had
-elected him bishop, refused to admit Grosseteste as
-their visitor, or to acknowledge his jurisdiction over
-their proceedings, and only after six years of controversy
-and litigation was the case finally decided at
-Rome (1245) wholly in the bishop’s favour. A sentence
-of excommunication pronounced upon him by
-the monks at Canterbury during the vacancy of the
-see was of course entirely ignored by Grosseteste.
-If the clergy resented Grosseteste’s call to arms, it is
-to be remembered that they had suffered considerably
-from the tyranny of the times, and had been
-reduced under the general oppression to a feeble
-and sluggish timidity. The old “Song of the
-Church”<a id="FNanchor_35" href="#Footnote_35" class="fnanchor">35</a> tells how low they had fallen:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_104">104</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Free and held in high esteem the clergy used to be,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">None were better cherished: or loved more heartily.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Slaves are they now: despised, brought low,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Betrayed (as all deplore)</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">By those from whom: their help should come;</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">I can no more.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">King and pope alike in this: to one purpose hold.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">How to make the clergy yield their silver and their gold.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Truth to say: the pope gives way,</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">Far too much to the king</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Our tithes he grants: for the crown’s wants</div>
- <div class="verse indent12">To his liking.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>To check the rapacity of the king, and to stop
-the seizure of Church revenues for Italian clerics,
-and thereby to raise the English clergy from their
-state of sluggish despondency was Grosseteste’s
-work for England. We find him conspicuous at the
-council summoned by the king to meet at Westminster
-in 1244. In vain Henry III. appealed for
-money, bishops and nobles reminded him that the
-money so frequently granted had done no good
-either to the king or the country, and that a justiciar
-and chancellor must be appointed for the strengthening
-of the state. Henry demurred, tried postponements
-and delays, and these failing, summoned the
-bishops alone, and confronted them with a letter
-from Pope Innocent IV. exhorting them to give
-liberally to the king. Even this failed to move the
-prelates. After much discussion, however, some
-were for “a mild answer,” for many of the prelates
-“fearing the king’s instability and the pusillanimity
-of the royal counsellors,” were unwilling to deny the
-pope’s request. Grosseteste clinched the matter by
-declaring they must all stand together with the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_105">105</span>
-barons:<a id="FNanchor_36" href="#Footnote_36" class="fnanchor">36</a> “We may not be divided from the
-common counsel. For it is written if we be divided
-we shall all perish forthwith,” The next day Henry
-tried to get at each of the bishops separately—an
-old device. “But they with wary heed would not be
-so entrapped, and by departing early in the morning
-escaped the net in which they had once been caught;
-and so the council broke up to the king’s discontent.”
-(Matthew Paris.)</p>
-
-<p>Again in 1252 Henry summoned the bishops, and
-tried to coerce them into giving him money by producing
-a papal mandate, authorising the payment
-of a full tithe of all Church revenues to the king for
-the space of three years. To make matters worse,
-“payment was not to be made on the old assessment,
-but on a new assessment conducted with
-strict inquiry, at the will and judgment of the royal
-agents and extortioners, who would seek their own
-profit before the king’s.” The excuse was that the
-king was about to start on a pilgrimage. Grosseteste
-was then an old man, but he blazed out at this
-monstrous demand, especially when the king’s
-messengers went on to explain that the tithe for two
-years might be paid at once, and that the third<span class="pagenum" id="Page_106">106</span>
-year’s tithe could also be raised before the king
-actually started. “By our Lady,” said the sturdy
-bishop of Lincoln, “what does all this mean? You
-assume that we shall agree to this damnable levy,
-and go on arguing from premises that have not been
-admitted. God forbid that we should thus bend
-our knee to Baal.”</p>
-
-<p>The king’s half-brother, Ethelmar, bishop-elect of
-Winchester, deprecated resistance to the will of
-pope and king, and urged that the French had consented
-to pay a similar demand. “Yes,” said the
-Bishop of Ely, “and it brought their king no good.”
-“For the very reason the French have yielded must
-we resist,” replied Grosseteste. “To do a thing
-twice makes it a custom, and if we pay too, we
-shall have no peace. For my own part, I say plainly
-that I will not pay this evil demand, lest the king
-himself as well as us should incur the heavy wrath
-of God.” The other bishops followed Grosseteste’s
-lead, and the old man went on to advise them to
-pray the king to think of his eternal salvation, and
-to restrain his rash impulses. Henry naturally
-declined to send an independent remonstrance to the
-pope against the mandate, and the bishops decided
-they could do nothing in the way of granting this
-special tithe. But they were hard put to it, “between
-the pulling of the king and the pushing of the pope.”</p>
-
-<p>All Grosseteste’s dealings with the king show the
-same firm resolution to stop the royal extortion, and
-to insist on the fulfilment of the charters of liberties
-obtained from the crown. He carries on the work
-of Stephen Langton, always backing up the unsuccessful
-efforts of the good St. Edmund Rich
-(Archbishop of Canterbury, 1234–1240) to keep<span class="pagenum" id="Page_107">107</span>
-Henry faithful to his word, and prepares the way for
-the great campaign of his friend Simon of Montfort.<a id="FNanchor_37" href="#Footnote_37" class="fnanchor">37</a>
-The very worst period of Henry’s long
-reign is covered by Grosseteste’s episcopal life.
-Hubert de Burgh’s wise rule was over by 1232, and
-Peter des Roches and the horde of aliens were
-fleecing the country for the next twenty years. It
-is not till after Grosseteste’s death that the barons
-dealt with Henry’s misrule to any purpose.</p>
-
-<p>At the great council held in London in 1248, at
-which Grosseteste was present, a full list of the
-national grievances is given: the lavish waste of the
-wealth of the country on foreigners, the ruin of
-trade by the arbitrary seizure of goods by the king
-and his agents, the robbery of poor fishermen by
-royal authority, “so that they think it safer to trust
-themselves to the stormy waves and seek a further
-shore,” and the keeping bishoprics and abbacies
-vacant so that the crown may enjoy the revenues
-therefrom, are the chief causes of complaint. They
-were not new grievances, for the most part, and they<span class="pagenum" id="Page_108">108</span>
-were not to die with Henry III., all charters and
-royal promises notwithstanding.</p>
-
-<p>Added to the common wrongs of Henry’s wretched
-misrule were the papal extortions, directly encouraged
-by the king. In return for papal mandates directing
-churchmen to supply the king with money, what
-could Henry—himself the most devoted servant of
-the papacy—do but help the pope to get what he
-could out of England? The wealth of England
-was held to be of fabulous amount at Rome, and
-popes beset by fierce ungodly emperors naturally
-turned to it in their need as to a treasury.</p>
-
-<p>But the thing was intolerable to Grosseteste. He
-had studied in Paris, he welcomed Dominican and
-Franciscan friars from the continent as no other
-prelate did, and had no objection to foreigners <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">per se</i>.
-But the pope claimed the revenues of church livings
-for boys and presented illiterates to benefices—to
-the obvious degradation of the Church in England.
-Grosseteste was always willing enough to raise what
-money he could for the holy see, but appoint unworthy
-and incompetent clerks to livings in his
-diocese, that he would not do—not for any pope.</p>
-
-<p>The country groaned under the biting avarice of
-the Roman see, as it bled under the vampire politics
-of Peter des Roches and his needy, greedy crew of
-Bretons and Poitevins.</p>
-
-<p>What it all meant to England Matthew Paris has
-told us in his description of things in 1237:</p>
-
-<p>“Now was simony practised without shame and
-usurers on various pleas openly extorted money from
-the common people and lesser folk; charity expired,
-the liberty of the Church withered away, religion
-was trampled to the dust. Daily did illiterate<span class="pagenum" id="Page_109">109</span>
-persons of the lowest class, armed with bulls from
-Rome, burst forth into threats; and, in spite of the
-privileges handed down to us from good men of old,
-they feared not to plunder the revenues consecrated
-by our holy forefathers for the service of religion, the
-support of the poor, and the nourishment of strangers,
-but thundering out their excommunications they
-quickly and violently carried off what they demanded.
-And if those who were wronged and robbed sought
-refuge by appealing or pleading their privileges, they
-were at once suspended and excommunicated by a
-papal writ. Thus mourning and lamentation were
-heard on all sides, and many exclaimed with heart-rending
-sobs, ‘It were better to die than to behold
-the sufferings of our country and its saints. Woe to
-England, once the chief of provinces, the mistress
-of nations, the mirror of the Church, the exemplar
-of religion, and now brought under tribute,—trampled
-on by worthless men, and the prey of men
-of low degree.’”</p>
-
-<p>The arrival of Otho, in 1237, a papal legate (on
-the request of Henry), far from remedying, increased
-the contemporary distress. For though Otho was a
-discreet man, he was more eager to get money for
-Rome than to deal with the oppression that plagued
-England, and when he did give advice it was spurned
-by those who saw his grasping hands. Archbishop
-Edmund was particularly vexed at having a papal
-legate set over him, and what with one disappointment
-and another finally gave up in despair the task
-of guiding the English Church, and in 1240 went to
-die at Pontigny, where his predecessors Anselm and
-Thomas had lived in exile.</p>
-
-<p>Grosseteste stuck to his post, and the Franciscans<span class="pagenum" id="Page_110">110</span>
-and Dominicans, whom he aided, poured in oil and
-wine on the wounds of the Church folk, and revived
-religion in the country.</p>
-
-<p>Grosseteste fought the extortionate papal demands
-for Church revenues all the time. In 1239, with
-his fellow bishops, he tells Otho plainly that the
-Church is drained dry by the grasping importunity
-of Rome. Otho left in 1241, and that same year
-saw Boniface of Savoy, a handsome, soldierly man
-appointed to Canterbury as St. Edmund’s successor.
-The following year came a new extortioner from
-Rome, named Martin, an altogether inferior person
-to Otho, but with all the legate’s powers of suspension
-and excommunication. His confiscations and
-rapacity provoked a remonstrance to the pope even
-from Henry. Martin at last, in 1245, had to fly for
-his life from England, and when Grosseteste subsequently
-had a calculation made of the English
-Church revenues enjoyed by foreigners, it was found
-that the incomes of foreign clerks appointed by Pope
-Innocent IV. amounted to more than 70,000 marks—more
-than treble the king’s income. And all this
-was done in spite of refusals by Grosseteste to
-appoint illiterates or allow boys to hold benefices.</p>
-
-<p>The barons sided with the Church against Martin,
-and drew up a long protest which they sent to the
-pope at the council of Lyons in 1245. In this they
-complained:—That the pope, not content with
-Peter’s Pence, which had been paid cheerfully from
-old times, wrung money from the Church against
-the law of the realm, without the king’s permission;
-and that the pope wrongfully put ignorant, covetous,
-or absentee Italians into English livings notwithstanding
-his own promises, the rights of patrons,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_111">111</span>
-and the privileges of the English clergy. A year
-later the protest was repeated with another item
-objecting to the pope’s claim to recall former
-charters.</p>
-
-<p>Innocent IV.’s answer to this was to threaten to
-dethrone Henry as he had dethroned his brother-in-law,
-the Emperor Frederick. The king weakly said
-no more, the barons, without a leader, were equally
-silent, and the Church continued “to sate the greed
-of Rome.”</p>
-
-<p>But in Grosseteste there was no spirit of surrender.
-In 1253, the very last year of his life, he was called
-upon by the pope to provide a nephew of his with a
-canonry at Lincoln, and the bishop’s letter of refusal
-is, perhaps, the only well remembered thing of all
-Grosseteste’s writings. This letter was not, as
-commonly stated, sent to the pope but to his representative
-who was also named Innocent.<a id="FNanchor_38" href="#Footnote_38" class="fnanchor">38</a> “The
-pope has power to build up,” wrote Grosseteste,
-“but not to pull down. These appointments tend
-to destruction, not edification, being of man’s device
-and not according to the words of the Apostles or
-the will of Christ. By my very love and obedience
-to the Holy See I must refuse obedience in things
-altogether opposed to the sanctity of the Apostolic
-See and contrary to Catholic unity. As a son and
-a servant I decline to obey, and this refusal must not
-be taken as rebellion, for it is done in reverence to
-divine commands.”</p>
-
-<p>(This letter is quoted by Matthew Paris and in
-the <cite>Burton Annals</cite>. It can be read in full in the
-<cite>Epistles</cite>, No. 128.)</p>
-
-<p>When the pope heard of this answer he talked<span class="pagenum" id="Page_112">112</span>
-angrily of “the old madman” who dared to sit in
-judgment on him, and blustered about the king of
-England being his vassal. The cardinals, however,
-said frankly that Grosseteste had spoken the truth,
-and that he was far too good a man to be condemned.
-“He is Catholic,” they declared, “and of
-deepest holiness. More religious, and more saintly
-than we are, and of better life. They say that
-among all the bishops there is no one his equal, still
-less his superior. All the clergy of France and
-England know this. Besides, he is considered a
-great philosopher, thoroughly learned in Latin and
-Greek; and he is zealous for justice, and a man who
-deals in theology, a preacher to the people, a lover
-of chastity, and a persecutor of those who practise
-simony.” So they extolled him. And it is to the
-everlasting credit of the cardinals of the Roman See
-in that year 1253 that they could discern the sincerity
-and the great qualities of the brave old bishop who
-defied the pope’s unrighteous commands. There
-was no question at Rome of any disloyalty on
-Grosseteste’s part to the Holy See, no suggestion
-of any failing as a good Catholic.<a id="FNanchor_39" href="#Footnote_39" class="fnanchor">39</a> And Pope<span class="pagenum" id="Page_113">113</span>
-Innocent IV. wisely let the matter drop, when the
-cardinals assured him it would never do to interfere
-with Grosseteste.</p>
-
-<p>Before he died Grosseteste made a last appeal “to
-the nobles of England, the citizens of London and
-the community of the whole realm” on behalf of
-the Rights of the English Church, making a careful
-list of the ills to be redressed. He also solemnly
-charged his friend Simon of Montfort, never, as he
-valued his immortal soul, to forsake the cause of the
-English people, but to stand up even to the death,
-if needs be, for a true and just government, and
-with prophetic foresight spoke of the heavier troubles
-coming on the land.</p>
-
-<p>On October 9th, 1253, the long life and the magnificent
-battling with odds were over, and the great
-bishop passed away. He was buried in Lincoln
-Cathedral, and in 1307, King Edward I. and the
-dean and chapter of St. Paul’s made application for
-his canonization, but without success. Fifty years
-later and Edward III.’s Statutes of Provisors, 1351,
-and Praemunire, 1353, by their prohibition of papal
-bulls and of the appointment of papal nominees to
-English benefices, may be accepted as the real
-acknowledgment of Grosseteste’s political work.</p>
-
-<p>“I confidently assert (wrote Matthew Paris) that
-his virtues pleased God more than his failings displeased
-Him.”</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_6">Simon of Montfort and the
-English Parliament<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1258–1265</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Matthew Paris; William of Rishanger;
-Thomas of Wykes; Adam of Marsh—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Monumenta
-Frascescana</cite>, <cite>Burton Annals</cite>, <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Annales Monastici</cite>; Robert
-of Gloucester—<cite>Royal letters of Henry III.</cite> (Rolls Series);
-<cite>Political Songs</cite> (Camden Society, 1839); <cite>Chronicle of
-Melrose</cite>; Stubbs—<cite>Constitutional History</cite>, vol. ii; and
-<cite>Select Charters</cite>; W. H. Blaauw—<cite>The Barons’ War</cite>;
-Dr. Pauli—<cite>Simon of Montfort</cite> (translated by Una M.
-Goodwin); G. W. Prothero—<cite>Simon of Montfort</cite>; Dr.
-Shirley in <cite>Quarterly Review</cite>, cxix. 57.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_117">117</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">SIMON OF MONTFORT AND<br />
-THE ENGLISH PARLIAMENT
-<span class="subhead">1258–1265</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">“In</span> the year of our Lord 1238, which was the
-twenty-second of his reign, King Henry
-held his court in London at Westminster,
-and there on the day after Epiphany, which
-was a Thursday, Simon de Montfort solemnly espoused
-Eleanor, daughter of King John, sister of
-Henry III., and widow of William Marshall, Earl of
-Pembroke. The king himself gave away the bride
-to the said Simon, Earl of Leicester, who received
-her gratefully by reason of his disinterested love for
-her, her own beauty, the rich honours that were
-attached to her, and the distinguished and royal
-descent of the lady, for she was the legitimate
-daughter of a king and queen, and furthermore was
-sister of a king, of an empress (the wife of Frederic
-II.), and of a queen (Joan, wife of Alexander II. of
-Scotland). Our lord the pope, too, gave him a dispensation
-to marry this noble lady.”</p>
-
-<p>Thus Matthew Paris, when Earl Simon, then a
-man about thirty-seven, and “tall and handsome,”
-enjoyed the royal favour and stood godfather to the
-infant Prince Edward. Simon had only done homage
-as Earl of Leicester in 1232; his boyhood was
-passed in France, and his father was the great
-soldier who led the French crusade against the
-Albigenses. Earl Richard of Cornwall, Henry’s<span class="pagenum" id="Page_118">118</span>
-brother—soon to become King of the Romans—objected
-to the marriage, regarding it as one more
-victory for the foreigners whom Henry nourished at
-the expense of England. But Simon was no real
-alien. His grandmother had been sister and heiress
-of the Earl of Leicester, and Simon’s French training
-no more made him a stranger in England than did
-Stephen Langton’s years of study in Paris and
-Rome unfit him for the primacy of the English
-Church.</p>
-
-<p>Henry’s favour was short-lived. Earl Simon
-made friends with Earl Richard and left for the
-crusades, disgusted with the king’s want of honesty.
-So much wisdom did he show in Palestine, and so
-great was his prowess, that Simon might have stayed
-in the east as regent for the young King of Jerusalem.
-But he had work to do in England, and
-came home with Richard in 1242.</p>
-
-<p>Here against all the disorder of misrule and the
-royal and papal extortions Simon laboured with his
-friend Bishop Grosseteste, and he is conspicuous at
-the Parliament of Westminster in 1244, and in
-drawing up the great protest to the pope a year later.</p>
-
-<p>Then for five years (1248–53) Simon was in
-Gascony contending with a body of nobles whom
-neither Henry II. nor Richard I. had been able to
-make good subjects, and whose only object in
-making formal acknowledgment of Henry III. was to
-escape the rule of Louis of France. Henry gave
-Simon neither men nor money, and lent a willing
-ear to all the complaints of Simon’s enemies in Gascony
-and in England.<a id="FNanchor_40" href="#Footnote_40" class="fnanchor">40</a> At his own expense the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_119">119</span>
-Earl of Leicester saved Gascony for the English
-crown, and brought peace and law and trade to that
-province. Henry’s return was to make Simon
-answer trumped-up charges of robbery, cruelty and
-treason brought by Gascons in 1252. The charges
-were not proved, although Henry sent his own
-commissioner to Gascony to make enquiry. Earl
-Richard and other nobles who knew the country
-were convinced of Simon’s justice, and Simon, who
-was in England trying to raise supplies, turned
-sharply on the king, reminding him of unfulfilled
-promises. “Keep thy agreement with me,” he went
-on, “or pay me the money I have spent in thy service;
-for it is well known I have impoverished my
-earldom beyond recovery for the honour of the
-king.” “There is no shame in breaking my word to
-a traitor,” the king answered angrily. At this Simon
-in open wrath declared the king a liar, only saved
-by the shelter of royalty from the penalty of his
-speech. “Call thyself a Christian?” said the earl.
-“Dost thou ever confess thy sins?” “Yes,” said the
-king, “I do.” “Thy confession is useless without repentance
-and atonement.” said the earl. The king,
-more angry than ever, retorted, “I repent of one thing,
-and that is that I made thee an earl in England, to
-wax fat and kick against me. Get thee to Gascony,
-thou who lovest strife, and take thy fill there and
-meet thy father’s fate.” “I go willingly, my lord,”
-came the answer. “And, ungrateful as thou art, I
-will not return till I have made these rebels thy subjects
-and thy enemies thy footstool.”</p>
-
-<p>Simon returned to Gascony, and though Henry
-again undermined his authority, he kept his word,
-only giving up his command when the work was done.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_120">120</span></p>
-
-<p>Adam of Marsh, a Franciscan friar, the friend
-and correspondent of Grosseteste, often writes to
-Simon in those days, encouraging and advising him.
-“Better is patience in a man than force,” says Adam,
-“and better he who rules his own passions than he
-who storms a city.” He prays this strong upright
-soldier-statesman to find comfort in the frequent
-reading of the Holy Scriptures, “breaking through
-as far as you can the cares and distractions of storm
-and trouble,” and recommends the 29th, 30th and
-31st chapters of the book of Job, “together with the
-delightful commentaries of St. Gregory.”</p>
-
-<p>Once more back in England, the time soon came
-when Simon was the recognised leader of the barons
-in their struggle with the king. And this leadership
-gave England its first representative parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Henry was in greater financial difficulties than
-ever in 1257. The mad scheme of accepting the
-crown of Sicily for his second son Edmund from the
-pope, on condition that the cost of driving out Manfred,
-the Emperor Frederick’s son, undertaken by
-the pope, was to be paid for by England, had been
-adopted by Henry in spite of the opposition of
-bishops and nobles. Henry pledged his kingdom
-with the pope as security for the expenditure in
-Sicily,<a id="FNanchor_41" href="#Footnote_41" class="fnanchor">41</a> and at last in the parliament of 1257 had to
-confess his indebtedness. Fourteen thousand marks
-were owing to Pope Alexander, and this wretched
-debt, in addition to the general contempt for law and
-justice by the king’s judges, sheriffs and foreign
-favourites, drove matters to a climax. The wet
-summer of 1257, followed by a failure at harvest,
-brought famine in the winter.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_121">121</span></p>
-
-<p>The barons insisted that the time had come for
-constitutional amendment. “The king’s mistakes
-call for special treatment,” said Richard, Earl of
-Gloucester, at a parliament early in 1258, and Simon,
-closely related to the royal house as he was, agreed.
-The swarm of royal parasites from Poitou raised
-objections to any interference with Henry’s prerogative,
-but were swept aside. “If the king can’t do
-without us in war he must listen to us in peace.
-And what sort of peace is this when the king is led
-astray by bad counsellors and the land is filled with
-foreign tyrants who grind down native-born Englishmen?”
-So the barons argued.<a id="FNanchor_42" href="#Footnote_42" class="fnanchor">42</a></p>
-
-<p>To Henry’s threat, “I will send reapers and reap
-your fields for you,” Hugh Bigod of Norfolk had
-retorted briskly, “And I will send you back the
-heads of your reapers.”</p>
-
-<p>Parliament met again in June that year at Oxford—the
-“Mad Parliament” it was called—and the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_122">122</span>
-barons came fully armed, for civil war seemed imminent.
-But the barons led by Richard of Gloucester
-and Earl Simon carried all before them and the war
-was postponed for five years.</p>
-
-<p>The work of this parliament, well known as the
-Provisions of Oxford, was one more attempt to get
-the Great Charter honestly observed. Under this
-<span class="locked">constitution:—</span></p>
-
-<p>The king was to have a standing council of fifteen,
-by whose advice he was to act, and to whom the
-justiciar, chancellor and treasurer were to be accountable.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament was to meet three times a year—February,
-June and October. Four knights were
-to be chosen by the king’s lesser freehold tenant-knights
-in each county.</p>
-
-<p>To save expense twelve commissioners were to be
-chosen to represent the baronage—“and the commonalty
-shall hold as established that which these
-twelve shall do.”<a id="FNanchor_43" href="#Footnote_43" class="fnanchor">43</a> The fifteen counsellors consisted
-of six of the king’s party, and nine of the barons’—the
-most conspicuous of the latter were Simon of
-Montfort, Richard of Gloucester, and Bishop Cantilupe,
-of Worcester.</p>
-
-<p>Then the oath was taken, “that neither for life
-nor death, for hatred or love, or for any cause whatever,
-would they be bent or weakened in their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_123">123</span>
-purpose to regain praiseworthy laws, and to cleanse
-the kingdom from foreigners.”</p>
-
-<p>Henry and Prince Edward, his eldest son, took the
-oath willingly enough—though the latter soon began
-“to draw back from it so far as he could.” The
-king’s half-brothers and the rest of the aliens not only
-refused the oath, but swore that as long as they had
-breath they would never surrender their castles,
-revenues, or wardships.<a id="FNanchor_44" href="#Footnote_44" class="fnanchor">44</a> Simon, who on the
-ground of his foreign birth had at once yielded his
-castles of Kenilworth and Odiham, without recompense,
-turned to William de Valence—who was
-blustering more than the rest—and said sharply,
-“To a certainty you shall either surrender your
-castles or lose your head.” The barons made it
-plain that they were in agreement with this, and
-then were the Poitevins afraid, not knowing what to
-do; “for if they hid themselves in their castles they
-would be starved out; for all the people would
-besiege them and utterly destroy their castles.” The
-aliens fled to the continent, and the new constitution
-was proclaimed in every county—in Latin, French,
-and English.<a id="FNanchor_45" href="#Footnote_45" class="fnanchor">45</a></p>
-
-<p>Twenty years had passed since Henry had blessed
-Simon’s marriage with his sister Eleanor, and Simon
-had stood godfather to Prince Edward, and now
-after the Parliament at Oxford, meeting the Earl of
-Leicester in the Bishop of Durham’s palace on the
-Thames bank, the king cannot conceal his fear of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_124">124</span>
-the one man who held up the good cause—“like a
-pillar that cannot be moved.” The king had taken
-refuge from a thunderstorm, and to Simon’s assurance
-that the storm was passing, and was no longer to be
-feared, answered grimly, “I fear thunder and
-lightning a good deal, Lord Simon, but by the
-Head of God, I fear you more than all the thunder
-and lightning in the world.”</p>
-
-<p>“Everyone suspected that these astounding words
-broke from the king because the Earl of Leicester
-manfully and boldly persevered in carrying out the
-provisions, compelling the king and all the enemies
-of these provisions to assent to them, and utterly
-banishing his brothers, who were corrupting the
-whole kingdom.” (Matthew Paris.)</p>
-
-<p>Manfully as the great earl might strive, he could
-not accomplish the carrying out of the Provisions of
-Oxford. Henry was quickly at his old work,
-obtaining from Rome a dispensation from his old
-promises on the ground they had been obtained by
-compulsion, and bringing back his foreign supporters.
-The barons neither held together nor made any
-serious effort to promote good government.</p>
-
-<p>Richard of Gloucester, jealous of Simon, fell away
-from the national cause before his death in 1262.<a id="FNanchor_46" href="#Footnote_46" class="fnanchor">46</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_125">125</span></p>
-
-<p>Prince Edward stood by his oath, but did nothing
-to prevent the break-up of the provisional government,
-and soon openly supported his father.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of all this the Provisions, modified at
-Westminster in 1259, endured for five years, and
-then it seemed as if nothing could save the country
-from civil war. As a last resource appeal was made
-by both sides to King Louis of France to arbitrate
-concerning the fulfilment of the Provisions, and at
-Amiens, in January, 1264, the award was given.
-Louis solemnly gave sentence for the king against
-the barons, entirely annulling the Statutes and Provisions
-of Oxford, and in particular declaring the
-king free to appoint his own ministers, councils, and
-sheriffs, and to employ aliens. But by the award—the
-mise—of Amiens the earlier charters given by
-the crown were to remain, and all disputes arising
-out of the Parliament of Oxford were to be suppressed.
-Louis gave as a reason for annulling the provisions
-that the pope had already annulled them.</p>
-
-<p>The appellants had turned to Louis hoping for
-peace. The award was the signal for war. Many
-of the bishops and barons at once withdrew from
-Simon, who answered the deserters by declaring,
-“Though all should forsake us, I and my four sons
-will fight to the death in the righteous cause I have
-sworn to uphold, to the honour of the Church and
-the good of the realm. Many lands have I travelled,
-heathen and Christian, but nowhere have I seen
-such bad faith and falsehood as in England.”</p>
-
-<p>London was enthusiastic in its support of the
-barons, and the Cinque Ports, the scholars of
-Oxford, and the Dominican and Franciscan friars
-were all on the side of reform. Chief among<span class="pagenum" id="Page_126">126</span>
-Simon’s supporters were Bishop Cantilupe, of Worcester,
-Gilbert, the young Earl of Gloucester, Hugh
-le Despenser, the justiciar, and Roger Bigod.</p>
-
-<p>War began in March, when Prince Edward
-captured Gloucester, joined Henry at Oxford, and
-then seized Nottingham and Northampton, while
-Simon and the citizens of London attacked
-Rochester. Henry turned south, and encamped in
-full force near Lewes.</p>
-
-<p>Again Simon laboured for peace, and in his own
-name and the name of Gilbert of Gloucester, the
-Bishops of Worcester and London went as ambassadors
-to Henry. Simon offered £30,000 to the
-king if he would make peace and keep to the Provisions
-of Oxford, and assured him that he had
-taken up arms not against Henry but against those
-who were “not only our enemies, but yours, and
-those of the whole kingdom.”</p>
-
-<p>The king treated the proposal with scorn, and
-Prince Edward added an additional message of
-contempt.</p>
-
-<p>On the 14th of May the battle of Lewes was
-fought and won by Simon, “through a singular conjunction
-of skill and craft on the one side, and rashness
-and panic on the other.”<a id="FNanchor_47" href="#Footnote_47" class="fnanchor">47</a></p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Leicester went into the battle fighting
-for his country and his oath, and with the exhortation
-to his men “to pray God, if this our undertaking
-be pleasing in His sight, to give us might to fulfil
-the same, serving Him as good knights.”</p>
-
-<p>The stout old Bishop of Worcester blessed the
-troops, “who had among them all but one faith, one
-will in all things, one love towards God and their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_127">127</span>
-neighbour, so that they feared neither to offend the
-king nor even to die for the sake of justice, rather
-than violate their oaths.” (Matthew of Westminster.)</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the day the defeat of the royalists
-was complete, and the king, Prince Edward and his
-kinsmen were prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>Then peace was made, Henry once more swearing
-to keep the charters and articles of Oxford, to employ
-no aliens, to submit the Provisions to arbitration
-again, to live thriftily till his debts were paid,
-and to give his son Edward and his nephew Henry
-as hostages for good behaviour till a permanent
-reform in the constitution was made. Early in June
-these terms of peace were proclaimed in London, to
-the general satisfaction, and on all sides the people
-shouted their thankfulness to Simon.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">God’s blessing on Earl Simon, his sons and followers light!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who put their lives in jeopardy and fought a desperate fight,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Because their hearts were moved to hear their English brethren groan</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Beneath the hard taskmasters’ rods, making a grievous moan,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like Israel under Pharaoh’s yoke, in thraldom and in dread,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their freedom gone, their lives scarce spared, so evilly they sped.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But at the last the Lord looked down and saw His people’s pain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And sent a second Mattathias to break their bonds in twain;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who with his sons so full of zeal for the law and for the right,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Will never flinch a single inch before the tyrant’s might.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To Simon’s faith and faithfulness alone our peace we owe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He raised the weak and hopeless and made the proud to bow,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He set the realm at one again and brought the mighty low.<a id="FNanchor_48" href="#Footnote_48" class="fnanchor">48</a></div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>And now in the summer of 1264 Earl Simon was
-to show what he could do for England, for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_128">128</span>
-victory of Lewes had placed power in his hands, and
-he stood indisputably the foremost man in the realm.
-For one short year his counsel was to guide the
-destinies of England and to make that year memorable
-for all time by the creation of the first representative
-Parliament.</p>
-
-<p>A new scheme of government was at once drawn
-up. Three electors chosen by the barons were to
-appoint a council of nine for the guidance of the
-king, and Simon of Montfort, Gilbert of Gloucester,
-and Stephen Berksted, Bishop of Chichester, were
-speedily chosen as the three electors. Hugh le
-Despenser remained justiciar, and Thomas Cantilupe,
-the bishop’s nephew, became chancellor. (This
-Thomas subsequently became Bishop of Hereford,
-died in Italy, and was canonized.)</p>
-
-<p>Then in December came the issue of writs for
-Simon of Montfort’s famous Full Parliament of 1265.
-Two knights are to be returned from each shire, and
-for the first time from each city and borough the
-burgesses are to send two representatives. Hitherto
-Parliament had consisted of barons and clergy, and
-knights sent by the king’s tenants, and the representation
-of the townspeople was unknown. Simon’s
-earlier policy at Oxford had done nothing to extend
-the basis of government or create a national responsibility
-for the laws. “The provisions of 1258
-restricted, the constitutions of 1264 extended the
-limits of parliament.... Either Simon’s views of a
-constitution had rapidly developed, or the influence
-which had checked them in 1258 were removed.
-Anyhow, he had had genius to interpret the mind of
-the nation and to anticipate the line which was taken
-by later progress.” (Stubbs.)</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_129">129</span></p>
-
-<p>This development of Simon’s views may fairly be
-traced to his close and intimate connection with the
-Dominican friars.<a id="FNanchor_49" href="#Footnote_49" class="fnanchor">49</a> Simon’s father, the warrior of
-the Albigensian wars, had been the warm friend of
-St. Dominic. Simon himself was equally the friend
-of Bishop Grosseteste, the champion of the friars.
-As far back as 1245 Simon had founded a Dominican
-priory at Leicester. In 1263 he had been present at
-a General Chapter of the Dominican Order in Holborn,
-London, and the Parliament of Oxford had
-met in a Dominican priory in that city. All along
-the friars had supported the popular movement.<a id="FNanchor_50" href="#Footnote_50" class="fnanchor">50</a></p>
-
-<p>Now the peculiarity of the Dominican Order of
-Friars is its representative form of government.
-Each priory sends two representatives to its provincial
-chapter, and each province sends two representatives
-to the general chapter of the order.</p>
-
-<p>Simon of Montfort, when the opportunity came to
-him for striking out a reform in the English Parliament,
-adopted the plan which he had studied and
-seen at work amongst the Preaching Friars. “The
-idea of representative government had ripened in his
-hand,” and his genius interpreted the mind of the
-nation. In spite of all the scorn that has been
-poured on popular elections and the Houses of
-Parliament, in spite of all the imperfections that
-necessarily are attached to any constitutional system
-devised by the wit of man, the idea of representative
-government has become the inspiration of the
-nations of the world. The failings of democracy are<span class="pagenum" id="Page_130">130</span>
-obvious, the weak spots in popular electoral systems
-glaring; but mankind, once grasping the idea of
-freedom in politics, clamours eagerly for responsibility
-in law-making and the administration of justice,
-and refuses to rest satisfied under any despotism or
-bureaucracy, benevolent or malevolent. Suppressed
-by dictators, perverted by demagogues, abused by
-the unscrupulous in power, there still seems nothing
-better in politics for mankind than self-government.
-“Better is he who rules his own temper than he who
-storms a city,” wrote Friar Adam of Marsh to Simon
-of Montfort. “Better self-government for a people
-than world-wide conquest,” the average man declares,
-and the opinion slowly moulds the destinies of
-nations, till “patriotism” becomes the word for good
-service in politics.</p>
-
-<p>The verse of the thirteenth century <span class="locked">chronicler:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The king that tries without advice to seek his people’s will,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Must often fail, he cannot know the woes and wants they feel,</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="in0">gets re-expression in the nineteenth century in Abraham
-Lincoln’s: “Government of the people, by the
-people, for the people.” Always threatened by the
-personal ambition of man, often overthrown when
-ambition held the sword of power, contemptible
-to the wise and prudent because of the simplicity and
-innocence of “the people,” denounced as dangerous
-by the professional expert in bureaucracy because of
-the ignorance of “the people,” its inadequacy the
-common theme of the disappointed—representative
-government survives its enemies, defies its critics, and
-with its blemishes unconcealed, finds the company of
-its lovers ever increasing and recruiting in its behalf.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_131">131</span>
-For since that first Full Parliament of Earl Simon’s
-in 1265 it has never been possible to get rid of the
-notion that representative government was a key to
-the portals of freedom; and though the wider the
-freedom the greater the responsibility, to the credit
-of the race at all times men and women have pressed
-forward, not rejecting responsibility.</p>
-
-<p>Simon’s parliament sat from January to March.
-Its chief business was the confirmation of the treaty
-of peace at Lewes, and Henry swore as usual to
-maintain the new constitution, the charters and provisions.
-The government was short-lived. Danger
-from France, where the queen and Archbishop Boniface
-of Canterbury and all Henry’s alien courtiers
-planned invasion with an army collected in Holland,
-had passed away at the close of the previous summer.
-There had been a great muster of troops for national
-defence near Dover, bad weather had incapacitated
-the queen’s fleet, and Louis of France agreed to
-negotiations in place of war. The Cinque Ports
-mariners refused a landing to the pope’s legate, who
-was ready to excommunicate the new government,
-and flung his papal bull in the sea.<a id="FNanchor_51" href="#Footnote_51" class="fnanchor">51</a></p>
-
-<p>Not from abroad but from within came the foes
-who overthrew Simon’s government and murdered
-the great statesman. Earl Gilbert, of Gloucester,
-like his father, grew jealous of Simon’s leadership,
-and disputed his authority as to the ransom of some
-of the prisoners of Lewes, and Simon’s sons added<span class="pagenum" id="Page_132">132</span>
-fuel to the flame by their pride and overbearing
-insolence. Roger Mortimer and some of the nobles
-of the Welsh marches rose for King Henry in the
-spring of 1265, and Gilbert deserted the barons for
-the king.<a id="FNanchor_52" href="#Footnote_52" class="fnanchor">52</a> William of Valence landed in South
-Wales with a body of crossbowmen in May, and
-when Simon reached Hereford to put down the
-rebellion, Prince Edward, who, with the king, had
-been in Simon’s custody, made his escape to Mortimer
-and the marches.</p>
-
-<p>Edward quickly raised troops, and joined Gilbert
-at Ludlow, where he took an oath to obey the laws
-and charters of the realm. Simon, in some danger
-of being cut off by this movement on his rear, sent
-word to his second son—Simon—to go to Kenilworth
-and join him at Evesham, and then turned
-back from Wales.</p>
-
-<p>The younger Simon was surprised at Kenilworth
-by a sudden raid by Edward. His camp was broken
-up, his banners taken, and he was driven back into
-the castle. Edward, fully aware that Earl Simon
-had only a small force with him, hurried off to
-Evesham to attack him, before young Simon could
-rally his scattered troops and come to his father’s
-help.</p>
-
-<p>On the morning of August 4th Earl Simon halted
-at Evesham, and at the king’s request, for Henry
-was still his captive, heard mass and dined. His<span class="pagenum" id="Page_133">133</span>
-son’s army, now on its way, halted for the same
-purpose at Alcester. “He was now only ten miles
-distant and the junction of father and son seemed
-secure.”<a id="FNanchor_53" href="#Footnote_53" class="fnanchor">53</a> But Prince Edward was already between
-them. “As the morning broke his army lay across
-the road that led northward from Evesham to
-Alcester. Ere three hours had passed the corpse of
-the great earl lay mangled amid a ring of faithful
-knights, and the ‘murder of Evesham, for battle
-none it was,’ was over.”</p>
-
-<p>At first Simon thought the advancing army was
-his son’s, for Edward displayed the captured banners
-of Kenilworth, but when he saw the standards of the
-prince and of Gloucester, and the well-known banner
-of Mortimer, the truth was clear.</p>
-
-<p>“By the arm of St. James,” cried the earl, “they
-come on skilfully, for they have turned my lessons
-against me. God have mercy on our souls, for our
-bodies are theirs! Though if Simon were to come
-up we might hope yet.” He turned to his eldest
-son, and pointing to the banner of Gloucester said,
-“See, Henry, what your pride has done.”</p>
-
-<p>In vain Henry urged his father to fly while escape
-was possible. “I had as lief die here in a good
-cause as in the Holy Land,” said the earl, and the
-barons and knights standing round were equally
-resolute to fight to the end—though they had but
-two men to every seven of the enemy. The good
-Bishop of Worcester blessed the little army as he
-had done at Lewes, and then the battle began. The
-Welsh footsoldiers quickly lost heart and fled from
-Simon and the field, and the barons were soon
-hemmed in. One by one they fell—Henry of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_134">134</span>
-Montfort, Hugh le Despenser, the wise and upright
-justiciar, and Simon himself, wounded and unhorsed,
-“fought on to the last like a giant for the
-liberties of England.” A soldier stabbed him in the
-back under the mail he wore, and then he was borne
-down and slain, overwhelmed by numbers rather
-than conquered. “So a death full of honour ended
-the chivalry and prowess, ennobled by so many
-deeds in so many lands.” “Thus lamentably fell
-the flower of knighthood, leaving to others an
-example of steadfast courage. Who can prevent
-the treachery of friends? Those who had eaten his
-bread had raised their heels against him. Those
-who had spoken words of love to him with their lips
-lied in their throats, for their hearts were not right
-with him, and they betrayed him in his hour of
-need.” (W. Rishanger.)</p>
-
-<p>For nearly three hours the unequal battle was
-fought, in the midst of storm and darkness. So
-dark was it that King Henry, who had been forced
-to remain with Simon’s knights, had difficulty in
-saving his life, and was actually wounded by a javelin
-before he was recognized by Edward’s soldiers.</p>
-
-<p>The monks of Evesham carried the bodies of
-some of the barons into the abbey for burial, and
-after horrible mutilations by the victors the remains
-of the great earl were reverently interred by the
-side of Hugh le Despenser, before the high altar.</p>
-
-<p>“Those who knew Simon praise his piety, admire
-his learning, and extol his prowess as a knight and
-skill as a general. They tell of his simple fare and
-plain russet dress, bearing witness to his kindly
-speech and firm friendship to all good men, describe
-his angry scorn for liars and unjust men, and marvel<span class="pagenum" id="Page_135">135</span>
-at his zeal for truth and right, which was such that
-neither pleasure nor threats nor promises could turn
-him aside from keeping the oath he swore at Oxford;
-for he held up the good cause ‘like a pillar that
-cannot be moved, and like a second Josiah esteemed
-righteousness the very healing of his soul.’ As a
-statesman he wished to bind the king to rule according
-to law, and to make the king’s ministers responsible
-to a full Parliament; and though he did not
-live to see the success of his policy, he had
-pointed out the way by which future statesmen
-might bring it about.” (F. York Powell.)</p>
-
-<p>The news of Simon’s death was received with
-general mourning as it spread over the land. He
-was acclaimed by the people as a saint and martyr,
-and miracles were said to be worked by his relics.<a id="FNanchor_54" href="#Footnote_54" class="fnanchor">54</a>
-The Franciscan friars drew up a service in his
-honour—“consisting of lessons, responses, verses,
-hymns, and other matter appertaining to the honour
-and respect due to a martyr.”<a id="FNanchor_55" href="#Footnote_55" class="fnanchor">55</a> But the pope who
-had excommunicated Simon was not likely to hear of
-canonization, and “as long as Edward lives the service
-compiled in Simon’s honour cannot gain acceptance
-to be chanted within the church of God, which
-was hoped for.”<a id="FNanchor_56" href="#Footnote_56" class="fnanchor">56</a></p>
-
-<p>The “Lament of Earl Simon,”<a id="FNanchor_57" href="#Footnote_57" class="fnanchor">57</a> compared the
-mighty statesman with Thomas of Canterbury:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_136">136</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For by his death Earl Simon hath</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In sooth the victory won,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like Canterbury’s martyr he</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">There to the death was done.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Thomas the good, that never would</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Let holy church be tried;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Like him he fought, and flinching not,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The good earl like him died.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="center"><i>Refrain:</i></div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">Now low there lies the flower of price</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">That knew so much of war;</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The Earl Montfort, whose luckless sort,</div>
- <div class="verse indent6">The land shall long deplore.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Death did they face to keep in place</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Both righteousness and peace;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Wherefore the saint from sin and taint</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Shall give their souls release.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They faced the grave that they might save</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The people of this land;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For so his will they did fulfill</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">As we do understand.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="center"><i>Refrain.</i></div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir Simon now, that knight so true,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With all his company,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Are gone above to joy and love</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">In life that cannot die;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But may our Lord that died on rood</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And God send succour yet</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To them that lie in misery,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Fast in hard prison set.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="center"><i>Refrain.</i></div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>The good cause for which Simon had fought
-might well have seemed lost, when Edward’s
-knights were hacking the dead body of the great
-earl to pieces at Evesham. But it was not exactly
-a “Royalist victory,” for the very men who stood
-victors over the mangled corpse of Earl Simon were<span class="pagenum" id="Page_137">137</span>
-men as resolute as he was to enforce the Great
-Charter and its results against the king.<a id="FNanchor_58" href="#Footnote_58" class="fnanchor">58</a></p>
-
-<p>In the hour of triumph Henry struck hard, and a
-mad reaction of terror ensued. But the movement
-Simon had led could not be turned back, and the
-very savage extravagance of the royalist party
-defeated its own ends. A general sentence of
-disinheritance against all who had fought with
-Simon drove the disinherited barons to keep up
-the fight. The siege of Kenilworth, where Sir
-Henry of Hastings defied the whole royal army,
-lasted from June to December, 1266, and was only
-ended by Parliament insisting on the king appointing
-a board of twelve, who made a just award
-concerning the disinherited. By this award, called
-the Ban of <span class="locked">Kenilworth:—</span></p>
-
-<p>The royal obligation to keep the charters was
-required.</p>
-
-<p>The acts of Simon were annulled, and the full
-prerogatives of the crown declared.</p>
-
-<p>The freedom of the Church was demanded.</p>
-
-<p>Justice was to be done according to the laws and
-customs of the realm.</p>
-
-<p>The adherents of Simon were to be punished by
-fine and not by disinheritance, so that the king
-could repay those who had served him faithfully
-without giving occasion for fresh war.</p>
-
-<p>Simon was not to be proclaimed a saint (seeing
-he died under the excommunication of the Church),
-and those who spread idle tales of miracles done at
-his tomb were to be punished.</p>
-
-<p>A complete indemnity was promised to all who
-accepted the ban within forty days.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_138">138</span></p>
-
-<p>For a time the ban was rejected, and it was not till
-the summer of 1267 that the struggle was finally over.
-Peace was assured by the Parliament of Marlborough
-in November, 1267, which re-enacted the Provisions
-of Westminster (1259) as a statute.</p>
-
-<p>The lasting value of Simon’s work was seen in
-1295, when Edward I. summoned his great representative
-parliament on the professed principle that
-“that which touches all shall be approved by all.”
-This assembly, by that very principle, served as “a
-pattern for all future assemblies of the nation.”
-(Stubbs.)</p>
-
-<p>Had Simon of Montfort received canonization by
-the Church he would surely have been the patron
-saint of all workers in the world of politics, and of all
-who honestly and courageously engage in public
-work.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_7">Wat Tyler and the Peasant Revolt<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1381</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Walsingham; Knyghton—(Rolls
-Series); Wright’s <cite>Political Songs</cite>—(Rolls Series);
-Froissart; Professor Oman—<cite>Great Revolt of 1381</cite>,
-containing translation of a chronicle of the rising in the
-Stow MSS., first published in <cite>English Historical Review</cite>,
-1895; André Réville—<cite xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">Le Soulèvement des Travailleurs</cite>
-(1898); Dr. G. Kriehn—<cite>American Review</cite>, 1902;
-Edgar Powell—<cite>Rising of 1381 in East Anglia</cite>; Dr.
-James Gairdner—<cite>Lollardy and the Reformation</cite>; G. M.
-Trevelyan—<cite>England in the Age of Wycliff</cite>; J. Clayton—<cite>Wat
-Tyler and the Great Uprising</cite>.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_141" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p140.jpg" width="1430" height="1941" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>KING RICHARD II.</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From the Panel Painting in the Sanctuary at Westminster Abbey.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_141">141</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">WAT TYLER AND THE<br />
-PEASANT REVOLT
-
-<span class="subhead">1381</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> Peasant Revolt of 1381, led by Wat
-Tyler, was not only the first great national
-movement towards democracy, it was the
-first uprising of the English people in
-opposition to all their hitherto recognised rulers in
-Church and State, and it was the first outburst in
-this land against social injustice.<a id="FNanchor_59" href="#Footnote_59" class="fnanchor">59</a></p>
-
-<p>The Black Death in 1349 and the pestilence that
-ravaged the country in 1361 and 1369 upset the old
-feudal order. The land was in many places utterly
-bereft of labour, and neither king nor parliament
-could restore the former state of things. Landowners,
-driven by the scarcity of labour, went in for
-sheep farming in place of agriculture, and were compelled
-to offer an increase of wages in spite of the
-Statutes of Labourers (1351–1353) which expressly
-forbade the <span class="locked">same:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“Every man or woman of whatsoever condition,
-free or bond, able in body, and within the age of
-three-score years, and not having of his own whereof
-he may live, nor land of his own about the tillage of
-which he may occupy himself, and not serving any
-other, shall be bound to serve the employer who<span class="pagenum" id="Page_142">142</span>
-shall require him to do so, and take only the wages
-which were accustomed to be taken in the neighbourhood
-two years before the pestilence.”</p>
-
-<p>This act remained the law until the fifth year of
-Elizabeth.</p>
-
-<p>“Free” labourers, landless men but not serfs,
-wandered away to the towns or turned outlaws in
-the forests. Serfs—only a small number of the
-population, for the Church had always recommended
-their liberation, even while abbots and priors retained
-them on Church estates, and Edward III. had encouraged
-granting freedom in return for payment in
-money—escaped to those incorporated towns that
-promised freedom after eighteen months’ residence.
-Villeins and lesser tenants commuted the service due
-from them to their landlords by money payments,
-and so began the leasehold system of land tenure.</p>
-
-<p>For thirty years preceding the Peasant Revolt
-the social changes had bred discontent, and discontent
-rather than misery is always the parent of
-revolt.</p>
-
-<p>An early statute of Richard II., framed for the
-perpetual bondage of the serfs, heightened the discontent.</p>
-
-<p>“No bondman or bondwoman shall place their
-children at school, as has been done, so as to advance
-their children in the world by their going into the
-Church.”</p>
-
-<p>This same act made equal prohibition against
-apprenticeship in the town.</p>
-
-<p>The free labourer had his grievance against the
-Statute of Labourers. Villeins and cottar tenants
-had no sure protection against being compelled to
-give labour service to their lords; and they, with<span class="pagenum" id="Page_143">143</span>
-the freehold yeomen and the town workmen and
-shopkeepers, hated the heavy taxation, the oppressive
-market tolls and the general misgovernment.</p>
-
-<p>To unite all these forces of social discontent into
-one great army, which should destroy the oppression
-and establish freedom and brotherhood, was the work
-John Ball—an itinerant priest who came at first
-from St. Mary’s at York, and then made Colchester
-the centre of his journeyings—devoted himself to for
-twenty years.</p>
-
-<p>Ball preached a social revolution, and his gospel
-was that all men were brothers, and that serfdom and
-lordship were incompatible with brotherhood. In
-our times such teaching is common enough, but in
-the fourteenth century, with its sumptuary laws and
-its feudal ranks, only in religion was this principle
-accepted.<a id="FNanchor_60" href="#Footnote_60" class="fnanchor">60</a> John Ball became the moving spirit in
-the agitation set on foot by his teaching. He had
-his colleagues and lieutenants, John Wraw in Suffolk
-and Jack Straw in Essex—both priests like himself—William
-Grindcobbe in Hertford and Geoffrey
-Litster in Norfolk. The peasants were organised
-into clubs, and letters were sent by Ball far and wide
-to stir up revolt. In Kent and the eastern counties
-lay the main strength of the revolutionaries—it was
-in Kent that Ball was particularly active just before
-the rising—but Sussex, Hampshire, Lincolnshire,
-Warwickshire, Yorkshire and Somerset were all
-affected, so grave and so general was the dissatisfaction,
-and so hopeful to the labouring people was the
-message delivered by John Ball.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_144">144</span></p>
-
-<p>Of course Ball did not escape censure and the
-penalty of law during his missionary years. He
-was excommunicated and cast into prison by three
-Archbishops of Canterbury, Islip, Simon Langham,
-and Simon Sudbury, for teaching “errors, schisms,
-and scandals against the popes, archbishops, bishops,
-and clergy,” and he was only released from prison,
-from Archbishop Sudbury’s gaol at Maidstone, by
-the rough hands of the men of Kent when the rising
-had begun. The “errors” of John Ball were civil and
-social rather than theological. The notion that Ball
-and his fellow socialists of the fourteenth century were
-mixed up with Wycliff and the Lollards has really no
-foundation in fact.<a id="FNanchor_61" href="#Footnote_61" class="fnanchor">61</a> Wycliff’s unorthodox views on
-the sacraments and his attacks on the habits of the
-clergy were of no interest to the social revolutionists,
-and John of Gaunt, the steady friend of Wycliff,
-was hated above all other men in the realm by the
-leaders of the revolt. Wycliff expressed as little
-sympathy with the Peasant Revolt of his day as
-Luther later in Germany did with the Peasant War,
-or Cranmer with the Norfolk rising under Ket in
-1549.</p>
-
-<p>John Ball’s sermons were all on one text—“In
-the beginning of the world there were no bondmen,
-all men were created equal. Servitude of man to
-man is contrary to God’s will.” He declared that
-“things will never go well in England so long as
-goods are not kept in common, and so long as there<span class="pagenum" id="Page_145">145</span>
-are villeins and gentlefolks.” He harped on the
-social inequalities of his age, quoting freely from
-Langland’s <cite>Piers the Plowman</cite>, and enlarging on
-the famous couplet:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">When Adam delved and Eve span,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Who was then the gentleman?</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>As years went by and the time grew ripe for
-revolt, there is a definite call to rise in Ball’s letters and
-speeches. “Let us go to the king, and remonstrate
-with him,” he declares, “telling him we must have it
-otherwise, or we ourselves shall find the remedy.”</p>
-
-<p>Richard II. was but eleven when he came to the
-throne in 1377. “He is young. If we wait on him
-in a body, all those who come under the name of
-serf or are held in bondage will follow us, in the
-hope of being free. When the king shall see us we
-shall obtain a favourable answer, or we must then
-ourselves seek to amend our condition.”</p>
-
-<p>Some of the rhymed letters Ball sent out, bidding
-his hearers “stand together manfully in the truth,”
-urge preparation for the coming conflict:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">John Ball greeteth you all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And doth to understand he hath rung your bell.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Now with right and might, will and skill,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">God speed every dell.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent2">John the miller asketh help to turn his mill right:</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">He hath ground small, small,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">The King’s Son of Heaven will pay for it all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Look thy mill go right, with its four sails dight.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">With right and with might, with skill and with will,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And let the post stand in steadfastness,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Let right help might, and skill go before will,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Then shall our mill go aright.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But if might go before right, and will go before skill,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">This is our mill mis-a-dight.</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_146">146</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Beware ere ye be woe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Know your friend from your foe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Take enough and cry ‘Ho!’</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And do well and better and flee from sin,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And seek out peace and dwell therein,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">So biddeth John Trueman and all his fellows.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In other letters he greets John Nameless, John
-the Miller, and John Carter, and bids them stand
-together in God’s name; and bids Piers Plowman “go
-to his work and chastise well Hob the Robber (Sir
-Robert Hales, the king’s treasurer); and take with
-you John Trueman and all his fellows, and look that
-you choose one head and no more.”</p>
-
-<p>These letters and the preaching did their work;
-the peasants were organised; men of marked courage
-and ability were found in various counties; and
-“the one head and no more” was ready in Kent to
-lead the army of revolt to the king when the signal
-should be given. Litster, Grindcobbe, and Wraw
-were at their posts. In every county from Somerset
-to York the peasants flocked together, “some armed
-with clubs, rusty swords, axes, with old bows
-reddened by the smoke of the chimney corner, and
-odd arrows with only one feather.”</p>
-
-<p>John Ball had rung his bell, and at Whitsuntide,
-at the end of May, 1381, came the great uprising,
-the “Hurling-Time of the Peasants.” The fire was
-all ready to be kindled, and a poll-tax, badly ordered,
-set the country ablaze.</p>
-
-<p>The poll-tax was first levied, in 1377, on all over
-fourteen years of age. Two years later it was
-graduated, from 4d. on every man and woman of the
-working class to £6 13s. 4d. on a duke or
-archbishop. Even this with a further tax on wool
-was found insufficient.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_147">147</span></p>
-
-<p>So early in 1381 John of Gaunt called the parliament
-together at Northampton, and declared that
-£160,000 must be raised. Parliament refused to
-find more than £100,000, and the clergy, owning at
-that time one-third of the land, promised £60,000.
-Again a poll-tax was demanded. This time everybody
-over fifteen was required to pay 1s., but in districts
-where wealthy folks lived it was held sufficient that
-the amount collected in every parish averaged 1s.
-per head; only the rich were not to pay less than
-£1 per household, nor the poor less than 8d. In
-parishes where all were needy the full shilling was
-demanded without exception. It soon appeared
-that the money was not to be raised. In many
-parts the returns as to the population liable to the
-tax were not even filled in with any attempt at
-accuracy, and numbers avoided liability by leaving
-their homes—to escape a tribute, which to the
-struggling peasant meant ruin. Of the £100,000
-required only £22,000 was forthcoming.</p>
-
-<p>Then one John Legge undertook to supply the
-deficit, if he had the authority of the crown to act
-as special commissioner to collect the tax. The
-appointment was made, with the result that the
-methods of the tax-collectors provoked revolt, and
-Legge lost his life over the business.</p>
-
-<p>The rising began in Essex, when the villagers of
-Fobbing, Corringham, and Stanford-le-Hope were
-summoned to meet the tax-commissioner at Brentwood.
-Unable to pay, they fell upon the collectors
-and killed them. The government met this assault
-by sending down Chief Justice Belknap to punish
-the offenders. But as the judge merely had for
-escort a certain number of legal functionaries, and as<span class="pagenum" id="Page_148">148</span>
-the blood of the people was up, Belknap was received
-with open contempt, and, forced to swear on the
-Bible that he would hold no other session in the
-place, was glad to escape from the town without
-injury. And with this defiance and overpowering of
-the king’s officers the signal was given, the beacon of
-revolt well lighted.</p>
-
-<p>It was June 2nd, Whit Sunday, when the Chief
-Justice was driven out of Brentwood; two days
-later Kent had risen at Gravesend and Dartford.</p>
-
-<p>At Gravesend Sir Simon Burley, the friend of
-Richard II., seized a workman in the town, claiming
-him as a bondsman of his estate, and clapped him in
-Rochester Castle, refusing to hear of release unless
-£300 was paid.</p>
-
-<p>At the same time word went about that the tax-collector
-at Dartford was insulting the women, and
-that, in especial, the wife and daughter of one John
-Tyler had been abused with gross indecency.</p>
-
-<p>Whereupon this John Tyler, “being at work in
-the same town tyling of an house, when he heard
-thereof, caught his lathing staff in his hand, and ran
-reaking home; where, reasoning with the collector, who
-made him so bold, the collector answered with stout
-words, and strake at the tyler; whereupon the tyler,
-avoiding the blow, smote the collector with his lathing
-staff, so that the brains flew out of his head.
-Wherethrough great noise arose in the streets, and
-the poor people being glad, everyone prepared to
-support the said John Tyler.”<a id="FNanchor_62" href="#Footnote_62" class="fnanchor">62</a></p>
-
-<p>Robert Cave, a master baker of Dartford, led the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_149">149</span>
-people straight off to Rochester; and the castle
-having been stormed, and all its prisoners released,
-Sir John Newton, the governor of the castle, was
-retained in safe custody.</p>
-
-<p>And now the time had come for good generalship
-and discipline in the ranks, if the fire of revolt was
-to burn aright. Accordingly at Maidstone, on
-June 7th, Wat Tyler is chosen captain of the host;
-and proof is quickly given that the rising is not for
-mob rule or general anarchy, but to redress positive
-and intolerable wrongs. (Five Tylers are mentioned
-in the records of the Peasant Revolt: Wat Tyler, of
-Maidstone; John Tyler, of Dartford, who slays the
-tax-collector, and is not heard of again; Walter Tyler,
-of Essex; and two Tylers of the City of London—William,
-of Stone Street, and Simon, of Cripplegate.)</p>
-
-<p>In every respect was this Wat Tyler a man of
-remarkable gifts. Chosen as leader by the voice
-of his neighbours in Kent, his authority is at once
-obeyed without dispute, and his influence is seen to
-extend beyond the borders of his own county.
-Jack Straw acts as his lieutenant; John Wraw, of
-Suffolk, and William Grindcobbe, of St. Albans,
-come to him for advice; and it is not till Tyler
-moves on London with his army that the rising
-becomes national. He is plainly marked out as a
-great leader of masses of men. Skilful, courageous,
-humane, Wat Tyler is proved to be; firm, clear-headed,
-downright in manner, and yet large-hearted,
-jovial and brotherly—equally at home with king or
-beggar. There is nothing of the fanatical doctrinaire
-about this first great leader of the English people.
-He could order the execution of “traitors,” but
-he is not the man for bloodshed in England if the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_150">150</span>
-revolution he and John Ball aimed at can be accomplished
-by peaceful means. After more than 500
-years the reputation of Wat Tyler stands out untarnished
-and unshaken.<a id="FNanchor_63" href="#Footnote_63" class="fnanchor">63</a></p>
-
-<p>Yet for eight days—and eight days only—does
-history allow us to follow the career of this remarkable
-man. On June 7th Wat Tyler was chosen by
-the men of Kent to lead the revolt; on June 15th
-he was dead. Of his antecedents we know nothing.
-Parentage, birth-place, age, height, and personal
-appearance, are all unrecorded. His trade alone we
-can infer, and we know that his contemporaries
-trusted him to the full: for no suggestion has been
-made of any kind of rivalry or jealousy amongst the
-leaders, or of criticism or grumbling amongst the
-rank and file.</p>
-
-<p>Wat Tyler emerges from the obscurity of history
-to become a strong democratic leader. For eight
-days he commands a vast army of men; he confronts
-the king as an equal; orders the execution of the
-chief ministers of the crown; and wrests from the
-king promises of fundamental social importance.
-Then, in the very hour of victory, an unexpected
-blow from an enemy strikes him down, and death
-follows. Surely to few men is it awarded to achieve
-an immortal reputation in so brief a public life.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner is Tyler acclaimed as leader at
-Maidstone than the commons of Kent are flocking
-to the standard of revolt. The cry is for “King<span class="pagenum" id="Page_151">151</span>
-Richard and the Commons,” and it goes hard with
-any who refuse to take the oath. John of Gaunt is
-the enemy. John of Gaunt is held to be responsible
-for all the mischief wrought on the coast towns of
-Kent by the privateer fleets of the Scots and the
-French, for the raiding of Rye and Winchelsea.
-(Only in the previous year these fleets had invaded
-the Thames as far as Gravesend.) John of Gaunt
-is the head and front of the misrule that bled the
-land with poll-taxes. John of Gaunt is the incarnation
-of the landlord rule that would keep the
-labourer in bondage for ever. So bitter is the
-feeling against John of Gaunt, and so acute the fear
-that he is aiming at the crown, that a vow is taken
-by the men of Kent that no man named “John”
-shall be King of England.</p>
-
-<p>John of Gaunt was the common enemy. But
-John of Gaunt was far away on the Scottish border,
-and there were enemies near at hand to be dealt
-with. The manor-houses of Kent were attacked;
-in a few cases, where their owners were notoriously
-bad landlords, were burnt. The main thing, however,
-was to obtain the rent-rolls, the lists of tenants and
-serfs, and all the documents of the lawyers. These
-papers were seized and destroyed by the peasants,
-for no assurance of freedom was possible while such
-evidence of service could be produced. These
-documents were the legal instruments of landlord
-rule; and as the people had risen to end this rule,
-a beginning had to be made by destroying the
-machinery. There was no general reign of terror
-in the country; there was nothing of the ferocity of
-the Jacquerie in France; no slaughter of landlords;
-and no common destruction of property.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_152">152</span></p>
-
-<p>The nobility seemed to expect judgment at the
-hands of the people, and those who were at Plymouth
-making preparation for their invasion of
-France put to sea as quickly as possible when news
-came of the rising.<a id="FNanchor_64" href="#Footnote_64" class="fnanchor">64</a> But the people had risen not
-for blind vengeance or for civil war, and the class
-who suffered badly at the rising were the lawyers
-rather than the landlords. It was the lawyer’s hand
-that the peasants saw and felt, and not the mailed
-fist, for the lawyer was not only the land agent of the
-lord of the manor, he was also the judge in matters
-of dispute between landlord and tenant, and it was
-he who kept the lists of villeins and serfs, and in the
-service of his lord did not scruple to manipulate
-those lists.</p>
-
-<p>In those first days of the rising, when yeomen and
-more than one landholder joined the army of revolt,<a id="FNanchor_65" href="#Footnote_65" class="fnanchor">65</a>
-and all who were willing to cry “King Richard and
-the Commons” were counted as supporters, the
-worst that the landlord suffered (except in extreme
-cases) was the loss of his papers, but the lawyer
-who clung to his office was often hanged without
-mercy, as a scourge to the commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler was at Canterbury on Monday, June 10th,
-and here Archbishop Sudbury’s palace was ransacked
-for papers, and his tenant-rolls burnt. Beyond
-this, and a rough exhortation to the monks to
-prepare to elect a new archbishop, no injury was
-done. The following day Tyler was back at Maidstone,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_153">153</span>
-and his men burst open the archbishop’s
-prison and released John Ball, with all others who
-had incurred ecclesiastical displeasure. This accomplished,
-with John Ball, the people’s poor priest, in
-the midst of them, 30,000 men of Kent—yeomen,
-craftsmen, villeins and peasants—set out for London
-under Wat Tyler’s command.</p>
-
-<p>Blackheath was reached at nightfall on Wednesday,
-June 12th, and a camp fixed; but a few indefatigable
-rebels hastened on to Southwark that same
-night to burst open the Marshalsea and King’s
-Bench prisons. John Wraw was at Blackheath, and
-after a short conference with Wat Tyler, hastened
-back to Suffolk to announce that the hour of rising
-had struck.</p>
-
-<p>Near Eltham Tyler had overtaken the young
-king’s mother, the widow of the Black Prince, returning
-from a pilgrimage, and had promised that no
-harm should befall her or her women from his host.
-Reassured, the princess and her company went on
-their way in safety to the Tower of London, where
-Richard and his council were assembled, and told
-of the great uprising.</p>
-
-<p>Judges had already been despatched into Kent at
-the first news of the disorders, but had turned back
-before reaching Canterbury, not liking the look of
-things.</p>
-
-<p>Early on Thursday morning, June 13th, the camp
-at Blackheath was astir. It was Corpus Christi day
-and a solemn festival. After mass had been said
-before all the people, John Ball preached on his old
-theme of equality and brotherhood. “For if God
-had intended some to be serfs and others lords He
-would have made a distinction between them at the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_154">154</span>
-beginning.” He went on to speak of the work to be
-taken in hand at once.</p>
-
-<p>“Now is the opportunity given to Englishmen,
-if they do but choose to take it, of casting off
-the yoke they have borne so long, of winning the
-freedom they have always desired. Wherefore let
-us take good courage and behave like the wise husbandman
-of scripture, who gathered the wheat into
-his barn, but uprooted and burned the tares that had
-half-choked the good grain. Now the tares of
-England are her oppressive rulers, and the time of
-harvest has come. Ours it is to pluck up these
-tares and make away with them all—the evil lords,
-the unjust judges, the lawyers, every man indeed
-who is dangerous to the common good. Then
-should we all have peace for the present and
-security for the future. For when the great ones
-have been rooted up and cast away, all will enjoy
-equal freedom, all will have common nobility, rank
-and power.”</p>
-
-<p>The sermon was received with bursts of cheers,
-and the people shouted that John Ball should be
-archbishop, “for that the present archbishop and
-chancellor, Simon Sudbury, was but a traitor.”</p>
-
-<p>Later that morning Sir John Newton arrived at
-the Tower with a message from Tyler, asking for an
-audience with the king. All along it was the belief
-of the commons that the king had but to hear the
-tale of their wrongs and redress would be speedily
-obtained.</p>
-
-<p>“Hold no speech with the shoeless ruffians,” was
-the advice of Sir Robert Hales, the treasurer. But
-Richard agreed to an interview, and presently rowed
-down the Thames in the royal barge as far as Rotherhithe<span class="pagenum" id="Page_155">155</span>
-with the Earl of Suffolk (President of the
-Council), and the Earls of Salisbury and Warwick.</p>
-
-<p>The river bank was crowded with the commons
-of Kent, and Wat Tyler and John Ball urged the
-king to land and listen to the message his subjects
-brought. They were promptly rebuked by the Earl
-of Salisbury<a id="FNanchor_66" href="#Footnote_66" class="fnanchor">66</a> for their boldness:</p>
-
-<p>“Gentlemen, you are not properly dressed, nor
-are you in a fit condition for the king to talk to
-you.”</p>
-
-<p>Instead of landing, Richard listened to the counsels
-of fear and pride, and the royal barge was
-turned and rowed back swiftly to the Tower.</p>
-
-<p>Wat Tyler and the men of Kent, with thousands
-more from Surrey, at once marched on to London
-Bridge, where they destroyed the houses of ill-fame
-that clustered round the south side of the bridge.
-The prisons had been pulled down the night before,
-and now the brothels were burnt to the ground and
-their inmates dismissed—that the new City of
-God of John Ball’s vision might be cleansed of
-its old foulness. These places of infamy, rented by
-Flemish women, were the property of William
-Walworth, the Mayor of London; and their destruction
-filled him with rage against the invaders.</p>
-
-<p>Walworth made some attempt to fortify London
-Bridge by placing iron chains across the bridge;
-and he gave orders for the drawbridge to be pulled
-up, in order that a passage might be prevented.
-But on Tyler’s threat that he would burn the bridge
-if a way was not quickly made for him, Alderman<span class="pagenum" id="Page_156">156</span>
-Sibley (who, with Aldermen Horne and Tonge,
-supported the claims of the revolutionaries on the
-City Corporation) had the chains removed and the
-draw-bridge lowered, and Alderman Horne met
-Tyler at the city gate and bade him welcome.</p>
-
-<p>Fifty thousand men followed Tyler in London,
-and the city was now at the mercy of the peasant
-army. Walworth, who had no want of spirit, declared
-to the king and his council in the Tower that
-6,000 soldiers could be raised in the city, but “fear
-had so fallen upon the soldiery that they seemed
-half dead with fright.” Sir Robert Knolles with
-600 men-at-arms guarded the Tower.</p>
-
-<p>It was now that Wat Tyler’s great qualities of
-leadership and the good discipline of his army were
-seen. With London in his hands, he warned his
-followers that death would be the instant punishment
-for theft; and proclaimed to the citizens, “We
-are indeed zealots for truth and justice, but we are
-not thieves and robbers.” Every respect was to be
-shown to the persons and property of the people of
-London, and wrath was only to fall on John of
-Gaunt and the ministers of the crown, and the
-lawyers—the enemies, as it seemed to Tyler, of the
-good estate of England. In return, the citizens
-offered bread and ale freely to the invaders, and
-London artisans joined their ranks in large
-numbers.</p>
-
-<p>The archbishop’s palace at Lambeth was soon
-stormed, and all the records it contained were
-destroyed; the building itself was left uninjured.</p>
-
-<p>At four o’clock in the afternoon the Savoy Palace of
-John of Gaunt, by the Strand, was in flames; and
-all its wealth of treasure, rich tapestries and costly<span class="pagenum" id="Page_157">157</span>
-furniture, rare vessels of gold and silver, precious
-stones, and art work of priceless value, heaped up
-on a bonfire or ground to powder. The Duke of
-Lancaster’s jewelled coat, covered with gems, was
-set up as a target and riddled with arrows, before it
-was cut into a thousand pieces and pounded to dust.
-One wretched man was caught attempting to sneak
-off with a silver cup; and being taken in the act,
-was put to death as Tyler had decreed. The Savoy
-was burnt to the ground, but no one interfered with
-its inhabitants; and Henry, Earl of Derby, John of
-Gaunt’s son (who was to reign in Richard’s stead as
-Henry IV.), passed out with all his servants unmolested.
-The wine-cellar proved fatal to certain
-of the host, who, drinking freely, perished, buried
-under the fallen building.</p>
-
-<p>From the Savoy the army of destruction passed
-to the Temple, the head-quarters of the Knights
-Hospitallers, of whom Sir Robert Hales was president,
-and a hive of lawyers. The Temple was
-burnt, but no lives were lost; for the lawyers, “even
-the most aged and infirm of them, scrambled off with
-the agility of rats or evil spirits.”</p>
-
-<p>At nightfall the priory of the Hospitallers at
-Clerkenwell, the prisons at the Fleet and at Newgate,
-and the Manor House at Highbury, had all been
-demolished; and the men of Essex, led by Thomas
-Faringdon, a London baker, were at Mile End;
-while William Grindcobbe, with a body of men from
-St. Albans, lay at Highbury.</p>
-
-<p>In vain Walworth urged the king and his
-royal council to act. Richard had sent to Tyler
-asking for a written statement of the grievances
-of the commons, and had been told in reply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_158">158</span>
-that the king must meet his commons face to face,
-and hear with his own ears their demands. In the
-evening Walworth proposed that the garrison at
-the Tower should be despatched against Tyler, “to
-fall upon these wretches who were in the streets, and
-amounted to 60,000, while they were asleep and
-drunk. They might be killed like flies,” Walworth
-added, “for not one in twenty had arms.”</p>
-
-<p>But the handful of soldiers at the Tower were in
-mortal terror of the peasant host, and “all had so
-lost heart that you would have thought them more
-like dead men than living.”</p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Salisbury checked Walworth’s rash
-proposals. “If we begin what we cannot carry
-through,” he observed, “we shall never be able to
-repair matters. It will be all over with us and our
-heirs, and England will be a desert.”</p>
-
-<p>An open conflict with Tyler and his 60,000 was
-a very hazardous proceeding. Who could be sure
-of escape if it came to battle? So far Tyler had
-only struck at the chief ministers and the lawyers,
-and why should others risk their lives in such a
-quarrel? Besides, it was said that Wat Tyler and a
-mad priest of Kent were for doing away with all
-nobles, and for making all men equal, and caution was
-necessary in dealing with men who held such strange
-opinions. England without its nobility would be a
-desert, and at all costs such an irreparable calamity
-as the loss of England’s nobility must be prevented.</p>
-
-<p>So Walworth got no help in his plans for resistance;
-and when that night a messenger from Tyler
-warned the king that if he refused to meet the
-commons of England in open conference, the people
-would seize the Tower, Richard sent word in reply<span class="pagenum" id="Page_159">159</span>
-promising to meet his subjects on the morrow at
-noon at Mile End, and there hear their complaints.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler accepted the king’s word, and after sleeping
-with his men hard by the Tower, at St. Catherine’s
-Wharf, was at Mile End betimes. Here he met
-Grindcobbe, and hearing that the people of Hertfordshire
-had trouble with the abbot at St. Albans,
-bade Grindcobbe return and accomplish freedom for
-the abbot’s tenants and serfs.</p>
-
-<p>Richard went to Mile End with no large retinue,
-and two of his companions, the Earl of Kent and
-Sir John Holland, left him at Whitechapel and
-galloped off in craven fear of the multitude that
-thronged the road. Richard, though he was only
-fifteen, displayed both courage and cunning when
-confronted with Tyler. He knew that the discontent
-in the country was directed against the government,
-and not against the king, and that the misrule
-could not fairly be laid to his charge. Besides, he
-was the son of the Black Prince, and the people
-showed no signs of hostility. His policy was to
-yield and to wait an opportunity for regaining power.</p>
-
-<p>The conference at Mile End began with a request
-from Richard to know what was required of him.
-Tyler answered that first all traitors should be executed,
-and to this demand the king agreed. Then
-four definite proposals were put forward by Wat
-Tyler:</p>
-
-<p>1. A free and general pardon to all concerned in
-the rising.</p>
-
-<p>2. The total abolition of all villeinage and serfdom.</p>
-
-<p>3. An end to all tolls and market dues,—“freedom
-to buy and sell in all cities, burghs, mercantile<span class="pagenum" id="Page_160">160</span>
-towns, and other places within our kingdom of
-England.”</p>
-
-<p>4. All customary tenants to be turned into lease-holders
-whose rent should be fixed at 4d. an acre for
-ever.</p>
-
-<p>Richard at once assented to these requests, and to
-prevent any uncertainty and remove all doubt or
-suspicion of good faith, thirty clerks were set to work
-on the spot to draw up charters of manumission,
-and to present banners to each county represented.</p>
-
-<p>Then Richard bade the people return home in
-peace, bearing the king’s banner in token that the
-king had granted the request of his subjects. One
-or two from each village remained to carry the
-charters of freedom signed and sealed by royal
-warrant.</p>
-
-<p>Richard was taken at his word. Thousands of
-the peasants dispersed that day believing their cause
-had triumphed. Nothing could be plainer than the
-charters of manumission:—“Know that of our
-special grace we have manumitted all our liege and
-singular subjects and others of the county of Hertford,
-freed each and all of their old bondage, and
-made them quit by these presents; pardon them all
-felonies, treasons, transgressions, and extortions committed
-by any and all of them, and assure them of
-our <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">summa pax</i>.”</p>
-
-<p>So ran the document which the peasants of Hertford
-bore, and similar charters were given to the
-counties of Bedford, Essex, Kent, and Surrey.</p>
-
-<p>Richard was also taken at his word concerning
-the execution of traitors, and by the authority of
-Wat Tyler, Archbishop Sudbury, the chancellor, Sir
-Robert Hales, the treasurer, and John Legge, the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_161">161</span>
-poll-tax commissioner, were dragged out of the
-Tower and beheaded on Tower Hill. When Richard
-returned from Mile End the heads of these three
-men were on the gate of London Bridge.</p>
-
-<p>Simon Sudbury, Archbishop of Canterbury, deserved
-a better fate, for he was an amiable and gentle
-priest, and “lenient to heretics.” As chancellor he
-shared the punishment of a government deservedly
-hated, but there were many who deplored his death.</p>
-
-<p>The soldiers at the Tower offered no resistance,
-but joked and fraternised with the people.</p>
-
-<p>(John of Gaunt’s chaplain, William Appleton,
-some of Legge’s subordinates, and Richard Lyons
-also perished that day on Tower Hill. Of these,
-Richard Lyons was a thoroughly corrupt person,
-who five years earlier had been convicted of gross
-usury and of fraudulently “forestalling” in the wool
-trade, and had escaped the penalty of the law on
-being sentenced to pay a heavy fine and suffer imprisonment.
-At one time he had been a member of
-Edward III.’s council, and in that capacity had enriched
-himself and his friends at the expense of the
-nation.)</p>
-
-<p>A cry was raised in London that night against
-the Flemings, and many of these industrious aliens,
-whose only offence was the employment of cheap
-labour, were put to death, denied even the right of
-sanctuary when they fled to the altar of the church
-of the Austin Friars. The houses of certain unpopular
-citizens were also fired, and it went hard
-with all who refused to shout for “King Richard
-and the Commons.”</p>
-
-<p>But Tyler gave no sanction to the attack on the
-Flemings, and though the London mob took the law<span class="pagenum" id="Page_162">162</span>
-into its own hands and dealt roughly with those
-whom it disliked, there is no evidence of general
-rioting and disorder. To the end the peasant folk
-in London remembered the brotherhood John Ball
-had proclaimed, and respected their fellows, and
-their good order is a lasting tribute to their leaders.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler, with the bulk of the men of Kent and
-Surrey, remained in the city, and the king hearing
-of what had happened at the Tower, decided to pass
-the night at the Wardrobe, by St. Paul’s, whither his
-mother had gone when the Tower was invaded.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler, in spite of all that had been obtained at
-Mile End, was not satisfied. The peasants and
-serfs had been freed by royal warrant, but the landlords
-remained in possession of power, and there
-was no promise of better government, no word as to
-the restoration of the old common rights in the
-land, or the repeal of the savage forest laws.
-Reforms had been won, but the changes were not
-strong enough to ensure a social revolution.</p>
-
-<p>Once more, on the Saturday, June 15th, Richard
-was invited to meet his subjects, and again he
-declared his willingness, summoning his commons
-by proclamation to meet him that afternoon at
-Smithfield, in the square outside St. Bartholomew’s
-Priory.</p>
-
-<p>It seemed on the morning of June 15th as though
-the rising had succeeded triumphantly. The peasants
-had their charters of manumission, the nobles were
-thoroughly alarmed and cowed, the soldiery powerless,
-and Wat Tyler and his men still held the City
-of London.</p>
-
-<p>Holding such an advantage, Tyler determined to
-make the king decree further reforms, and when the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_163">163</span>
-two met at Smithfield, the confidence of victory could
-be seen in the peasant leader’s bearing.</p>
-
-<p>Richard, with two hundred retainers, and with
-Henry, Earl of Derby, the Earls of Suffolk and
-Salisbury, Sir Simon Burley, and Walworth, the
-mayor, were on the east side of the square, the
-great priory at their back.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler and his army drew up on the west side,
-and when Walworth opened the proceedings by
-calling on Wat Tyler to speak with the king, Tyler,
-seated on a little horse, rode out into the middle of
-the square with a single attendant. There he dismounted,
-dropped on one knee before the king, and
-shook him heartily by the hand. He bade Richard
-be of good cheer, and declared that within a fortnight
-he should have even more thanks from the
-commons than he had won already. “You and I
-shall be good comrades yet,” Tyler added.</p>
-
-<p>Richard, in some embarrassment, enquired why
-the commons did not return home, and Tyler answered
-with a great and solemn oath that no one
-should leave the city until they had got a further
-redressing of all their grievances. “And much the
-worse will it be for the lords of this realm if this
-charter be refused,” he concluded.</p>
-
-<p>Then Richard bade Tyler say what charter it was
-the commons demanded.</p>
-
-<p>“First, then,” said Tyler, “let no law but the law
-of Winchester prevail throughout the land, and let
-no man be made an outlaw by the decree of judges
-and lawyers.<a id="FNanchor_67" href="#Footnote_67" class="fnanchor">67</a> Grant also that no lord shall henceforth<span class="pagenum" id="Page_164">164</span>
-exercise lordship over the commons; and since
-we are oppressed by so vast a horde of bishops and
-clerks, let there be but one bishop in England; and
-let the property and goods of the holy Church be
-divided fairly according to the needs of the people in
-each parish, after in justice making suitable provision
-for the present clergy and monks. Finally, let
-there be no more villeins in England, but grant us
-all to be free and of one condition.”</p>
-
-<p>“All that you have asked for I promise readily,”
-Richard answered, “if only it be consistent with
-the regality of my crown. And now let the commons
-return home since their requests have been
-granted.”</p>
-
-<p>In the presence of his nobles and the hearing of
-his people the king had promised that the demands
-of his subjects should be granted.</p>
-
-<p>For Wat Tyler the victory seemed complete, and
-now that the battle was won he called out that he
-was thirsty, and complained of a parched throat.
-The days had been strenuous, and Tyler longed for
-a draught of the good home-brewed beer of his
-native county. His attendant brought him water,
-and Tyler rinsed out his mouth with it, to the disgust
-of the king’s courtiers. Then beer was brought in
-a mighty tankard, and Tyler drank a deep draught
-to the health of “King Richard and the Commons.”
-He remounted his little horse, while the nobles stood
-by in silent and sullen anger, “for no lord or counsellor
-dared to open his mouth and give an answer
-to the commons in such a situation.” Had they not
-heard it proclaimed that henceforth all were to be
-free and equal in the land?</p>
-
-<p>A “valet of Kent,” some knight in the royal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_165">165</span>
-service, broke silence, muttering loudly his opinion
-that Wat Tyler was the greatest thief and robber
-in all Kent.</p>
-
-<p>Tyler caught the abusive words, and immediately
-ordered his attendant to cut down the man who had
-spoken in this insulting fashion.</p>
-
-<p>The “valet” edged back within the ranks of the
-king’s party, and Tyler drew his dagger. Walworth,
-sharing to the full the rage of the nobles at the
-capitulation of the king, and yet anxious to avoid a
-conflict, shouted that he would arrest all those who
-drew weapons in the royal presence. Tyler struck
-impatiently at Walworth, but the blow was harmless,
-for the mayor had armour on beneath his jerkin.</p>
-
-<p>Before Tyler could defend himself the mayor
-retaliated. Drawing a short cutlass he slashed at
-Tyler, wounding him in the neck so that he fell
-from his horse. And with the fall of their leader fell
-all the promised liberties of the peasants, and the
-rising collapsed.</p>
-
-<p>Two knights, Ralph Standish and another, plunged
-their swords into him while he was on the ground.
-Still, mortally wounded though he was, Tyler
-managed to scramble on to his little horse. He
-rode a yard or two, gave a last call on the commons
-to avenge his death, and then dropped to the ground
-to rise no more.</p>
-
-<p>Had the commons at once attacked the king’s
-party, they would have conquered. But confusion
-fell upon the people, and there was no one ready to
-take command. “Let us stand together,” “We will
-die with our captain or avenge him,” “Shoot, lads,
-shoot,”—the various cries went up, and the bowmen
-looked to their weapons.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_166">166</span></p>
-
-<p>But Richard, with the presence of mind that
-marked his dealings with the people at Mile End,
-turned the doubt and uncertainty to his own advantage.
-He rode out boldly into the middle of the
-square, reminded the people that he, and not Tyler,
-was their king, and bade them follow him into the
-fields and receive their charters.</p>
-
-<p>There was no reason to refuse obedience, no
-reason to mistrust the king. Tyler had always
-spoken well of Richard, and the people themselves
-had seen him only yesterday sign their charters, and
-had heard him in Tyler’s presence, only a few
-minutes ago, promise to do the will of the commons.
-It was not by the king’s hand that their leader had
-been slain.</p>
-
-<p>A small band carried Tyler’s body into the Priory
-of St. Bartholomew, while the rest of the peasants
-followed Richard into the fields that stretched from
-Clerkenwell to Islington. Here he held them until
-Sir Robert Knolles arrived with 700 soldiers, for
-Walworth had lost no time in spreading the news
-that Tyler was dead, and in raising a troop for the
-king. By Richard’s orders the commons were dispersed
-when the soldiery arrived, the men of Kent,
-now broken and dispirited, being marched through
-the city, and left to take their way home.</p>
-
-<p>That very night Walworth and Standish were
-knighted for what they had done, and in the morning
-Wat Tyler’s head stared horribly from London
-Bridge.</p>
-
-<p>“My son, what sorrow I have suffered for thee
-this day,” cried the king’s mother, when Richard
-came to the Wardrobe.</p>
-
-<p>“I know it well, madam,” answered the king;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_167">167</span>
-“but rejoice with me now, and thank God that I
-have this day won back my heritage of England,
-so nearly lost.”</p>
-
-<p>The great uprising was over. Wat Tyler had
-fallen, as it seemed, in the very hour of victory.</p>
-
-<p>By Walworth’s orders, Jack Straw and two prominent
-men of Kent were hanged on the night of
-June 15th, without the formality of trial. Jack
-Straw, an itinerant priest sharing John Ball’s views,
-it is said, explained before he died what had been in
-the minds of the leaders of the revolt. They had
-meant to get rid of the supremacy of the landlords
-altogether, and to substitute for the established
-clergy a voluntary ministry of mendicant friars; the
-boy-king was to be enlisted in the cause of the
-revolution before the monarchy was finally abolished;
-and in place of parliament and royal council each
-county was to enjoy self-government.<a id="FNanchor_68" href="#Footnote_68" class="fnanchor">68</a></p>
-
-<p>No longer in the presence of danger, the king and
-his ministers struck fiercely at the rebels.</p>
-
-<p>On June 18th a general proclamation was issued
-ordering the arrest of all malefactors and the dispersal
-of all unruly gatherings. On June 22nd,
-Chief Justice Sir Robert Tressilian went on assize,
-and “showed mercy to none and made great havock.”
-John Ball was taken at Coventry and, with Grindcobbe,
-hanged at St. Albans on July 15th.</p>
-
-<p>The Earl of Suffolk went down to Suffolk with
-500 lances on June 23rd, and John Wraw, with
-twenty others, including four beneficed clergy, was
-quickly taken and hanged. Henry Despenser,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_168">168</span>
-Bishop of Norwich, grandson of Edward III.’s
-minister, suppressed the rising in Norfolk, and
-walked beside Litster to the gallows.</p>
-
-<p>At least a thousand peasant lives were sacrificed
-to the law under Tressilian’s sentence.</p>
-
-<p>At Waltham a deputation came to Richard to ask
-if it were true that the royal promises and charters
-were annulled, and the king’s answer left no room
-for doubt, for it breathed all the hatred and contempt
-of the commons that Tyler had striven to end:</p>
-
-<p>“O vile and odious by land and sea, you who are
-not worthy to live when compared with the lords
-whom ye have attacked; you should be forthwith
-punished with the vilest deaths were it not for the
-office ye bear. Go back to your comrades and bear
-the king’s answer. You were and are rustics, and
-shall remain in bondage, not that of old, but in one
-infinitely worse. For as long as we live, and by
-God’s help rule over this realm, we will attempt by
-all our faculties, powers, and means to make you
-such an example of offence to the heirs of your
-servitude as that they may have you before their
-eyes, and you may supply them with a perpetual
-ground for cursing and fearing you.”</p>
-
-<p>In despair at this rough ending to all their
-cherished hopes of freedom, the Essex peasants
-made a last attempt to fight for liberty, and on
-June 28th, at Great Baddow and Billericay, more
-than 500 fell before the king’s soldiery.</p>
-
-<p>On July 2nd all the charters of manumission and
-royal pardons were declared formally annulled,
-and sheriffs were strictly forbidden to release any
-prisoners. It was not till August 30th an amnesty
-was granted to those suspected of taking part in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_169">169</span>
-rising. In the autumn parliament refused to ratify
-the charters, and the lawyers declared that without
-the consent of parliament the charters were illegal.</p>
-
-<p>So there was an end to all Wat Tyler and the
-peasants had risen to obtain, and well might it seem
-that the rising had been in vain.<a id="FNanchor_69" href="#Footnote_69" class="fnanchor">69</a></p>
-
-<p>Yet it was not altogether in vain that John Ball
-had rung his bell and died for his faith, that Wat
-Tyler had led the peasant folk of Kent to do battle
-for freedom. The poll-tax was stopped for one
-thing. And villeinage was doomed. “The landlords
-gave up the practice of demanding base
-services; they let their lands to leasehold tenants,
-and accepted money payments in lieu of labour;
-they ceased to recall the emancipated labourer into
-serfdom or to oppose his assertion of right in the
-courts of the manor and the county.” (W. Stubbs.)</p>
-
-<p>The great uprising brought out the desire for
-personal liberty in the labouring people of England
-that has never since been utterly quenched. It was
-the first insistence that peasants and serfs were men
-of England. “It taught the king’s officers and
-gentle folks that they must treat the peasants like
-men if they wished them to behave quietly, and
-it led most landlords to set free their bondsmen,
-and to take fixed money payments instead of uncertain
-services from their customary tenants, so
-that in a hundred years’ time there were very few
-bondsmen left in England.” (F. York Powell.)</p>
-
-<p>If Wat Tyler died as a man should for the cause
-he loves, few of those who trampled on the cause of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_170">170</span>
-the peasants were to know the paths of peace in
-later years.</p>
-
-<p>Richard died in prison at the hands of Henry
-Bolingbroke, John of Gaunt’s son, whom Tyler had
-let depart in safety when the Savoy was in flames.
-The Earls of Suffolk and Warwick died exiled
-fugitives. The Earl of Salisbury, fleeing from
-Henry V., was hanged in the streets of Cirencester.
-Chief Justice Tressilian was hanged for a traitor in
-1387, and Sir Simon Burley was beheaded.</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">This worldly wealth is nought perseverant</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor ever abides it in stabilitie.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_8">Jack Cade, the Captain of Kent<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1450</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: William of Worcester, Gregory, Mayor
-of London, 1451–2; <cite>Collections of a London Citizen</cite>; <cite>an
-English Chronicle</cite>; <cite>Three Fifteenth Century Chronicles</cite>
-(Camden Society); Fabyan—<cite>Ellis Letters</cite> (second series),
-<cite>Issue Rolls, Devon, Rolls of Parliament, Paston Letters</cite>,
-vol. i, with introduction by Dr. Gairdner; Orridge—<cite>Illustrations
-of Jack Cade’s Rebellion</cite>; Durrant Cooper—<cite>John
-Cade’s Followers in Kent and Sussex</cite>; J. Clayton—<cite>True
-Story of Jack Cade</cite>; Dr. G. Kriehn—<cite>The English
-Rising in 1450</cite>, Strasburg, 1892.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_173">173</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">JACK CADE, THE<br />
-CAPTAIN OF KENT
-<span class="subhead">1450</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> rising of the commons of Kent in 1450
-under their captain, Jack Cade, was the
-protest of people—sick of the misrule at
-home and of the mismanagement of affairs
-abroad—driven to take up arms against an incapable
-government that would not heed gentler measures.</p>
-
-<p>It was not such a peasant revolt as Wat Tyler
-had led, this rising of the fifteenth century. It was
-largely the work of men of some local importance,
-and country squires were active in enrolling men,
-employing the parish constable for that purpose in a
-good many parishes.<a id="FNanchor_70" href="#Footnote_70" class="fnanchor">70</a></p>
-
-<p>For years discontent had been rife. Henry VI., a
-weak, religious man, more fit for the cloister than
-the throne, had lost the great statesmen of the early
-years of his reign. The Duke of Bedford, good
-Duke Humphrey of Gloucester, and Cardinal Beaufort
-were all dead, and Richard, Duke of York, by
-far the ablest man left among the nobles, had been
-banished to the government of Ireland. The Duke
-of Suffolk became the chief minister of the crown in
-1445, and all the disasters of the war in France and
-of corrupt maladministration in England were laid at
-his door. Suffolk was responsible for the king’s
-marriage with the penniless princess, Margaret of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_174">174</span>
-Anjou, who, ambitious and self-willed, proved the
-worst possible counsellor for Henry. And the price
-of this marriage was the territories of Anjou and
-Maine, which were ceded to Margaret’s father,
-besides a heavy tax of one-fifteenth of all incomes
-demanded by Suffolk in payment for his expenses in
-arranging and carrying out the undesirable wedding.
-The years of Suffolk’s ministry saw nothing but
-defeat and disgrace as the hundred years’ war with
-France drew to its end. The victories of Edward
-III. and Henry V., and all the wealth of life and
-treasure poured out so lavishly by England, had
-come to nothing, and by 1451 all France save Calais
-was lost. Popular discontent turned to action early
-in 1450 against Suffolk and his fellow ministers. At
-the opening of parliament Suffolk was impeached as
-a traitor, along with Lord Say-and-Sele, the treasurer,
-and Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury; and
-Suffolk, without even demanding a trial by his peers,
-threw himself on the king’s mercy. Henry was
-satisfied with the banishment of his fallen minister
-for five years; but when Suffolk went on board, the
-sailors of the vessel that was to take him across seas
-decreed a capital sentence, and after a rough court-martial
-trial the Duke of Suffolk was beheaded on
-May 2nd in a small boat off the coast of Dover, and
-his body left on the sands. Four months earlier,
-Moleyns, Bishop of Chichester, who had only just
-resigned the keepership of the Privy Seal, and was
-known as a supporter of Suffolk’s, had been slain by
-the sailors of Portsmouth, when he arrived at that
-town with arrears of pay long overdue to the troops.
-Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury, survived till the end
-of June, and then, at the time when Cade was marching<span class="pagenum" id="Page_175">175</span>
-on London, he was dragged away from the very
-altar of Erdington Church, in Wiltshire, when he
-had said mass, and put to death on a hill there by
-the infuriated people of his diocese.<a id="FNanchor_71" href="#Footnote_71" class="fnanchor">71</a></p>
-
-<p>Widespread as the discontent was in 1450, there
-was no general movement throughout the land as
-in the days when John Ball and his companions
-bound the peasants together by village clubs. Kent,
-“impatient in wrongs, disdaining of too much
-oppression, and ever desirous of new change
-and new fangleness,” was well organised for
-revolt, and the men of Surrey and Sussex were
-ready to bear arms with Cade. Outside these
-counties no one is found to have taken the lead
-against the government. Kent and Sussex had
-their own reasons for revolt, for piracy swept the
-English Channel unchecked, and the highways were
-infested with robbers—soldiers broken in the war;
-and they had their leader—Mortimer, whom some
-called “John Mendall” and others, later, Jack Cade.
-So by the end of May a full list of grievances and
-necessary reforms was drawn up, and the commons
-of Kent had, for the second time in history, risen in
-arms and encamped on Blackheath, resolute to get
-redress from the king for their injuries.</p>
-
-<p>The success of democratic revolt depends largely
-on the clear courage of its leaders and the complete
-confidence of the people in those they elect for their
-captains. In 1450 Jack Cade proved himself both<span class="pagenum" id="Page_176">176</span>
-clear-headed and brave, and the men of Kent followed
-him whole-heartedly.</p>
-
-<p>To this day we are still in the dark as to the real
-name and family of the Captain of Kent. He was
-known popularly as “Mortimer,” and was so described
-in the “pardon” he received. He was a
-man of some property, or he would not have been
-attainted by special act of parliament, nor have
-enjoyed the confidence of the men of substance who
-accepted his generalship. He was known as an
-Irishman and as a soldier in the French wars, and it
-is likely enough that he served under the Duke of
-York both in France and Ireland. His strong
-advocacy of the claims of York favours the notion of
-kinsmanship; but, on the other hand, York was by
-far the ablest statesman of the day, and to demand
-his recall to the king’s council was no guarantee of
-family motives.</p>
-
-<p>There was some talk at the time that Cade was
-called John Aylesmere, and that he was married to
-the daughter of a Surrey squire at Taundede. But
-there is no more evidence for these things than for
-the charges made against him in the warrant for his
-arrest, that he had once killed a woman in Sussex
-and had then fled to France and fought with the
-French arms.</p>
-
-<p>The undisputed high character of Cade’s followers
-is all against the portrait painted by the government
-after his death; when, anxious to blacken the good
-name of so resolute a leader, it was made out that
-he was merely a disreputable ruffian. The landowners
-of Kent and Sussex would never have
-accepted for their captain a mere swashbuckling
-blackguard. They rallied to him as a Mortimer,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_177">177</span>
-seeing in him a likeness to Richard, Duke of York.<a id="FNanchor_72" href="#Footnote_72" class="fnanchor">72</a>
-If his real name was Cade, then he was probably a
-squire or yeoman, for Cade was no uncommon name
-round Mayfield and Heathfield in Sussex, and Cades
-were landed proprietors near Reigate as late as the
-seventeenth century.</p>
-
-<p>It was enough that, chosen Captain of Kent, Cade,
-or Mortimer, was known and trusted as a brave,
-upright man of good character and ability.<a id="FNanchor_73" href="#Footnote_73" class="fnanchor">73</a>
-Whether descended from nobles or of good Sussex
-stock was a small matter to men in earnest for the
-changes and reforms the country needed.</p>
-
-<p>Ashford was the heart of the rising, and from
-Ashford the host marched to Blackheath, where, at
-the beginning of June, the camp was fixed. The
-army, estimated at 46,000, included 18 esquires, 74
-county gentlemen, and some five clerks in holy
-orders, who were presently joined by the Abbot of
-Battle, the Prior of Lewes, and twenty-three county
-gentlemen from Sussex.</p>
-
-<p>Cade at once explained that they must deal
-directly with the king if they were to get relief from
-their present burdens, and then set to work to draw
-up the bill of “the complaint and requests” of the
-commons of Kent, while the rank and file laboured
-“to dyke and stake the camp all about, as it had
-been in the land of war.”</p>
-
-<p>But war had not yet been declared, and for the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_178">178</span>
-present discipline was loose in the camp at Blackheath.<a id="FNanchor_74" href="#Footnote_74" class="fnanchor">74</a>
-“As good was Jack Robin as John at the
-Noke, for all were as high as pig’s feet; until the
-time that they should come and speak with such
-states and messengers as were sent unto them.
-Then they put all their power into the man that was
-named captain of all their host.”</p>
-
-<p>On June 7th the king was at Smithfield with
-20,000 soldiers, and messengers were promptly
-despatched to Blackheath to know the meaning of
-the insurrection. Cade answered by showing the
-petition he had drawn up, and mentioned that they
-had assembled “to redress and reform the wrongs
-that were done in the realm, and to withstand the
-malice of them that were destroyers of the common
-profit, and to correct and amend the defaults of them
-that were the king’s chief counsellors.” He then
-sent off the “bill of complaints” to the king and to
-the parliament then sitting at Westminster, “and
-requested to have answer thereof again, but answer
-he had none.” The “complaint” was received with
-contempt, and the opinion of the king’s counsellors
-was that “such proud rebels should rather be suppressed
-and tamed with violence and force than with
-fair words or amicable answer.”</p>
-
-<p>Yet “the complaint,” which consisted of fifteen
-articles, was no revolutionary document. It contained
-protests against the royal threat to lay waste
-Kent in revenge for the death of the Duke of
-Suffolk; the diversion of the royal revenue raised
-by heavy taxation to “other men”; the banishment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_179">179</span>
-of the Duke of York “to make room for unworthy
-ministers who would not do justice by law, but
-demanded bribes and gifts”; the purveyance of
-goods for the royal household without payment; the
-arrest and imprisonment on false charges of treason
-of persons whose goods and lands were subsequently
-seized by the king’s servants, who then “either compassed
-their deaths or kept them in prison while they
-got possession of their property by royal grant”;
-the interference with the old right of free election of
-knights of the shire by “the great rulers of the
-country sending letters to enforce their tenants and
-other people to choose other persons than the
-common will is to elect”; the misconduct of the war
-in France, demanding inquiry and the punishment by
-law of those found guilty. Complaint was also
-made of various local grievances—the insecurity of
-property, the arbitrary conduct of the lords of the
-seaports, the extortion in taxation owing to sheriffs
-and under-sheriffs farming their offices, the fines
-exacted by sheriffs for non-compliance with the
-orders of the court of exchequer (whose writs were
-sealed with green wax) when no summons or warning
-had been given, and the “sore expense” incurred
-by there being only one Court of Sessions in
-the whole county.</p>
-
-<p>Five “requests” were added to the bill of complaints.
-These expressed the desire of the commons
-that the king should reign “like a king royal”; that
-“all the false progeny and affinity of the Duke
-of Suffolk” should be banished from the king’s
-presence and brought to trial, and the Duke of York
-and his friends included in the royal council; that
-punishment should be meted out to those responsible<span class="pagenum" id="Page_180">180</span>
-for the death of the Duke of Gloucester; that the
-extortions practised daily by the king’s servants in
-the taking of goods from the people should cease;
-that the old Statute of Labourers for keeping down
-wages should be abolished; and that the “false
-traitors” and “great extortioners,” Lord Say and
-Crowmer, the sheriff of Kent, should be brought low.</p>
-
-<p>In brief, the charter of the commons of Kent
-demanded the total expulsion of all Suffolk’s
-ministers and relatives from public service, the
-return of the Duke of York and his party to power,
-the suppression of the bribery, corruption, and
-extortion practised by the sheriffs and government
-servants, and the repeal of the Statute of Labourers.</p>
-
-<p>It would have been well if Henry had heeded
-these complaints and requests. As it was he pushed
-on to Blackheath, in spite of murmuring in his army,
-and Cade, unwilling to risk a battle, and knowing
-that disaffection was at work in London, quietly
-withdrew to Sevenoaks. There was no spirit in the
-royal troops to suppress the rising, and many
-favoured the Captain of Kent. But two knights,
-Sir Humfrey Stafford and Sir William Stafford,
-kinsmen of the Duke of Buckingham and the Archbishop
-of Canterbury, and men of some military
-repute, decided to pursue the rebels and advanced to
-Sevenoaks with a small picked body of soldiers.
-Their defeat was complete. Both knights were
-slain, and those of their men who were not cut to
-pieces fled from the battle, or joined Cade’s host.</p>
-
-<p>The result of this disaster to the royal plans was
-that Henry returned to London with an army that
-soon melted away, or broke into open disorder.
-Many of the nobles, who on receipt of the petition of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_181">181</span>
-the commons of Kent had called for violent measures
-against the rebels, now left the king, and, with their
-retainers, rode to their country estates. Henry, to
-appease the clamour of some of his own followers,
-ordered the arrest of Lord Say-and-Sele, the king’s
-treasurer, and of Sheriff Crowmer, and bade officers
-take them to the Tower. Parliament was dissolved,
-and Cade was busy in Kent gathering reinforcements,
-and doing what he could to repair locally
-the mischief of Suffolk’s rule before proceeding to
-London.<a id="FNanchor_75" href="#Footnote_75" class="fnanchor">75</a></p>
-
-<p>As a last resource, Henry decided to treat with
-Cade by ambassadors, and on June 29th, when the
-commons were again encamped on Blackheath, came
-the Duke of Buckingham, and Stafford, Archbishop
-of Canterbury, for many years the king’s
-chancellor—a gentle old man, who, if he had made
-no stand against the misgovernment himself, was
-hardly to be blamed—to arrange, if possible, a
-peaceful settlement.</p>
-
-<p>The conference came to nothing, for neither
-Buckingham nor the archbishop could promise Cade
-any positive redress of grievances, or the interview
-he sought with the king.</p>
-
-<p>“These lords found him sober in talk, wise in
-reasoning, arrogant in heart, and stiff in opinions;
-one who that by no means would dissolve his
-army, except the king in person would come to
-him, and assent to the things he would require”
-(Holinshed.)</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the mission was reported, and
-Henry, after appointing Lord Scales as guardian of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_182">182</span>
-the prisoners in the Tower, hastily fled to Kenilworth,
-although the lord mayor and citizens of
-London promised to stand by him if he would
-remain in the city. There was little of sovereignty
-in Henry VI., son of Henry V., the conqueror of
-Agincourt. Quiet he loved, and in religious exercises
-he found the satisfaction that others found in war
-and statecraft.</p>
-
-<p>On the first of July the way was open for the
-commons to enter London. Suffolk, Bishop
-Moleyns, and Bishop Ayscough had all been
-summarily executed. Lord Say, the treasurer,
-alone remained of the discredited ministers. No
-opposition was offered to Cade by the citizens of
-London. The Common Council had discussed the
-rising, and at the Guildhall only one dissentient
-voice had been raised to the admission of the
-Captain of Kent to the city. One Horne, a stockfishmonger
-and alderman, alone objected to any
-recognition of the unlawful assembly of the commons,
-and he was sent to Newgate prison for safety,
-and on Cade’s entry fined 500 marks for his daring
-speech.</p>
-
-<p>Negotiations had been opened between the City
-Council and the commons while the latter were at
-Blackheath, and Thomas Cocke (or Cooke),<a id="FNanchor_76" href="#Footnote_76" class="fnanchor">76</a> a past
-warden of the Drapers’ Company, acted as the
-mutual friend of both parties. From Cocke the
-corporation learnt of Cade’s purposes, and that the
-city stood in no danger from the rising; and it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_183">183</span>
-Cocke who carried instructions from Cade to the
-wealthy foreign merchants, requiring them to furnish
-horses, arms and money for his army.</p>
-
-<p>“Ye shall charge all Lombards and strangers,
-being merchants, Genoese, Venetians, Florentines and
-others this day to draw them together: and to ordain
-for us, the captain, twelve [sets of] harness complete,
-of the best fashion, twenty-four brigandines, twelve
-battle-axes, twelve glaves, six horses with saddle
-and bridle completely harnessed, and 1,000 marks of
-ready money.”</p>
-
-<p>So ran the summons, which was duly obeyed.<a id="FNanchor_77" href="#Footnote_77" class="fnanchor">77</a>
-For Cade had added the stern warning that “if this
-demand be not observed and done, we shall have the
-heads of as many as we can get of them.”</p>
-
-<p>The corporation had really no choice but to welcome
-Cade. Kings and nobles had fled, and here
-was the Captain of Kent with 50,000 men come to
-do justice at their gates. London had suffered as
-badly as any place from the misgovernment of the
-country, and it was plain the commons of Kent were
-no army of maurauders, for no complaint had been
-heard of their ill doing in Kent, and their captain
-had treated with full civility the Duke of Buckingham
-and Archbishop Stafford.</p>
-
-<p>So the keys of the city were presented to Cade,
-and at five o’clock on the 2nd of July the Captain of
-Kent, mounted on a good horse, rode across London
-Bridge, followed by all his army. In Cannon Street,
-in the presence of Sir John Chalton, the Lord
-Mayor, and a great multitude of people, Cade laid<span class="pagenum" id="Page_184">184</span>
-down his sword on the old London Stone and declared
-proudly, “Now is Mortimer lord of this city.”
-At nightfall he returned to his headquarters, the
-White Hart, a famous inn in Southwark, and next
-morning was betimes in the city. That day sentence
-was passed on Lord Say-and-Sele and on his son-in-law,
-Sheriff Crowmer. They were removed from the
-Tower by Cade’s orders, taken to the Guildhall,
-tried and condemned for “divers treasons,” and for
-“certain extortions,” and executed forthwith. Say
-was beheaded at the standard in Cheapside, and
-Crowmer at Mile End, and so bitter was the public
-feeling against these two men, and so fierce the
-popular hatred, that their heads were carried on
-poles through the city, and made to kiss in ghastly
-embrace before being placed on London Bridge.</p>
-
-<p>These, with a third man named John Bailey, who
-was hanged with Cade’s permission for being a
-necromancer and a dabbler in magic and the black
-arts, were the only persons put to death while Mortimer
-was lord of the city. At Southwark, where
-the commons were now encamped, as at Blackheath,
-theft in the popular army was treated as a capital
-offence, and two or three “lawless men” were
-hanged. It was inevitable if discipline and good
-order were to be obtained in so vast a company that
-punishment should follow sharp and swift on all who
-brought discredit on the rising.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Say and Sheriff Crowmer being dead, the
-city fathers saw no further purpose in Cade’s lordship,
-and they dreaded being called upon to contribute
-to the support of his army, for they knew that
-Cade needed money for his men. To the everlasting
-credit of the commons no charge was laid against<span class="pagenum" id="Page_185">185</span>
-them of riot or disorder. The city was in their
-hands for three days, yet no harm befell the citizens.
-On their captain alone has blame fallen for the
-events of those days in July.</p>
-
-<p>The difficulties of the man were immense. He
-had rendered no mean service to the state by calling
-attention to the ills that plagued the country, and
-proposing remedies. He had roused a large body of
-Englishmen to demand a better government, and by
-the sharp method of the times he had got rid of a
-bad minister and a corrupt sheriff, so that public life
-was at least the healthier for the deliverance from two
-of its oppressors. And now he had this army of 50,000
-men, all needing food and shelter—an orderly, well-disciplined
-body, no mob of mercenaries—and the
-city of London, with all its wealth, gave him nothing.</p>
-
-<p>Cade had to get supplies. The commons of Kent
-could not live on the good will of the London people.
-Their captain was forced to levy toll where he could.
-At present all he had received was the tribute from
-the foreign merchants and 500 marks from the fishmonger
-Horne.</p>
-
-<p>On July 3rd, the night of Say’s execution, Cade
-supped with Philip Malpas, Cocke’s father-in-law.
-Malpas was one of Suffolk’s party, a King Henry’s
-man, unpopular in the city, and though an alderman
-and a draper, an expelled member of the city council.
-Warned by Cocke, Malpas got rid of his valuables
-before Cade arrived. But the Captain of Kent
-found certain jewels belonging to the Duke of York
-in the house, and these he carried off.<a id="FNanchor_78" href="#Footnote_78" class="fnanchor">78</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_186">186</span></p>
-
-<p>The following night Cade supped with a merchant
-named Curtis (Ghirstis according to Fabyan, Girste
-according to Stow) in the parish of St. Margaret
-Pattens and before he left insisted on a contribution
-to the war chest. Curtis paid, but he resented
-bitterly the abuse of his hospitality. It seemed to
-him, as it seemed to his fellow merchants to whom
-he told the tale of his wrongs, sheer robbery, and
-the following morning (Sunday, July 5th), while
-Cade rested quietly at the White Hart in Southwark,
-the city fathers were busy shaking their heads
-over the business, and grave anxiety filled their
-minds. This might be but the beginning of pillage;
-there were always materials in London for a riot,
-apart from Cade’s army.</p>
-
-<p>“And for this the hearts of the citizens fell from
-him, and every thrifty man was afraid to be served
-in like wise, for there was many a man in London
-that awaited and would fain have seen a common
-robbery” (Stow.)<a id="FNanchor_79" href="#Footnote_79" class="fnanchor">79</a></p>
-
-<p>In the course of the day mayor and corporation
-were in consultation with Lord Scales, the Governor
-of the Tower, with the result that decision was made
-to prevent Cade and the commons from re-entering
-the city. London Bridge was at once seized and
-fortified by the citizens, and Matthew Gough, a distinguished
-soldier in the French wars, was placed in
-command.</p>
-
-<p>Cade, knowing nothing of the hostility he had
-created, took his ease that day—it was the last
-peaceful Sabbath he was to know. Towards evening<span class="pagenum" id="Page_187">187</span>
-he gave orders for the King’s Bench and Marshalsea
-prisons to be opened, and their inmates—for
-the most part victims of official extortion and injustice—to
-be released. This was done, and certain
-“lawless men” convicted of disobedience were haled
-off to be hanged; to the end there was no relaxing
-of discipline.</p>
-
-<p>Then came word that the passage of London
-Bridge was stopped, and the right of entry to the
-city barred against the commons as against a foe.
-Cade took this as a declaration of war, of the civil
-war he had done his best to prevent, and sallied out
-to force an entrance. At nine o’clock the battle
-began on the bridge, and all through the short
-summer night it raged, neither side effecting victory.
-“For some time the Londoners were beat back to
-the stulpes at St. Magnus corner, and suddenly
-again the rebels were repulsed and driven back to
-the stulpes at Southwark.” It was not till nine
-o’clock on Monday morning that the commons,
-wearied and disheartened, fell back from the fray,
-and Cade understood that the attack had failed, and
-that for the first time since the assembling of the
-people on Blackheath, at the end of May, a check
-had been given to the democratic movement. A
-hasty truce was settled between Cade and the mayor,
-that while the truce lasted the commons should not
-cross into London nor the citizens into Southwark.
-Cardinal Kemp, Archbishop of York, the king’s
-chancellor, who with old Archbishop Stafford had
-been left undisturbed in the Tower since the king’s
-ignominious flight, immediately decided that the
-time had come to arrange a settlement with the
-Captain of Kent.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_188">188</span></p>
-
-<p>Kemp sent messengers that day to the White
-Hart, asking Cade to meet the representatives of the
-king, “to the end that the civil commotions and disturbances
-might cease and tranquility be restored,”
-and Cade consented.</p>
-
-<p>Kemp, who had himself presided at the trial and
-condemnation of Suffolk, brought to the conference,
-which was held in the church of St. Margaret,
-Southwark,<a id="FNanchor_80" href="#Footnote_80" class="fnanchor">80</a> on July 7th, Archbishop Stafford and
-William Waynfleet, Bishop of Winchester. The
-chancellor, bent on making peace, also brought
-pardons to all concerned, duly signed and sealed.
-He listened courteously to Cade’s “complaints” and
-“requests,” received the petition, promised it should
-have the full consideration of parliament, and then
-announced a full pardon to all who should return home.</p>
-
-<p>The proposals of the bishops won the general
-approval of the commons. There was nothing to be
-gained, it seemed, by remaining in arms, now they
-had won a promise that their charter should come
-before parliament.</p>
-
-<p>Cade alone hesitated. What if parliament should
-disavow these “pardons,” and the commons be
-treated as the peasants were treated when they
-trusted a king’s word? He asked for the endorsement
-of his own pardon, and the pardons of his
-followers, by parliament before his army dispersed.
-Chancellor Kemp explained that this was impossible,
-because parliament was dissolved. The people were
-satisfied with the cardinal’s word. The rising was
-at an end.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_189">189</span></p>
-
-<p>The following day the bulk of the commons
-departed from Southwark for their farms and
-cottages in Kent and Surrey and Sussex. Cade
-watched them go. His own mind was made up.
-Not till parliament should give him a pardon of
-indisputable legality would he lay down his arms.
-With a small band of followers he set off for
-Rochester, sending what goods and provisions he
-had by water.</p>
-
-<p>The rising was at an end, and nothing more was
-heard in parliament, or elsewhere, of the famous
-charter of “complaints” and “requests.”</p>
-
-<p>With the break-up of the insurgent army, the
-government woke to activity. Alexander Iden was
-appointed sheriff of Kent, and marrying Crowmer’s
-widow, subsequently gained considerable profit.
-Within a week the king’s writ and proclamation,
-declaring John Cade a false traitor, was posted
-throughout the countryside, and Cade, defeated in
-an attempt to get possession of Queenborough
-Castle, was a fugitive with the reward of 1,000
-marks on his head, alive or dead, and with Sheriff
-Iden in hot pursuit.</p>
-
-<p>Near Heathfield, in Sussex, Iden came up with
-his prey, early on Monday, July 13th.</p>
-
-<p>Cade died fighting. A broken man, worn and
-famished, friendless and alone, he still had his
-sword. The spirit of Mortimer, Captain of Kent,
-flickered up in the presence of his enemies—it were
-better to die sword in hand fighting for freedom
-than to perish basely by the hangman. So Cade
-fought his last fight in the Sussex garden, and fell
-mortally wounded, overpowered by the sheriff and
-his men.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_190">190</span></p>
-
-<p>In all haste Iden sent off the dead body to
-London; it was identified by the hostess of the
-White Hart, and three days later the head was
-stuck on London Bridge. The body was quartered
-and portions sent to Blackheath, Norwich, Salisbury,
-and Gloucester, for public exposure. The sheriffs of
-London, upon whom the gruesome task fell of
-despatching these remains, complained bitterly of
-the cost of this proceeding, “because that hardly any
-persons durst nor would take upon them the carriage
-for doubt of their lives.”<a id="FNanchor_81" href="#Footnote_81" class="fnanchor">81</a></p>
-
-<p>Iden got his 1,000 marks reward, besides getting
-the governorship of Rochester Castle, at a salary of
-£36 per annum.</p>
-
-<p>Cade was “attainted of treason” by act of parliament,
-and all his goods, lands, and tenements made
-forfeit to the crown. A year later another act of
-parliament made void all that had been done by
-Cade’s authority during the rising.</p>
-
-<p>In January, 1451, Henry VI. went into Kent with
-his justices, and this royal visitation was known as
-the harvest of heads; for in spite of Cardinal
-Kemp’s pardons, twenty-six men of Canterbury and
-Rochester implicated in the rising were hanged.</p>
-
-<p>So the last echoes of the rising died away, and
-corruption and misgovernment remained. But the
-commons of Kent and their captain had done what
-they could, and in the only way that seemed possible,
-to get justice done, and their failure was without
-dishonour.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_9">Sir Thomas More and the
-Freedom of Conscience<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1529–1535</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: William Roper—<cite>Life of Sir Thomas
-More</cite>, 1626; Harpsfield—<cite>Life of More</cite> (Harleian
-MSS.); Stapleton—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Ires Thomæ</cite>, 1588; Cresacre
-More—<cite>Life of More</cite>, 1627; Erasmus—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Epistolae</cite>
-(Leyden, 1706); Sir James Mackintosh—<cite>Life of More</cite>,
-1844; Campbell—<cite>Lives of the Chancellors</cite>; Foss—<cite>Lives
-of the Judges</cite>; <cite>Calendar of State Papers—Henry
-VIII.</cite>, edited by Dr. Brewer and Dr. Gairdner
-(Rolls Series); <cite>More’s English Works</cite>, edited by
-William Rastell; Rev. T. E. Bridgett—<cite>Life of Blessed
-John Fisher</cite>, and <cite>Life and Writings of Sir Thomas
-More</cite>, 1891.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_193" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p192.jpg" width="1509" height="2094" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>SIR THOMAS MORE</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From the Drawing by Hans Holbein.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_193">193</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">SIR THOMAS MORE AND THE<br />
-FREEDOM OF CONSCIENCE
-
-<span class="subhead">1529–1535.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">“Did</span> Nature ever frame a sweeter, happier
-character than that of More?”—so
-Erasmus wrote in 1498, when Thomas
-More was twenty, and Erasmus, recently
-come to England, some ten years older. It was
-at the beginning of their friendship, a friendship
-that was to last unbroken till death,<a id="FNanchor_82" href="#Footnote_82" class="fnanchor">82</a> and More had
-then passed from the household of Cardinal Morton
-to Oxford, and from Oxford to Lincoln’s Inn, to
-take up his father’s calling and follow the law as a
-barrister.</p>
-
-<p>Twenty years later Erasmus, writing at length to
-Ulrich von Hutten, gives us a portrait of More in
-full manhood. Temperance, simplicity, human
-affection, good humour, independence of mind—these
-qualities are conspicuous.</p>
-
-<p>“I never saw anyone so indifferent about food.
-Until he was a young man he delighted in drinking
-water, but that was natural to him. Yet, that he
-might not seem to be singular or unsociable, he
-would conceal his temperance from his guests by<span class="pagenum" id="Page_194">194</span>
-drinking the lightest beer, or often pure water, out
-of a pewter vessel.”</p>
-
-<p>“He prefers milk diet and fruits, and is especially
-fond of eggs. He would rather eat corned beef and
-coarse bread than what are called delicacies.”</p>
-
-<p>“He likes a simple dress, using neither silk nor
-purple nor chains of gold—except on state occasions.
-It is wonderful how careless he is of all that ceremony
-which most men identify with politeness.
-He neither requires it from others nor is anxious
-to use it himself, though when it is necessary, at
-interviews or banquets, he knows how to employ
-it. But he thinks it unmanly to waste time over
-such trifles.”</p>
-
-<p>“He seems born and fashioned for friendship, and
-is a most faithful and enduring friend. He is easy of
-access to all; but if he chances to get familiar with
-one whose vices will not brook correction, rather
-than a sudden breaking off, he gradually relaxes the
-intimacy and quietly drops it. He abhors games of
-tennis, dice, cards, and the like, by which most
-gentlemen kill time. Though he is rather too negligent
-of his own interests, no one is more diligent in
-behalf of his friends. So polite, and so sweet-mannered
-is he in company, that no one is too
-melancholy to be cheered by him. Since boyhood
-he has always so delighted in merriment that it seems
-to be part of his nature; yet his merriment is never
-turned into buffoonery.”</p>
-
-<p>“No one is less led by the opinions of the crowd,
-yet no one is less eccentric.”</p>
-
-<p>The friendship of More and Erasmus had ripened
-in those twenty years. In More’s house, and at his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_195">195</span>
-instigation, Erasmus had written the <cite>Praise of
-Folly</cite>,<a id="FNanchor_83" href="#Footnote_83" class="fnanchor">83</a> and the great scholar watched with warm
-interest the famous career and the brilliant character
-of the man he loved so heartily.</p>
-
-<p>More was already high in Henry VIII.’s favour
-when Erasmus could write that no one was less led by
-the opinions of the crowd, and more than once his
-independence and courage of mind had been proved
-in the twenty years that had passed.</p>
-
-<p>Drawn at first to the monastic life, More had
-spent four years (1500–1504) with the Carthusians
-in Smithfield, “frequenting daily their spiritual
-exercises, but without any vow.” Then it is plain
-to him that his vocation is not the priesthood, but
-marriage and public life, and he leaves the Charterhouse,
-and in 1505 is married and in Parliament.<a id="FNanchor_84" href="#Footnote_84" class="fnanchor">84</a>
-But all his life the devotion to religion, and to the
-services of the Church, remain in More, and he is
-ascetic in the mortifications of the body till the spirit
-and the will ride supreme.</p>
-
-<p>In the House of Commons More stood out against
-the exactions of Henry VII., and at once fell under
-the king’s displeasure.</p>
-
-<p>More’s son-in-law, Roper, tells the story:</p>
-
-<p>“In the time of King Henry the Seventh, More
-was made a burgess of the Parliament wherein was
-demanded by the king (as I have heard reported)
-about three-fifteenths, for the marriage of his eldest<span class="pagenum" id="Page_196">196</span>
-daughter, that then should be Scottish Queen; at
-the last debating whereof he made such arguments
-and reasons against, that the king’s demands were
-thereby overthrown. So that one of the king’s privy
-chamber being present thereat, brought word to the
-king out of the Parliament house that a beardless boy
-had disappointed all his purpose. Whereupon the
-king, conceiving great indignation towards him,
-could not be satisfied until he had some way
-revenged it. And forasmuch as he, nothing have,
-nothing could lose, his Grace devised a causeless
-quarrel against his father, keeping him in the Tower
-till he had made him pay a hundred pounds fine....
-Had not the king soon after died, Sir
-Thomas More was determined to have gone over
-sea, thinking that being in the king’s indignation, he
-could not live in England without great danger.”</p>
-
-<p>The grant from parliament to the king was reduced
-from £113,000 to £30,000 by More’s action; and if
-this action brought royal anger, it won for More the
-confidence of his fellow-citizens in London, so that
-we see him in the second year of Henry VIII. under-sheriff
-for the city, and according to Erasmus and
-Roper, the most popular lawyer of the day. With
-all his legal business, and good income, More is
-never anxious after money. “While he was still
-dependent on his fees, he gave to all true and
-friendly counsel, considering their interests rather
-than his own; he persuaded many to settle with
-their opponents as the cheaper course. If he could
-not induce them to act in that manner—for some
-men delight in litigation—he would still indicate the
-method that was least expensive.”<a id="FNanchor_85" href="#Footnote_85" class="fnanchor">85</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_197">197</span></p>
-
-<p>More’s rising reputation was bound to attract the
-notice of Henry VIII., for the king was alert in the
-early years of his reign to get good men at the
-court, and Wolsey, who had become chancellor on
-Archbishop Warham’s retirement in 1515, was
-anxious to enlist More in the royal service. The
-court had no attractions for More, his embassies to
-Flanders and Calais, to settle trade disputes and
-difficulties with France, wearied him, and in 1516 he
-was engaged in finishing his <cite>Utopia</cite>. According
-to Roper, it was More’s independence of mind that
-made the king force office at court upon him. A
-ship belonging to the pope, which had put into
-Southampton, was claimed by Henry as a forfeiture.
-More argued the case so clearly that the commissioners
-decided in the pope’s favour, and the king at
-once declared he must have More in his service.</p>
-
-<p>Then for the next twelve years Sir Thomas More
-enjoyed the royal favour and friendship. His promotion
-was rapid. Secretary of state, master of
-requests when the king was travelling, privy councilor,
-under-treasurer, or chancellor of the exchequer—all
-these offices were filled. In 1521 More
-was knighted, in 1523 he was speaker of the House
-of Commons, and in 1525 chancellor of the Duchy
-of Lancaster.</p>
-
-<p>Erasmus writes to Ulrich von Hutten in 1519 in
-praise of More’s public work: “In serious matters
-no man’s advice is more prized, and when the king
-wishes for recreation no man’s conversation is more
-entertaining. Often there are matters deep and involved
-that demand a grave and prudent judge,
-and More unravels these questions in a way that
-gives satisfaction to both sides. Yet no one has<span class="pagenum" id="Page_198">198</span>
-ever prevailed on him to receive a gift for his decision.
-Happy that commonwealth where kings
-appoint such officials! No pride has come to him
-with his high estate. With all the weight of state
-affairs he remembers his old friends, and returns
-from time to time to the books he loves so well.
-Whatever influence has come to him with his high
-office, whatever favour he enjoys with his wealthy
-king, he uses all for the good of the state and for
-the assistance of his friends. Ever fond of conferring
-benefits and wonderfully prone to pity, his disposition
-has grown with his power of indulging it. Some
-he helps with money, to others he gives protection,
-and others he recommends for promotion. When
-he can help in no other way he does it by his advice:
-no one is sent away dejected. You might well say
-that he had been appointed the public guardian of
-the distressed and needy.”</p>
-
-<p>If the cares of state did not cut off Sir Thomas
-More from assisting old acquaintances, they made
-great inroads into the home life he loved so well.
-He had married again on the death of his first wife,
-and his letters to his children, especially to his “most
-dear daughter, Margaret”—Roper’s wife—are full
-of tenderness. He is anxious about the education of
-his children, and rejoices that his daughter shares
-his love for books. We find him writing to Margaret
-Roper just after her marriage in <span class="locked">1522:—</span></p>
-
-<p>“I am therefore delighted to read that you have
-made up your mind to give yourself diligently to
-philosophy, and to make up by your earnestness in
-future for what you have lost in the past by neglect.
-My darling Margaret, I indeed have never found
-you idling, and your unusual learning in almost<span class="pagenum" id="Page_199">199</span>
-every kind of literature shows that you have been
-making active progress. So I take your words as
-an example of the great modesty that makes you
-prefer to accuse yourself falsely of sloth rather than
-to boast of your diligence, unless your meaning is
-that you will give yourself so earnestly to study that
-your past history will seem like indolence by comparison....
-Though I earnestly hope that you will
-devote the rest of your life to medical science and
-sacred literature, so that you may be well furnished
-for the whole scope of human life, which is to have
-a healthy soul in a healthy body, and I know that
-you have already laid the foundations of these studies,
-and there will be always opportunity to continue the
-building; yet I am of opinion that you may with
-great advantage give some years of your yet flourishing
-youth to humane letters and liberal studies....
-It would be a delight, my dear Margaret, to me to
-converse long with you on these matters, but I have
-just been interrupted and called away by the servants,
-who have brought in supper. I must have
-regard to others, else to sup is not so sweet as to talk
-with you.”<a id="FNanchor_86" href="#Footnote_86" class="fnanchor">86</a></p>
-
-<p>The close friend of Erasmus and Dean Colet, an
-accepted champion of the New Learning, More
-was naturally enthusiastic for education—for girls as
-for boys. He had written to Gunnell, for a time the
-tutor of his <span class="locked">family:—</span></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_200">200</span></p>
-
-<p>“Though I prefer learning, joined with virtue, to
-all the treasures of kings, yet renown for learning,
-when it is not united with a good life, is nothing else
-than splendid and notorious infamy: this would be
-especially the case in a woman.... Since erudition
-in woman is a new thing and a reproach to the sloth
-of men, many will gladly assail it and impute to
-literature what is really the fault of nature, thinking
-from the vices of the learned to get their own
-ignorance esteemed as virtue. On the other hand
-if a woman (and this I desire and hope with you as
-the teacher for all my daughters) to eminent virtue
-should add an outwork of even moderate skill in
-literature, I think she will have more real profit than
-if she had obtained the riches of Crœsus and the
-beauty of Helen.”</p>
-
-<p>In this letter More goes on to speak of the profit
-of learning and the happiness of those who give
-themselves to it—“possessing solid joy they will
-neither be puffed up by the empty praises of men nor
-dejected by evil tongues.”</p>
-
-<p>“These I consider the genuine fruits of learning,
-and though I admit that all literary men do not
-possess them, I would maintain that those who give
-themselves to study with such views (avoiding the
-precipices of pride and haughtiness, walking in the
-pleasant meadows of modesty, not dazzled at the
-sight of gold) will easily attain their end and become
-perfect. Nor do I think that the harvest will be
-much affected whether it is a man or a woman who
-sows the field. They both have the same human
-nature, which reason differentiates from those of
-beasts; both therefore are equally suited for those
-studies for which reason is perfectioned, and becomes<span class="pagenum" id="Page_201">201</span>
-fruitful like a ploughed land on which the seed of
-good lessons has been sown.”</p>
-
-<p>This strong love for wise learning, laying emphasis
-on a complete education—the training in virtue no
-less than the knowledge of letters—had its roots in
-More’s character. The “genuine fruits of learning”
-ripen in his life and death. His wide toleration,
-which will blame no man for not taking the path he
-trod to martyrdom, is coupled inextricably with a
-refinement of conscience that cannot be sullied by a
-denial of his faith. The freedom of conscience
-Thomas More claimed for himself he most willingly
-allows to others. Just as the education he valued for
-himself he extends to all his children.</p>
-
-<p>Standing largely aloof from the violent controversies
-Luther had started, hating the bitter
-intolerance and savage abuse of theological strife,
-refusing to be drawn into the deadly discussion of
-Henry VIII.’s divorce, Sir Thomas More is content
-to live in loyal devotion to his religion and to the
-service of the state, if haply he may. And when this
-is denied him he is content to die, retaining his
-tolerant good-humour and the love of his kind to
-the end, and without resentment at his fate.</p>
-
-<p>The courage of the sage never failed Sir Thomas
-More in his public work. As “a beardless boy” he
-had resisted in parliament the king’s extortions, as
-speaker of the House of Commons he protected the
-privileges of the commons. Wolsey had come down
-to the House with all his train to command a subsidy,
-but no word was uttered in reply to his address. In
-vain Wolsey appealed for an answer, Sir Thomas
-More could only declare that the speaker, then the
-mouthpiece of the commons, had nothing to say till<span class="pagenum" id="Page_202">202</span>
-he had heard the opinion of the House. “Whereupon,
-the cardinal, displeased with Sir Thomas
-More that had not in this parliament in all things
-satisfied his desire, suddenly arose and departed.”</p>
-
-<p>High as More stood at that time in the affection
-of Henry, Sir Thomas knew the king, and the
-nature of the favour of princes. Roper relates that
-when he offered his congratulations, at the time of
-the appointment to the chancellorship of the Duchy
-of Lancaster, More answered, “I may tell thee I
-have no cause to be proud thereof, for if my head
-would win him a castle in France (for then was there
-war betwixt us) it should not fail to go.”</p>
-
-<p>Aware of Henry’s character, More yet had no
-choice but to accept the lord chancellorship from the
-king on Wolsey’s fall in 1529. It was no matter
-for personal satisfaction, and More’s reply to the
-Duke of Norfolk was substantially the same as his
-previous answer to Roper: “Considering how wise
-and honourable a prelate had lately before taken so
-great a fall, he had no cause to rejoice in his new
-dignity.” Erasmus wrote, “I do not at all congratulate
-More, nor literature; but I do indeed
-congratulate England, for a better or holier judge
-could not have been appointed.”</p>
-
-<p>On November 3rd, 1529, Sir Thomas More, as
-chancellor, opened parliament, and in a long speech
-declared that “the cause of its assembly was to
-reform such things as had been used or permitted by
-inadvertence, or by changes of time had become
-inexpedient.” It was the opening of the seven years’
-parliament, and before six years should run, this
-same parliament would, at the king’s order, condemn
-Sir Thomas More by act of attainder.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_203">203</span></p>
-
-<p>The position of the new chancellor was dangerous
-from the first. Wolsey had fallen because he had
-failed to help Henry to a divorce from his queen,
-Catherine of Aragon, and More had been made his
-successor because the king had counted on him to
-accomplish the “great matter.” All that Sir
-Thomas could hope for was that he might be
-allowed to do his work as chancellor without being
-mixed up with divorce proceedings. As long as he
-was not called upon to declare publicly that the
-divorce was right, he had no wish to interfere in the
-matter. First to last no word of approval came
-from More’s lips to encourage Henry in the divorce,
-but he was not the man to express judgment on a
-case that he did not wish brought before him.<a id="FNanchor_87" href="#Footnote_87" class="fnanchor">87</a> In
-the end the chancellor’s very silence turned Henry’s
-disappointment to active displeasure, and More’s life
-was taken in savage revenge for non-compliance
-with the royal will.</p>
-
-<p>Henry’s divorce dates the beginning of the Protestant
-Reformation in England—of that ecclesiastical
-revolution in which the supremacy of Rome
-was rejected, the crown superseded the pope as
-supreme head of the Church of England, and
-England was detached from the rest of Roman
-Catholic Christendom. In the reigns of Edward VI.
-and Elizabeth the revolution proceeded still further,
-and Catholic rites and doctrines, service books and
-ceremonies were rigorously cast out of the Church
-of England, and all who adhered to the old order in<span class="pagenum" id="Page_204">204</span>
-religion were punished by law. But those days were
-far off as yet.</p>
-
-<p>More, at the outset of this revolution, declines to
-follow the king in the rejection of the old allegiance
-to Rome. All he asks for is freedom of conscience
-to remain in the faith of his fathers, to worship as
-Christians in England had worshipped since the
-coming of Augustine. To escape death by giving
-up this freedom is impossible for Sir Thomas More.</p>
-
-<p>The divorce from Queen Catherine is the turning
-point in More’s worldly fortunes as well as in ecclesiastical
-affairs in England.</p>
-
-<p>Eighteen years passed from the day of Henry’s
-marriage to Catherine, on his accession to the
-throne, before the divorce was mooted. The
-scruple was that Catherine had been formerly
-betrothed to his dead brother Arthur; the moving
-force of Henry’s petition for divorce was the desire
-to marry Anne Boleyn. Unable to get the marriage
-annulled at Rome, or to get a favourable opinion
-from the universities, Henry fell back on Archbishop
-Cranmer to decree the divorce, and finally this was
-done in 1533, all appeals to Rome being henceforth
-forbidden. Henry had already, in 1531, called upon
-the clergy to acknowledge him as the supreme head
-of the Church of England, and the following year
-they were required to surrender the ancient right to
-meet and enact canons.<a id="FNanchor_88" href="#Footnote_88" class="fnanchor">88</a></p>
-
-<p>In these four years the chancellor had kept out of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_205">205</span>
-political life as far as he could, and had given his
-attention to his judicial work. But in May, 1532,
-he resigned the great seal into the king’s hands,
-“seeing that affairs were going badly, and likely to
-be worse, and that if he retained his office he would
-be obliged to act against his conscience, or incur the
-king’s displeasure as he had already begun to do, for
-refusing to take his part against the clergy. His
-excuse was that his salary was too small, and that he
-was not equal to the work. Everyone is concerned,
-for there never was a better man in the office.”<a id="FNanchor_89" href="#Footnote_89" class="fnanchor">89</a></p>
-
-<p>Nothing is known of Sir Thomas More’s work in
-the chancery except his integrity and his despatch.
-“When More took the office there were causes that
-had remained undecided for twenty years. He presided
-so dexterously and successfully that once after
-taking his seat and deciding a case, when the next
-case was called, it was found that there was no second
-case for trial. Such a thing is said never to have
-happened before or since.” (Stapleton.)</p>
-
-<p>For nearly two years More lived unmolested after
-his resignation of the chancellorship; but he had
-incurred the enmity of the king and the hatred of
-Anne Boleyn, and Henry was swiftly driving at
-certain changes in religion that were to bring Sir
-Thomas More to the Tower and the block, and
-many another honest Christian to the prison and the
-gallows of Tyburn.</p>
-
-<p>In June, 1533, after Cranmer had duly pronounced
-Henry’s marriage with Catherine void, came the
-coronation of Anne Boleyn, and Sir Thomas More
-declined an invitation from some of the bishops to
-be present at the celebration. He knew that his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_206">206</span>
-absence would be marked unfavourably by the king,
-and was ready to pay the penalty; but his care in
-avoiding the expression of any disapproval of
-Henry’s proceedings required an equal care that no
-approval should be expressed. To have been present
-at the coronation of Anne would have been, for
-More, to condone the divorce.</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn came an attempt to include More,
-with Bishop Fisher and certain monks and friars, in
-the treason of the “Holy Maid of Kent,”—Elizabeth
-Barton, a Canterbury nun. The
-“treason” amounted to this, that the nun, who was
-given to prophesying, declared that God had revealed
-to her to speak against Henry’s divorce, and
-it was sufficient to bring her to Tyburn. But against
-Sir Thomas More no shred of evidence could be
-procured, for none existed. He had seen the nun,
-and talked with her, and “held her in great estimation,”
-but would neither commit himself to a belief
-in her visions, nor permit any discussion on the
-king’s doings; but wrote to the nun a letter which
-could not have been more prudent, as he exhorted
-her “to attend to devotion, and not meddle in the
-affairs of princes.”</p>
-
-<p>The name of Sir Thomas More was struck out of
-the bill of attainder, but the days of his liberty were
-already numbered.</p>
-
-<p>The Act of Succession, passed in March, 1534,
-made Mary, the daughter of Henry and Catherine,
-illegitimate, and Elizabeth, Anne’s child, the heir to
-the throne. The act also declared that “all the
-nobles of the realm, spiritual and temporal, and all
-other subjects arrived at full age, should be obliged
-to take corporal oath, in the presence of the king or<span class="pagenum" id="Page_207">207</span>
-his commissioners, to observe and maintain the whole
-effect and contents of the act,” under the penalties
-for treason for refusal. The words of the oath were
-not inserted in the act, and the commissioners drew
-up a formula, requiring all persons to affirm in
-addition that the marriage with Catherine was invalid,
-and the marriage with Anne valid, and further
-to recall and repudiate allegiance to any foreign
-authority, prince, or potentate. This was a much
-larger demand than parliament had authorised, for it
-contained a denial of the papal supremacy, while all
-that the act had required was an acknowledgment of
-the succession to the crown. The pope had only just
-given his final decision on Henry’s appeal for divorce
-(March, 1534), and the decision had been against the
-king and in favour of the marriage. The oath
-now administered was in direct opposition to the
-supremacy of Rome, and as such was impossible to
-the consciences of men like Sir Thomas More and
-Bishop Fisher, though the great bulk of the clergy
-took it without giving any trouble.</p>
-
-<p>More was quite prepared to swear to the succession
-of Elizabeth. Parliament had, in his eyes, a
-plain right to decide who should wear the crown,
-and the doctrine of divine hereditary kingship does
-not come in till the Stuarts. But this mere willingness
-to comply with the letter of the law was not
-sufficient. More’s silent want of sympathy with the
-divorce, and with the breach it involved with Rome,
-was intolerable to Henry, who had counted More
-amongst his dearest friends; for friend or foe, in
-Henry’s power, could only live by abject agreement
-with the royal pleasure. No king had three more
-faithful servants than Henry VIII. had in Thomas<span class="pagenum" id="Page_208">208</span>
-Wolsey, Thomas More, and Thomas Cromwell, and
-no king destroyed his ministers with such fierce
-caprice.</p>
-
-<p>Sir Thomas More, unable to take the oath, was
-sent to the Tower in April, 1534, Bishop Fisher
-having already been lodged there. In November
-parliament met again, and passed the Act of
-Supremacy, making Henry VIII. “the supreme head
-of the Church of England,” and declaring that on
-and after the first of February, 1535, it was high
-treason “to deprive the king’s most royal person, the
-queen’s, or their heirs apparent of their dignity, title
-or name of their royal estates, or slanderously and
-maliciously publish or pronounce, by express writing
-or words, that the king, our sovereign lord, should be
-heretic, schismatic, tyrant, infidel, etc.” Under this
-act Sir Thomas More was to be assailed and to die.
-That the martyrdom was a “judicial murder” is
-plain—to Lord Campbell it was “the blackest crime
-that ever has been perpetrated in England under the
-form of law.”<a id="FNanchor_90" href="#Footnote_90" class="fnanchor">90</a></p>
-
-<p>The indictment was for treason, and on July 1st, a
-week after Bishop Fisher’s execution, Sir Thomas
-More was brought before the judges. To the charge
-of having refused the king, “maliciously, falsely, and
-traitorously, his title of supreme head of the Church
-of England,” More answered that the statute had
-been passed while he was in prison, and that he was
-dead to the world, and had not cared about such
-things—“your statute cannot condemn me to death
-for such silence, for neither your statute nor any laws
-in the world punish people except for words and
-deeds—surely not for keeping silence.”</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_209">209</span></p>
-
-<p>“To this the king’s proctor replied that such
-silence was a certain proof of malice intended
-against the statute, especially as every faithful
-subject, on being questioned about the statute, was
-obliged to answer categorically that the statute was
-good and wholesome.” “Surely,” replied More, “if
-common law is true, and he who is silent seems to
-consent, my silence should rather be taken as
-approval than contempt of your statute.”</p>
-
-<p>To the first article charging him with having
-always maliciously opposed the king’s second
-marriage, More had answered that anything he had
-said had been according to his conscience, and that
-for “this error,” he had already suffered fifteen
-months’ imprisonment, and the confiscation of his
-property.</p>
-
-<p>The trial was soon over, for the king had decided
-on More’s death when Fisher was executed, ordering
-the preachers to set forth to the people the
-treasons of the late Bishop of Rochester and of Sir
-Thomas More; “joining them together though the
-later was still untried.”<a id="FNanchor_91" href="#Footnote_91" class="fnanchor">91</a> The jury, after a quarter of
-an hour’s absence, declared him guilty of death for
-maliciously contravening the statute, and sentence
-was pronounced by the chancellor “according to the
-tenour of the new law.”</p>
-
-<p>Death being now in sight, and faith having been
-kept with his conscience, More has no longer any
-reason to observe silence. To the usual question
-whether he has anything to say against the
-sentence, he replied, that for the seven years he had
-studied the matter he could not find that supremacy
-in a church belonged to a layman, or to any but the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_210">210</span>
-see of Rome, as granted personally by our Lord
-when on earth to St. Peter and his successors; and
-that, as the city of London could not make a law
-against the laws of the realm of England, so
-England could not make a law contrary to the
-general law of Christ’s Catholic Church; and that
-the Magna Charta of England said that “the
-English Church should be free to enjoy all its rights,”
-as the king had sworn at his consecration. Interrupted
-by the chancellor with the inquiry whether
-he wished to be considered wiser and better than all
-the bishops and nobles of the realm who had sworn
-to the king’s supremacy, More retorted, “For one
-bishop of your opinion, my lord, I have a hundred
-saints of mine; and for one parliament of yours, and
-God knows of what kind, I have all the general
-councils for a thousand years.” The Duke of Norfolk
-said that now his malice was clear.</p>
-
-<p>On the sixth of July, 1535, Sir Thomas More
-was beheaded on Tower Hill, for the king remitted
-the ferocious mutilations that accompanied the executions
-for treason at Tyburn. “The scaffold was
-very unsteady, and putting his feet on the ladder, he
-said, merrily, to the lieutenant of the Tower: “I
-pray thee see me safe up, and for my coming down
-let me shift for myself.”<a id="FNanchor_92" href="#Footnote_92" class="fnanchor">92</a></p>
-
-<p>Then, with a simple request to the people standing
-round to pray for him, and to bear witness that he
-died a Catholic for the faith of the Catholic Church,
-a friendly word to the executioner, and a last prayer—the
-51st Psalm—the axe fell, and More was dead.</p>
-
-<p>Beyond More’s scholarship and wit, and his affection
-for his family and friends, stands out his great,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_211">211</span>
-unflinching quality of loyalty to conscience. When the
-power was in his hands as lord chancellor, no one
-was put to death by Sir Thomas More for heresy in
-England, though he did what he could by his pen to
-check the innovations of Luther, which he hated,—not
-only because they broke up the unity of Christendom,
-but because, it seemed to him, they struck at
-all social morality and decency.<a id="FNanchor_93" href="#Footnote_93" class="fnanchor">93</a> The violence
-of Luther’s outbreak, the determination of the
-Lutherans—sure of their own possession of the
-truth—to allow no liberty to Catholics, and the antinomian
-communism of the anabaptists—all these
-things made Protestantism detestable to men like Sir
-Thomas More and Erasmus, and made More declare
-that dogmatising heretics ought to be repressed by
-the state as breeders of strife and contention. But
-his own record is clear: “And of all that ever came
-in my hand for heresy, as help me God, saving (as I
-said) the sure keeping of them, had never any of
-them any stripe or stroke given them, so much as a
-fillip on the forehead.”<a id="FNanchor_94" href="#Footnote_94" class="fnanchor">94</a></p>
-
-<p>“What other controversialist can be named, who,
-having the power to crush antagonists whom he
-viewed as the disturbers of the quiet of his own
-declining years, the destroyers of all the hopes which
-he had cherished for mankind, contented himself
-with severity of language?”<a id="FNanchor_95" href="#Footnote_95" class="fnanchor">95</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_212">212</span></p>
-
-<p>The author of the <cite>Utopia</cite> was a critic, as
-Colet and Erasmus were, of abuses in the Church;
-but like his friends he lived and died a Catholic.
-He saw Lutheranism as the source of a thousand
-ills, and with Erasmus opposed it; but though
-heretics were anti-social and factious, he would
-not put one to death for error.</p>
-
-<p>It is all through Sir Thomas More’s character—this
-respect for conscience. There is no going back
-on the wide toleration of his early manhood, and
-high office and responsibilities of state no more
-cramp or belittle his faith than they destroy his playfulness
-or the warmth of his affections.</p>
-
-<p>He died a martyr for the religion of his life,
-for the simple right to abide in the old Catholic
-paths of his fellow-countrymen.</p>
-
-<p>As Sir Thomas More was not the first of the
-Catholic martyrs at the Reformation, for he had
-seen his old friends, the Carthusian monks, carried to
-Tyburn, so he was not the last. For the next fifty
-years of Henry and Elizabeth, English men and
-women were to suffer for the old faith of England,
-and in Mary’s reign to die as bravely for Protestantism.</p>
-
-<p>In spite of monasteries and priories destroyed, and
-parish churches stripped and plundered, in spite of
-penal laws which banned its priesthood and proscribed
-its worship, the Catholicism More died for
-has endured in England. All that parliament could
-do to exterminate the belief in papal supremacy has
-been done; all that panic and prejudice could
-accomplish by “popish plots” to the same end has
-been accomplished. These things have been no
-more successful than the mad “no popery” riots of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_213">213</span>
-Lord George Gordon in crushing the faith of the
-Roman Catholic minority. The penal laws have
-gone, Catholic emancipation has been obtained, a
-Catholic hierarchy has been set up, and to-day in
-England the freedom of conscience that was refused
-to Sir Thomas More is the accepted liberty of all.</p>
-
-<p>In 1887 Sir Thomas More, with Bishop Fisher
-and the Carthusian martyrs, were beatified by Pope
-Leo XIII. Serving their religion in life and death,
-they served the cause of human liberty, withstanding
-Henry as Anselm withstood the Red King, and
-as Langton withstood John.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_10">Robert Ket and The Norfolk
-Rising<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1549</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: <cite>The Commotion in Norfolk</cite>, by
-Nicholas Sotherton, 1576 (Harleian MS.); <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">De
-Furoribus Norfolciensum</cite>, by Nevylle, 1575 (Translated
-into English by Wood, 1615); Holinshed—<cite>Chronicle</cite>;
-Sir John Hayward—<cite>Life of Edward VI.</cite>; Strype—<cite>Memorials</cite>;
-Blomefield—<cite>History of Norfolk</cite>; F. W.
-Russell—<cite>Kett’s Rebellion</cite>; W. Rye; <cite>Victoria County
-History—Norfolk</cite>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_217">217</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">ROBERT KET AND THE<br />
-NORFOLK RISING.
-<span class="subhead">1549.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> Norfolk Rising of the sixteenth century
-was a land war, caused directly by
-the enclosing of the common fields of the
-peasants, and the break up of the
-accustomed rural life.</p>
-
-<p>The landowners finding greater profit in breeding
-sheep and cattle than in the small holdings of
-peasants, began, about 1470, to seize the fields which
-from time immemorial had been cultivated by the
-country people in common, and to evict whole
-parishes by pulling down all the dwelling places.
-For eighty years these clearances were going on.
-Acts of Parliament were passed in 1489 and 1515
-to prohibit the “pulling down of towns” and to
-order the rebuilding of such towns, and the restoration
-of pasture lands to tillage, but both acts were quite
-inoperative. In 1517, Cardinal Wolsey’s Royal
-Commission on Enclosures reported on the defiance
-of the law in seven Midland counties, where more
-than 36,000 acres had been enclosed; but legal
-proceedings against the landowners were stayed on
-the latter promising to make restitution.</p>
-
-<p>Thomas More, in the first part of his <cite>Utopia</cite>,
-in 1516, described for all time what the enclosures
-he witnessed meant for England.</p>
-
-<p>“For look in what parts of the realm doth grow
-the finest and therefore dearest wool, there noblemen<span class="pagenum" id="Page_218">218</span>
-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 public weal—leave
-no ground for tillage, they inclose all into
-pastures; they throw down houses; they pluck down
-towns and leave nothing standing but only the
-church to be made a sheep fold.... They turn
-all dwelling-places and all glebe land into desolation
-and wilderness. Therefore, that one covetous and
-insatiable comorant may compass about and inclose
-many thousand acres of ground together within one
-pale or hedge, the husbandmen be thrust out of their
-own, or else either by cunning and fraud, or by
-violent oppression, or by wrongs and injuries they
-be so wearied, that they be compelled to sell all. By
-one means therefore or another, either by hook or
-by crook they must needs depart away, men, women,
-husbands, wives, fatherless children, widows, mothers
-with their young babies, and their whole household
-small in substance and large 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.... And when they have
-wandered abroad till the little they have be spent,
-what can they then else do but steal, and then justly
-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 a work, though they never so willingly proffer
-themselves thereto. For one shepherd or herdsman
-is enough to eat up that ground with cattle, to the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_219">219</span>
-occupying whereof about husbandry many hands
-were requisite.”</p>
-
-<p>This was social England in the early years of
-Henry VIII., and every year saw things grow worse
-for the rural folk, in spite of further royal proclamations
-against enclosures in 1526. A series of
-bad harvests drove a starving population to riot in
-Norfolk in 1527 and 1529. In 1536 came the
-suppression of 376 lesser monasteries, followed two
-years later by the dissolution of all remaining
-monasteries and priories, and in 1547 by the royal
-confiscation of the property of the religious guilds and
-brotherhoods.</p>
-
-<p>The landowners having established a starving
-unemployed class by the simple process of depriving
-people of access to the land, and the crown having
-removed the only source of relief to the unemployed
-by destroying the monasteries, it remained for
-parliament to deal with the “social problem” thus
-created by declaring poverty a crime, and the
-unemployed person a felon. The lash and the
-gallows were to solve the problem.</p>
-
-<p>In 1531, an act of parliament granted licences to
-the impotent beggar, and ordered a whipping for all
-other mendicants. Five years later stronger
-measures were adopted, and whipping was only
-permitted to first offenders: mutilation and hanging
-were the subsequent penalties on conviction, and
-thousands of unemployed men and women suffered
-under this act. But still the unemployed existed,
-for the enclosures had not been stopped; and so the
-first year of Edward VI. saw an act passed declaring
-the convicted unemployed “a slave.” (As it seemed
-to many that parliament had got rid of papal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_220">220</span>
-authority only to bring back slavery in England, this
-act was repealed in two years, and the act of 1531
-revived.)</p>
-
-<p>The bitterness of the agrarian misery, the violent
-destruction of all the old religious customs and
-habits of the people, the confiscation of the funds
-of the guilds, the open despoiling of the parish
-churches of the people<a id="FNanchor_96" href="#Footnote_96" class="fnanchor">96</a>—all these things plunged
-the country into confusion and despair. The
-general rising in Lincolnshire and the north in 1536
-(known as the “Pilgrimage of Grace”) against the
-suppressions of the monasteries, and the rising in
-Cornwall and Devon in 1549 against Edward’s VI.’s
-new Book of Common Prayer were strong manifestations
-of the popular dislike of the changes
-made in religion by Henry VIII. and the ministers
-of Edward VI.</p>
-
-<p>In Norfolk, in 1537, the people made an insurrection
-against the suppression of the monasteries; but
-the later risings of 1540 (at Griston, when one John
-Walker “exhorted the people to destroy the gentry”),
-and in 1549, under Ket, were not concerned with
-the religious troubles of the times, but were frankly
-agrarian. The Norfolk rising, which Ket led, was
-no more connected with Protestantism than the
-Peasant Revolt of 1381 was with Lollardy. Agrarian
-disturbances took place in a number of counties in
-1549. In May the peasants of Somerset and
-Lincoln were in revolt, and in July there were
-tumults in Essex, Kent, Wiltshire, Buckinghamshire,
-and Oxfordshire. A rude Cambridge ballad of the
-time extols the pulling down of enclosures:</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_221">221</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Cast hedge and ditch in the lake,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Fixed with many a stake;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though they be never so fast,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Yet asunder they are wrest.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Sir, I think that this work</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is as good as to build a kirk.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>In 1548 Protector Somerset had followed Wolsey’s
-footsteps in issuing a proclamation for a royal commission
-to inquire and report concerning enclosures,
-and to give the names of all who kept more than
-two thousand sheep or who had “taken from
-any other their commons.”<a id="FNanchor_97" href="#Footnote_97" class="fnanchor">97</a> The commissioners
-were also “to reform” any cases of the enclosing of
-commons and highways, “without due recompense,”
-which they might find; “and to the intent your
-doings may proceed without all suspicion, and the
-people conceive some good hope of reformation at
-your hands, we would that as many of you as be
-in any of the cases to be reformed, do first, for
-example’s sake, begin to the reformation of yourselves.”</p>
-
-<p>Somerset’s ingenuous suggestion was naturally
-disregarded by the commissioners, and beyond
-making inquiries and publishing a report—to the
-effect that in the counties of Suffolk, Essex, Hertford,
-Kent, and Worcester nearly all the common
-lands<a id="FNanchor_98" href="#Footnote_98" class="fnanchor">98</a> had been enclosed, while in Norfolk and
-Northampton large enclosures had been made—the
-commission of 1548 was as fruitless as its predecessors.
-Somerset, however, got some reputation<span class="pagenum" id="Page_222">222</span>
-by it as an enemy to the enclosures, and certainly
-incurred the dislike of the landowners. But where
-Wolsey, in the hey-day of power, had failed, there
-was small chance of success for Somerset, with the
-country in a state of anarchy, and the nation rent
-and distracted by a violent revolution in the Church.</p>
-
-<p>The only strong movement to prevent the utter
-downfall of the country-people was the Norfolk
-Rising, which Robert Ket directed in the summer of
-1549. It failed in the end, but for more than six
-weeks the power of the landlords was broken round
-Norwich, their enclosures were stopped, and the
-hope of better things filled the hearts of the peasants.</p>
-
-<p>The rising began at Attleborough on 20th June
-when Squire Green, of Wylby, set up fences and
-hedges round the common lands at Harpham and
-Attleborough, and the people, excited by news that
-in Kent similar fences had been destroyed, proceeded
-to pull them down. For the next fortnight
-the revolt had neither leaders nor organization.
-“There were secret meetings of men running hither
-and thither, and then withdrawing themselves for
-secret conferences, but at length they all began to
-deal tumultuously and to rage openly.” On July 7th
-the annual feast at Wymondham, in honour of the
-translation of St. Thomas of Canterbury, brought
-the country folk together from miles round; and at
-the close of the fair they all set off to break down
-the fences set up round the common lands at Hetherset
-by one Sergeant Flowerdew.<a id="FNanchor_99" href="#Footnote_99" class="fnanchor">99</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_223">223</span></p>
-
-<p>Flowerdew, unable to save his fences, proposed a
-diversion. The Kets at Wymondham had made
-enclosures, why shouldn’t the rioters deal with them
-in similar fashion? Flowerdew actually paid over
-40d. to encourage an attack on the Kets.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Ket and his brother were well-known men.
-Both were craftsmen, Robert, a tanner, and William,
-a butcher. They were landowners besides, and men
-of substance and of old family, for it was said the
-Kets had been in the land since the Norman Conquest.
-Robert Ket held three manors from the
-Earl of Warwick; his yearly income was put down
-at £50, and his property valued at 1,000 marks.
-Like other landowners, the Kets had made enclosures,
-but on the arrival of the people from Hetherset
-they at once declared themselves willing to
-stand by the movement for freeing the land. Robert
-Ket felt the misery of his neighbours. He saw that if
-the revolt was to be anything more than a local riot
-it must have necessary guidance, and his sympathies
-were entirely on the democratic side. And so from
-that time forward he gave up the quiet of a country
-gentleman’s life at Wymondham for the strenuous
-movement of an insurgent camp.</p>
-
-<p>To the appeal of the people for help, Ket
-answered passionately, “I am ready, and will be
-ready at all times, to do whatever, not only to
-repress, but to subdue the power of great men.
-Whatsoever lands I have enclosed shall again be
-made common unto ye and all men, and my own
-hands shall first perform it.”</p>
-
-<p>Then Robert Ket went on to commit himself
-body and soul to the movement, resolved that the
-peasants should not be left unaided in the struggle<span class="pagenum" id="Page_224">224</span>
-they had begun, and willing to take upon himself the
-burden and responsibility of leadership.</p>
-
-<p>“You shall have me, if you will, not only as a
-companion, but as a captain; and in the doing of
-the so great a work before us, not only as a fellow,
-but for a leader, author and principal.”</p>
-
-<p>If the ambition which clutches at sovereignty and
-rule is despicable, even more despicable is the weakness
-which refuses to take command at times of
-peril.</p>
-
-<p>To Robert Ket and his brother there was no
-promise of the world’s honour and glory should the
-rising be successful. At the best would be the
-satisfaction of a battle fought and won for the
-deliverance of long-suffering peasants. At the worst
-the laying down of life in a good cause, as Geoffrey
-Litster and many a Norfolk man had done in bygone
-days.</p>
-
-<p>Robert Ket’s leadership was acclaimed with enthusiasm,
-nor was it ever disputed throughout the
-rising. In this, the last of the great popular risings
-in England, the Norfolk men were as loyal to their
-leader as the men of Kent were to Wat Tyler and
-Jack Cade. And in each case that loyalty had ample
-justification.</p>
-
-<p>There were but a thousand men involved when
-the rising began, but under Ket’s command the
-movement passed rapidly from the fluid “running
-hither and thither” condition of the first fortnight,
-and became the march of an organized army.</p>
-
-<p>On July 10th, two days after Ket took command,
-this army was on the road to Norwich, and after
-crossing the river at Cringleford, lay encamped at
-Eaton Wood.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_225">225</span></p>
-
-<p>It is plain from Ket’s speeches to his men, and
-from “The Rebels’ Complaint,” which he published at
-this time, that to Robert Ket the rising was not only
-to put down enclosures, its aim was rather to strike at
-the root of the evil and to put an end to the ascendancy
-of the landlord class, and make England a free
-commonwealth. Either the people must put down
-landlords, or very soon the landlords would have the
-whole land in their possession, and the people would
-be in hopeless and helpless subjection. Had not
-an act of parliament been actually passed making
-“slaves” of the landless men, dispossessed by
-enclosures? When parliament was establishing
-slavery it was time for honest men to be up and
-doing, rousing the people to action.</p>
-
-<p>Ket’s speech at Eaton Wood is a fierce attack on
-the landlords, and a reminder that having ventured
-so far, the peasants must advance yet further:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>Now are ye overtopped and trodden down by gentlemen,
-and put out of possibility ever to recover foot. Rivers of
-riches ran into the coffers of your landlords, while you are
-pair’d to the quick, and fed upon pease and oats like beasts.
-You are fleeced by these landlords for their private benefit,
-and as well kept under by the public burdens of State wherein
-while the richer sort favour themselves, ye are gnawn to the
-very bones. Your tyrannous masters often implead, arrest,
-and cast you into prison, so that they may the more terrify and
-torture you in your minds, and wind your necks more surely
-under their arms. And then they palliate these pilleries with
-the fair pretence of law and authority! Fine workmen, I
-warrant you, are this law and authority, who can do their
-dealings so closely that men can only discover them for your
-undoing. Harmless counsels are fit for tame fools; for you
-who have already stirred there is no hope but in adventuring
-boldly.</p></div>
-
-<p>In “The Rebels’ Complaint,” the same note is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_226">226</span>
-struck. Only by taking up arms, and mixing
-Heaven and earth together, can the intolerable
-oppression of the landlords be ended.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The pride of great men is now intolerable, but our condition
-miserable.</p>
-
-<p>These abound in delights; and compassed with the fullness
-of all things, and consumed with vain pleasures, thirst only
-after gain, inflamed with the burning delights of their desires.</p>
-
-<p>But ourselves, almost killed with labour and watching, do
-nothing all our life long but sweat, mourn, hunger, and thirst.
-Which things, though they seem miserable and base (as they
-are indeed most miserable), yet might be borne howsoever,
-if they which are drowned in the boiling seas of evil delights
-did not pursue the calamities and miseries of other men with
-too much insolent hatred. But now both we and our miserable
-condition is a laughing stock to these most proud and
-insolent men—who are consumed with ease and idleness.
-Which thing (as it may) grieveth us so sore and inflicteth such
-a stain of evil report, so that nothing is more grievous for us
-to remember, nor more unjust to suffer.</p>
-
-<p>The present condition of possessing land seemeth miserable
-and slavish—holding it all at the pleasure of great men; not
-freely, but by prescription, and, as it were, at the will and
-pleasure of the lord. For as soon as any man offend any of
-these gorgeous gentlemen, he is put out, deprived, and thrust
-from all his goods.</p>
-
-<p>How long shall we suffer so great oppression to go unrevenged?</p>
-
-<p>For so far as they, the gentlemen, now gone in cruelty and
-covetousness, that they are not content only to take all by
-violence away from us, and to consume in riot and effeminate
-delights what they get by force and villainy, but they must
-also suck in a manner our blood and marrow out of our veins
-and bones.</p>
-
-<p>The common pastures left by our predecessors for our relief
-and our children are taken away.</p>
-
-<p>The lands which in the memory of our fathers were
-common, those are ditched and hedged in and made several;
-the pastures are enclosed, and we shut out. Whatsoever
-fowls of the air or fishes of the water, and increase of the
-earth—all these do they devour, consume, and swallow up;<span class="pagenum" id="Page_227">227</span>
-yea, nature doth not suffice to satisfy their lusts, but they
-seek out new devices, and, as it were, forms of pleasures to
-embalm and perfume themselves, to abound in pleasant
-smells, to pour in sweet things to sweet things. Finally,
-they seek from all places all things for their desire and the
-provocation of lust. While we in the meantime eat herbs
-and roots, and languish with continual labour, and yet are
-envied that we live, breathe, and enjoy common air!</p>
-
-<p>Shall they, as they have brought hedges about common
-pastures, enclose with their intolerable lusts also all the commodities
-and pleasures of this life, which Nature, the parent
-of us all, would have common, and bringeth forth every day,
-for us, as well as for them?</p>
-
-<p>We can no longer bear so much, so great, and so cruel
-injury; neither can we with quiet minds behold so great
-covetousness, excess, and pride of the nobility. We will
-rather take arms, and mix Heaven and earth together, than
-endure so great cruelty.</p>
-
-<p>Nature hath provided for us, as well as for them; hath
-given us a body and a soul, and hath not envied us other
-things. While we have the same form, and the same condition
-of birth together with them, why should they have a
-life so unlike unto ours, and differ so far from us in calling?</p>
-
-<p>We see that things have now come to extremities, and we
-will prove the extremity. We will rend down hedges, fill up
-ditches, and make a way for every man into the common
-pasture. Finally, we will lay all even with the ground, which
-they, no less wickedly than cruelly and covetously, have
-enclosed. Neither will we suffer ourselves any more to be
-pressed with such burdens against our wills, nor endure so
-great shame, since living out our days under such inconveniences
-we should leave the commonwealth unto our
-posterity—mourning, and miserable, and much worse than
-we received it of our fathers.</p>
-
-<p>Wherefore we will try all means; neither will we ever rest
-until we have brought things to our own liking.</p>
-
-<p>We desire liberty and an indifferent (or equal) use of all
-things. This will we have. Otherwise these tumults and
-our lives shall only be ended together.</p></div>
-
-<p>Revolutionary as this manifesto is, Robert Ket is
-seen all through the rising exerting his authority on<span class="pagenum" id="Page_228">228</span>
-behalf of law and good order, curbing anarchy and
-checking ferocity in the rebel camp.</p>
-
-<p>Only one day was spent at Eaton Wood. Ket’s
-plan was to advance to Mousehold, a wide stretch of
-high, well-wooded ground to the east of Norwich.
-Here the camp was fixed on July 12th, the river
-having been crossed at Hailsdon, and a night’s halt
-called at Drayton—for the mayor of Norwich,
-Thomas Cod, positively refused to allow the rebels
-to pass through the city. Ket, anxious to unite
-citizens and peasants in a common cause, willingly
-avoided altercation, and Cod, alarmed at the rising,
-and unable to dissuade the insurgents from their
-enterprise, was careful to refrain from all hostile
-demonstrations. Cod’s one purpose was to exclude
-Ket’s army from the city, and to accomplish this he
-kept on friendly terms with Ket, even while appealing
-to the government to send down troops to suppress
-the rising. Ket’s purpose was to break down landlord
-rule in Norfolk, extend the area of revolt, and to get
-the king to attend to the complaints of his subjects.</p>
-
-<p>Ket’s company at Mousehold numbered no more
-than 2,600 on July 12th; but the ringing of bells
-and the firing of beacons brought in thousands of
-homeless men. At the end of a week 20,000 men
-were enrolled under the banner of revolt, and now
-Ket had all his work to do in maintaining discipline
-and in arranging for provisions for the camp.</p>
-
-<p>It is clear Robert Ket was the right man for a
-leader.<a id="FNanchor_100" href="#Footnote_100" class="fnanchor">100</a> The people trusted him and obeyed his<span class="pagenum" id="Page_229">229</span>
-orders. Cod and two other reputable citizens of
-Norwich—Aldrich, an alderman, and Watson, a
-preacher—attended the camp daily, and along with
-Ket and his brother William sat under a great tree,
-known as the Oak of Reformation, and administered
-justice. The 20,000 hungry, disinherited men
-carried out in as orderly way as they could the
-instructions they received.</p>
-
-<p>Ket’s first business was to send to the king a
-plain statement of “Requests and Demands.” He
-knew what was wanted for rural England, and refused
-to admit that his purpose was disloyal or that
-his conduct was rebellion.</p>
-
-<p>The “Requests” were twenty-nine, and they contained
-a full statement of the grievances of the
-country folk. The chief requests were for the stoppage
-of enclosures, the enactment of fair rents, the
-restoration of common fishing rights in sea and
-river, the appointment of resident clergymen in
-every parish to preach and instruct the children, and
-the free election or official appointment of local
-“commissioners” for the enforcement of the laws.
-One significant prayer was “that all bond men may
-be made free, for God made all free with His precious
-bloodshedding.”</p>
-
-<p>This document, which was signed by Ket, Cod
-and Aldrich,<a id="FNanchor_101" href="#Footnote_101" class="fnanchor">101</a> was answered by the arrival of a
-herald from the king with a promise that parliament
-should meet in October to consider their complaints,
-and that something should be done to redress their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_230">230</span>
-grievances, if in the meantime they would quietly
-disperse to their homes.</p>
-
-<p>All this was too vague and uncertain for Ket.
-Not till some definite step was taken by king or
-parliament to end the present distress was he willing
-to lay down his arms and bid his followers disperse.
-He had put his hand to the plough, and no turning
-back was possible while the evils he had risen
-against flourished unchecked.</p>
-
-<p>So Ket put his house in order on Mousehold
-Heath. The Oak of Reformation was boarded over
-“with rafters,” and to this place of summary justice
-landowners were brought and tried for making
-enclosures. Two men were chosen by the commons
-from every hundred to assist in the work of administration,
-and all the people were strictly admonished
-“to beware of robbing, spoiling and other evil
-demeanours.” As the army had to be victualled,
-Ket sent out men armed with his official warrant
-requiring the country houses to provide cattle and
-corn, “so that no violence or injury be done to any
-honest or poor man,” and this requisition brought in
-guns, gunpowder and money, in addition to “all
-kinds of victual.” The smaller farmers sent their contributions
-“with much private good will,” while on
-the landowners a great fear had fallen, and it seemed
-that the day of their might was passed.</p>
-
-<p>A royal messenger bearing commissions of the
-peace to various country gentlemen falling into the
-hands of Ket, he was at once deprived of these
-documents and sent on his way. Ket filled in the
-names of men who had joined the rising on these
-commissions, and these new magistrates gave assistance
-in maintaining order.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_231">231</span></p>
-
-<p>Cod and Aldrich were shocked at the arrest of
-landowners. “Notwithstanding were divers gentlemen
-taken and brought to prison, some in Norwich
-Prison, some in Norwich Castle and some in Surrey
-Place.”—St. Leonard’s Hill.</p>
-
-<p>In every case the lives of the landowners were
-spared. Stern and unmoved by respect of persons
-was Robert Ket, but there was no taint of cruelty,
-meanness or bloodthirstiness in his rule. It was not
-his purpose to raise civil war or leave a festering
-sore of hatred by putting his neighbours to death.
-To destroy the power of the landlords and ensure
-the right of an evicted people to live on the land was
-the aim of the Norfolk Rising.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of the first week relations became
-strained between Cod and the army on Mousehold.</p>
-
-<p>It was the custom to have prayers every day under
-the Oak, and Dr. Conyers, vicar of St. Martin’s,
-Norwich, acted as chaplain. “Grave persons and
-good divines” would come out from the city and
-preach under the Oak, and on one occasion Dr.
-Matthew Parker, a Norwich man, who had been
-chaplain to Anne Boleyn, and who was to become
-Archbishop of Canterbury under Elizabeth, filled
-the pulpit. Parker’s sermon, full of rebukes on the
-rising and praise of Edward VI., was so obnoxious,
-for “he touched them for their living so near that
-they went near to touch him for his life,” that
-Conyers only prevented a riot by striking up the
-“Te Deum” in English, and during the singing
-Parker withdrew “to sing his part at home.”</p>
-
-<p>Matthew Parker was a great man in Norwich (his
-brother Thomas became mayor), and the incivility
-he had received at Mousehold gave great offence.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_232">232</span>
-Cod and the aldermen sent off Leonard Sutherton,
-a respectable burgess, to report to the king’s council
-the doings in Norfolk, and Sutherton brought back
-from London a royal herald, who went out to Mousehold
-and promised the king’s pardon to all that
-would depart quietly to their homes.</p>
-
-<p>The people cheered and shouted “God save the
-king’s majesty,” but to Ket this talk of pardon was
-altogether beside the mark. With some dignity he
-informed the herald that “kings and princes are
-wont to pardon wicked persons, not innocent and
-just men,” and added, “I trust I have done nothing
-but what belongs to the duty of a true subject.”</p>
-
-<p>The herald then called on John Petibone, the
-sword-bearer of Norwich, who with other civic
-notables was standing by, to arrest Robert Ket.
-But the thing was impossible. Ket had 20,000 men
-at his back, and the sword-bearer was supported by
-half-a-dozen elderly members of the town council.
-All that could be done was to escort the herald into
-the city, leaving Ket to his own devices.</p>
-
-<p>There was no more peace between the camp at
-Mousehold and the city of Norwich after this.
-Hitherto Mayor Cod had retained the keys of the
-city, and his authority had been respected by Ket.
-At the same time Ket’s men had gone freely to and
-fro throughout the city without let or hindrance.
-Now all was changed. First the landowners were
-being arrested and despoiled, then the learned
-doctor, Matthew Parker (was he not master of
-Corpus Christi College, Cambridge?) had been
-interrupted and hooted, and now a king’s herald was
-contemned! Cod ordered the city gates to be made
-fast, commanded Ket’s prisoners to be released, and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_233">233</span>
-placed the city’s ordnance in the meadows by the
-river. This amounted to a declaration of war, and
-Ket replied by bringing up his guns.</p>
-
-<p>The night of July 21st was spent “in fearful shot
-on both sides,” but little injury was done. For
-Ket’s guns brought “more fear than hurt to the
-city,” and “the city ordnance did not much annoy
-the enemy.”</p>
-
-<p>In the morning Ket sought to renew peace by
-asking permission for the transport of victuals through
-the city, “as the custom was of late,” and warning
-the mayor that refusal would provoke fire and sword.</p>
-
-<p>Cod refused permission, and Ket opened fire on
-the city gates. But “for lack of powder and want
-of skill in the gunners the ordnance was spent to
-small and little purpose.” A desperate encounter
-followed, with bows and arrows for the chief weapons
-of offence. Boys from Mousehold, “naked and unarmed,
-would pluck the arrows from their bodies
-and hand them to the rebels to fire at the city.” At
-Bishopsgate a number of men swam the river and
-forced their way into the city, and on the night of
-July 22nd Norwich was in the hands of Robert
-Ket.</p>
-
-<p>No reprisals followed. The herald made a last
-attempt to induce the insurgents to disperse by promising
-pardons, and was greeted derisively. “Depart
-with a plague on thee!” they cried. “To the
-devil with these idle promises. We shall only be
-oppressed afterwards.” Forthwith the herald did
-depart, with eight pounds of gold in his pocket from
-the mayor.</p>
-
-<p>Ket retired to Mousehold, the passage through
-the city having been secured, and Cod accompanied<span class="pagenum" id="Page_234">234</span>
-him, leaving a deputy, Augustine Steward, who
-lived in the big house in Tombland, opposite Erfingham
-Gate, to act as mayor.</p>
-
-<p>Judgment went on as before under the Oak of
-Reformation, and people clamoured for the landowners
-to be hanged. “So hated at this time was
-the name of worship or gentleman, that the basest
-of the people, burning with more than hostile hatred,
-desired to extinguish, and utterly cut off, not only
-the gentry themselves, but if it were possible, all
-the offspring and hope of them.” (Nevylle.)</p>
-
-<p>But Ket was as strong in his mercy as in his
-resistance to the land enclosers. The gentry were
-imprisoned, and made to pay tribute: their fences
-were pulled down, but their lives were spared, and
-no hurt befell them. In the city Steward, no friend
-to Ket, was left undisturbed in authority.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of July came William Parr, Marquis
-of Northampton, with 1,500 soldiers, mostly Italian
-mercenaries, and a number of country squires with
-their retainers, to put down the rising. Steward at
-once admitted him to the city; but Northampton—Henry
-VIII.’s brother-in-law—was neither a soldier
-nor statesman, and after two days’ hard fighting he
-fled from Norwich, utterly defeated.</p>
-
-<p>Ket’s men were badly armed, but they had
-numbers on their side, and they fought for freedom
-and for very life. They swam the river, as before,
-and forced an entrance. “Half dead, drowned in
-their own and other men’s blood, they would not
-give over; but till the last gasp, when their hands
-could scarce hold their weapons, would strike at
-their adversaries.”</p>
-
-<p>Lord Sheffield fell in the fight on August 1st,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_235">235</span>
-killed by a stalwart rebel—one Fulke, a butcher and
-carpenter by trade—and some hundred of Ket’s men
-lay dead. The city suffered. Several houses and
-city gates were fired, and only a heavy rain prevented
-the flames from spreading. (This same rain
-drove many of the rebels to take refuge in the
-cathedral, much to the annoyance of the dean and
-chapter.)</p>
-
-<p>And now for three weeks Ket had to take charge
-of Norwich as well as of Mousehold camp, for it was
-impossible to trust Steward. Many of the wealthier
-townsmen hastened away to Cambridge and London,
-leaving their wives and families behind. Trade was
-at an end.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>The state of the city began to be in most miserable case,
-so that all men looked for utter destruction, both of life and
-goods. Then the remnant that feared God, seeing the
-plague thus of sorrow increasing, fell to prayer and holy life,
-and wished but to see the day that after they might talk
-thereover, looking never to recover help again, nor to see
-their city prosper.</p>
-
-<p>The women resorted twice a day to prayer, and the servants
-(except what must needs stay at home) did the same.
-When Ket’s ambassadors were sent to any private house they
-were fain to bake or brew or do any work for the camp, else
-they were carried as traitors to the Oak. As for trading,
-there was none in the city, people being forced to hide up
-their choicest goods, and happy were they that had the
-faithfullest servants.</p>
-
-<p>They that did keep open their shops were robbed and
-spoiled, and their goods were measured by the arm’s length
-and dispersed among the rebels; their children they set
-away for fear of fire. I, the writer (who was then above
-twenty-two years of age, and an eye-witness) was present
-after prayer during this dolorous state, when people met and
-bewailed the miserable state they were in. (Sutherton.)</p></div>
-
-<p>But for all their misery the tradesmen of Norwich<span class="pagenum" id="Page_236">236</span>
-were in no fear for their lives. The city had done
-its best to thwart the rising, but Ket treated it
-generously, allowing neither pillage nor bloodshed—though
-he did not scruple to take what goods were
-necessary for his army.<a id="FNanchor_102" href="#Footnote_102" class="fnanchor">102</a> It was beyond the power
-of man to prevent all thieving during those first
-few weeks of August, for the civic magistracy was
-gone, and Ket had large responsibilities on his
-hands.</p>
-
-<p>The hope that the rising would become general
-turned to disappointment in the weeks that passed
-after the flight of Northampton. In Suffolk a
-number of men rose at Ket’s call, and made an
-unsuccessful attempt to take Yarmouth. A small
-camp set up at Rising Chase was dispersed, but for
-a fortnight the peasants gathered at Watton, and
-stopped the passages of the river at Thetford and
-Brandon Ferry. For want of leadership they then
-came on to Mousehold. At Hingham a rising was
-put down by Sir Edmund Knyvett. And while Ket
-waited, hoping against hope for better news, the
-fugitive citizens from Norwich had already persuaded
-Somerset to send down an army to crush
-the revolt.</p>
-
-<p>On August 21st the Earl of Warwick, with 14,000
-troops, reached Cambridge, and three days later was
-at Norwich.</p>
-
-<p>Warwick, Henry VIII.’s high chamberlain, the
-son of Dudley, Henry VII.’s minister, was a man of
-war and resolution. Sent down to suppress the
-rising he did his work, but not till he had tried an<span class="pagenum" id="Page_237">237</span>
-appeal to the peasants to disperse without further
-trouble.</p>
-
-<p>Halting outside the city, Warwick sent a herald
-to proclaim pardon to all who should now return to
-their homes, and, as before, the people shouted,
-“God save King Edward!” Ket himself talked
-with the herald on the high ground near Bishop’s
-Gate.</p>
-
-<p>Negotiations ended abruptly. Some ill-mannered
-boy gave an indecent and offensive salute to the
-herald, and was shot dead by an arrow from the
-herald’s escort. At once the cry of “treachery”
-was raised by the people, and all talk of peace was
-at an end. While the herald tried to persuade Ket
-to come to the Earl of Warwick under a flag of
-truce, the rebels gathered round their leader and
-besought him not to forsake them. To Ket there
-could be sure reliance on royal promises of pardon,
-and no surrender of the charge he had undertaken.
-His reply to the herald was to retire on Mousehold
-and prepare for battle.</p>
-
-<p>Warwick at once entered the city, and began the
-business of pacification by promptly hanging sixty
-men in the Market Place, by Norwich Castle,
-“without hearing the cause”; and by issuing a proclamation
-that all who were out of doors would
-receive similar treatment. Then came a mishap, for
-the greater part of Warwick’s artillery fell into Ket’s
-hands. The drivers of the gun-carriages, entering
-the city after the soldiers, by St. Bennet’s Gate on
-the west, and ignorant of the way, actually passed
-out at Bishop’s Gate on the east on the very road
-towards Mousehold, and were quickly taken. Ket
-had now the advantage in ordnance, and there was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_238">238</span>
-fighting in the city all Sunday, August 25th. So
-uncertain was the issue that the burgesses feared
-Warwick would suffer Northampton’s fate, and
-prayed him to depart without further loss. But
-Warwick, waiting for reinforcements, and knowing
-that 1,400 German mercenaries were close at hand,
-was not the man to beat an ignominious retreat.</p>
-
-<p>The hireling “lanznechts” arrived next day, and
-on Tuesday, August 27th, came the fatal battle.</p>
-
-<p>Instead of remaining at Mousehold, where a
-strong resistance might have been made, the rebels
-decided to march out boldly from their camp and
-meet the king’s army in the open country that lay
-between Mousehold Heath and the city. An old
-song was recalled, which, it seemed, foretold victory
-in such a case:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The country gnoffes (churls), Hob, Dick, and Rick,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With clubs and clouted shoon,</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Shall fill the vale</div>
- <div class="verse indent4">Of Dussindale</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With slaughtered bodies soon.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>But the country churls were to be the slaughtered,
-and not the slaughterers.</p>
-
-<p>Warwick marched out by the north-east gate of
-St. Martin-at-the-Oak, and for the last time a herald
-promised pardon to all who would surrender. But
-the hangings in the market place had destroyed all
-confidence in such proclamations, and the answer to
-the herald was that they “perceived this pardon to
-be nothing else but a cask full of ropes and halters.”</p>
-
-<p>Ket’s judgment failed him utterly on that last
-day of the rising. On the strength of an irrelevant
-old song he allowed his army to go to its doom unchecked,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_239">239</span>
-and at the very time when good generalship
-was wanted above all other things, Robert Ket
-seems to have lost his nerve, and to have been
-struck by some paralysis of the will, as though
-conscious of impending ruin.</p>
-
-<p>The peasants poured down into the valley, and
-into the meadows beyond Magdalen and Pockthorp
-Gates, and fought with desperate courage, but they
-were simply cut to pieces by the professional soldiery.
-At four o’clock in the afternoon it was all over, the
-defeat utter and complete, and Robert Ket and his
-brother were in flight.</p>
-
-<p>The remains of the rebel army laid down their
-arms, when Warwick himself offered pardon in the
-king’s name to those who would surrender.</p>
-
-<p>The rising was at an end. The foreign mercenaries
-of the crown had triumphed over English
-peasants. Robert Ket was taken the same night at
-Swannington, eight miles north of Norwich. He
-had ridden away from the battle when the field was
-lost, but horse and rider were too tired to proceed
-further. Taking refuge in a barn, he was recognized
-by some men unloading a wagon of corn and seized.
-The farmer’s wife “rated him for his conduct, but he
-only prayed her to be quiet, and to give him meat.”
-That same night William Ket was taken, and the
-two brothers were delivered to the lord lieutenant of
-the county, and by him carried to London to be
-tried for their lives.</p>
-
-<p>At Mousehold Warwick proved the worth of the
-pardons he had given by first having nine of the
-bravest of the peasants hanged, drawn, and quartered
-under the Oak of Reformation, and distributing
-their bodies in the city; and then by hanging 300<span class="pagenum" id="Page_240">240</span>
-prisoners on trees, and then forty-nine more at the
-Market Cross in Norwich. The country gentlemen
-of Norfolk, backed by their wealthier citizens, called
-for more executions, till Warwick turned with disgust
-from the vindictive clamour of these bloodthirsty
-civilians, and pointed out in impatient reproof that
-no one would be left “to plough and harrow over
-the lands” if all the peasants were massacred.</p>
-
-<p>And now the king’s authority having been re-established,
-a public service of thanksgiving was
-held in the church of St. Peter, Mancroft, and
-August 27th was ordered to be observed henceforth
-as “Thanksgiving Day” in Norwich. (This was
-done by prayers and sermon until 1667. In the
-grammar school, during Elizabeth’s reign, an account
-of the rising—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">De Furoribus Norfolciensum</cite>,
-written in Latin by Nevylle, and violently anti-popular
-in expression—was ordered to be used as a
-text book in place of the usual classics, and was so
-used for some years.)</p>
-
-<p>On September 7th Warwick returned to London.<a id="FNanchor_103" href="#Footnote_103" class="fnanchor">103</a>
-In November Robert and William Ket, after lying
-in the Tower for two months, were brought to trial.
-They offered no defence for what they had done: for
-having borne arms without the king’s permission,
-and for having striven to stop the robbery and
-oppression of the peasant without the authority of
-king and parliament.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_241">241</span></p>
-
-<p>On November 26th they were found guilty of high
-treason, their property confiscated, and they were
-condemned to death. On November 29th they were
-delivered out of the custody of the Tower to the
-high sheriff of Norfolk, and on December 1st the
-Kets were again in Norwich.</p>
-
-<p>It was winter, and hope was dead. The last
-great rising of the English peasantry had failed,
-crushed without pity, and the leaders of the army of
-revolt, who had judged it better to give up ease and
-worldly honour rather than acquiesce dumbly in the
-enslavement of their poorer neighbours, were to die
-as traitors.<a id="FNanchor_104" href="#Footnote_104" class="fnanchor">104</a> On December 7th the executions were
-carried out, and Robert Ket was hanged in chains
-outside Norwich Castle, while William Ket was
-taken to Wymondham (where he held the manor of
-Chossell—Church lands, bought years earlier from
-the Earl of Warwick), and there hanged in chains
-from the parish church.</p>
-
-<p>The property of the Kets was duly taken by the
-servants of the crown, and the bodies of the rebel
-leaders swung in the wind—to remind unthinking
-men of the reward of rebellion, of the fate of all
-who challenge, without success, the arms of government.</p>
-
-<p>The Norfolk Rising was the last great movement
-of the English people in social revolt. Riots we
-have known even in our times, and mob violence,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_242">242</span>
-but no such rising as those led by Wat Tyler, by
-Cade, and by Ket has England seen since the year
-1549.</p>
-
-<p>The country people sunk into hopeless poverty
-and permanent degradation under Edward VI. and
-Elizabeth, and with the rejection by the government
-of papal authority, the supremacy of the crown and
-of the ministers of the crown was established.</p>
-
-<p>In the nineteenth century, when the working
-people in town and country once more bestirred
-themselves at the call of freedom, their wiser leaders
-advised political and not revolutionary methods of
-action, and the advice has been followed.</p>
-
-<p>But if the year 1549 marks the end of organized
-democratic resistance to intolerable misgovernment,
-the coming centuries were to see the rise of the
-middle class with the insistent demand for the predominance
-of that class in the parliament of the
-nation, and the incurable belief that in a popularly
-elected House of Commons resided all the safeguards
-of civil and religious liberty.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_11">Eliot, Hampden, Pym, and the
-Supremacy of the Commons.<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1625–1643</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: S. R. Gardiner—<cite>History of England</cite>,
-<cite>History of Great Civil War</cite>, <cite>History of Commonwealth
-and Protectorate</cite>; Clarendon—<cite>History of the
-Great Rebellion</cite>;, John Forster—<cite>Life of Sir John
-Eliot</cite>, <cite>Life of Hampden</cite>, <cite>Life of Pym</cite>, <cite>The Grand
-Remonstrance</cite>, <cite>Arrest of the Five Members</cite>; Nugent—<cite>Memorials
-for Life of Hampden</cite>; <cite>Calendar of State
-Papers</cite>; <cite>House of Commons’ Journals</cite>.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_245" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p244.jpg" width="1543" height="1894" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>SIR JOHN ELIOT</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From a Steel Engraving by William Holl.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_245">245</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">ELIOT, HAMPDEN, PYM,<br />
-AND THE SUPREMACY<br />
-OF THE COMMONS.
-<span class="subhead">1625–1643</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">John Eliot</span>, John Hampden, John Pym—by
-the work of these men comes the supremacy
-of the House of Commons in the government
-of England.</p>
-
-<p>All three are country gentlemen of good estate, of
-high principle and of some learning.<a id="FNanchor_105" href="#Footnote_105" class="fnanchor">105</a> They are men
-of religious convictions, of courage and resolution,
-and of blameless personal character. Two of them—Eliot
-and Hampden—are content to die for the
-cause of good government.</p>
-
-<p>The strong rule of Elizabeth left a difficult legacy
-of government to James I. The despotism of the
-queen had been forgiven in the success of her State
-policy; and if she had no high opinion of parliament,
-Elizabeth had ministers who fairly represented the
-mind of the English middle class. Elizabeth’s absolutism
-in Church and State was the direct following
-of Henry VIII., and only at the very close of her
-reign was it threatened by the discontent of parliament.
-With a shrewd instinct for popularity Elizabeth
-at once yielded. Like her father, she saw the
-importance of retaining parliament on the side of the
-crown and making it the instrument of the royal<span class="pagenum" id="Page_246">246</span>
-will. There was no idea in the Tudor mind of
-parliament sharing the government with the crown.
-The business of the House of Commons of Elizabeth
-was to express its opinion and then decree the proposals
-of the crown. “Liberty of speech was granted
-in respect of the aye or no, but not that everybody
-should speak what he listed.” (1592.)</p>
-
-<p>In religion Elizabeth had done her worst to exterminate
-the Roman Catholic faith, and by the fierceness
-of her persecution had kindled undying enthusiasm
-for the old beliefs and worship. But forty
-years of repression did their work, and a generation
-arose which only knew Catholicism as the faith of a
-proscribed and unpatriotic sect, who denied the absolute
-sovereignty of the crown and had another
-sovereign at Rome—the religion of Spain—popery,
-in short: a faith worse than Mahomedanism or
-heathenism—the scarlet woman of the Apocalypse—according
-to the fierce Puritan expounders of the
-Bible, and not to be counted as Christianity. That
-this very Roman Catholicism—so hateful because
-the penal laws kept it hidden and unknown, and
-because it was the religion of Spain, then the national
-enemy—had been the religion of all England for
-centuries, and that under it the earliest charters of
-public liberty had been wrung from the crown, and
-the principle of a representative parliament established,
-were facts uncontemplated.</p>
-
-<p>But Elizabeth, while persecuting Roman Catholics,
-had left in the Book of Common Prayer of the
-Church of England a sanction for ceremonial and
-for episcopal ordination, and a body of doctrine which
-were to be interpreted under the Stuarts by certain
-Anglican divines as witnesses to Catholicism. Such<span class="pagenum" id="Page_247">247</span>
-interpretation was to be found in Elizabeth’s reign as
-a pious opinion. With Laud it was an active principle,
-and it brought him to the scaffold. The
-Elizabethan bishops in the main were thoroughly
-Protestant, the queen was the head of the Church of
-England, and the ritual of the Church prescribed by
-her was reduced to a simplicity that average Protestants
-could accept.</p>
-
-<p>If Elizabeth burnt anabaptists and hanged other
-nonconformists, her excuse was that the Church of
-England was sufficiently Protestant to include all
-well-affected persons. The extreme Puritans whom
-she persecuted had this in common with the Roman
-Catholics, that neither accepted the absolute supremacy
-of the crown, and the best Puritan teaching
-in England, even when it counselled conformity to
-the Established Church, was creating a mind and
-temper that only found expression in the Commonwealth.</p>
-
-<p>James I. came to the throne in 1603 prepared to
-carry on the Tudor absolutism. He failed because
-he had neither Elizabeth’s ministers nor her knowledge
-of the English country landowners. James
-never realised that Spain was the popular enemy,
-that a discontent had suddenly grown up in parliament
-in the last years of Elizabeth’s reign, and that
-the English landowners—in many cases from their
-inherited possession of the old Church lands—were
-generally bitterly hostile to the Roman Catholic
-religion. James was tolerant in religion, and not
-inclined to press Elizabeth’s penal laws against
-Roman Catholics, and this very toleration brought him
-under the dislike of the country party. He thought
-he could disregard the opinion of parliament and he<span class="pagenum" id="Page_248">248</span>
-found that while a House of Commons submitted
-to a despotism when the country was governed
-by a strong queen, it would not put up with the
-follies and extravagance of the Duke of Buckingham.</p>
-
-<p>James died before the strength of the growing
-movement for parliamentary government was seen.
-Charles who was no more tyrannical than his father,
-but even more blind to the signs of the times, fell
-before that parliamentary movement—a movement
-which outraged all the traditions of Tudor government—and
-with his fall brought down the throne, the
-House of Lords, and the Established Church. By
-his inability to understand the House of Commons,
-by his support of the Anglican movement towards
-Catholicism in the Church of England, and by the
-mistakes of his ministers, Charles ripened the
-desire for constitutional monarchy till the desire was
-irresistible.</p>
-
-<p>John Eliot gave forcible utterance to this desire,
-and died in prison for his speech. John Pym
-carried on the work till the sword of civil war was
-drawn. John Hampden, “the noblest type of
-parliamentary opposition,” was content to back Pym
-as he had earlier backed Eliot, and to die on Chalgrove
-Field. Brought up to regard as an alien
-creed the old belief in papal supremacy in religion,
-unable to accept the new doctrine of the Church of
-England that the king was supreme by divine right
-(a doctrine begotten by the Tudors and dying with
-the Stuarts), Eliot, Hampden, and Pym were all of
-the same Puritan type which found its authority in
-the individual conscience.</p>
-
-<p>Eliot was less afflicted than his colleagues by the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_249">249</span>
-theological Protestantism of the age.<a id="FNanchor_106" href="#Footnote_106" class="fnanchor">106</a> First and
-last he was the straightforward country gentleman,
-with exalted views on the sacred responsibility of
-civil government, and a high standard of personal
-honour. For Eliot there was no nobler sphere of
-work for an Englishman than the House of
-Commons, and his example has not been without
-followers. Seneca and Cicero are on his lips, as the
-later Puritans had the Bible on theirs, and his
-eloquence marks the beginning of parliamentary
-oratory. With a strong and clear view of constitutional
-government, Eliot was no republican; he held
-to the notion that the king must depend on the
-decisions of parliament. Time was to show that
-this notion, in the event of a collision between king
-and parliament, was to make parliament the predominant
-partner.</p>
-
-<p>On his first entry into the House of Commons as
-member for St. Germans, in 1614, Eliot was the
-friend of Buckingham—whom he had met as a youth
-abroad—and on Buckingham’s rise to the lord high
-admiralship Eliot was knighted and became vice-admiral
-of Devon.</p>
-
-<p>The fidelity of his service to the State as vice-admiral
-brought an unpleasant experience of the
-will of princes. Grappling with the scourge of
-piracy which afflicted the seaports and shipping<span class="pagenum" id="Page_250">250</span>
-trade of the West of England, Eliot accomplished
-the arrest of Nutt, a notorious sea-robber. But
-Nutt had friends in high places, and Eliot found
-himself lodged in the Marshalsea prison over the
-business. He was released on Buckingham’s return
-from the continent, for the charges were absurd,
-and in 1624 returned to the House of Commons as
-member for Newport. Two years later Eliot was
-estranged from Buckingham—convinced that the
-favourite of the king was an evil counsellor—and
-had become the recognized leader of the House of
-Commons. Once assured in his mind that Buckingham
-was responsible for the policy of the king,
-Eliot became his implacable opponent. For the
-policy of the crown in not making war upon Spain,
-in relaxing the penal laws against Roman Catholics,
-and for the mismanagement of the war on the continent
-in support of the Protestants, Eliot held
-Buckingham responsible. In answer to the demand
-of Charles for money in 1626, Eliot insisted that an
-inquiry into past disasters should precede supply,
-and that Buckingham should be impeached. Not
-the king but his minister is to blame, Eliot maintained,
-for all that was wrong in the State, and this very
-speech strikes the note of the campaign that was
-beginning. Buckingham was not responsible to
-Charles alone, in the eyes of Eliot and his friends,
-but also to parliament.<a id="FNanchor_107" href="#Footnote_107" class="fnanchor">107</a></p>
-
-<p>Charles, quite unable to fathom the depth of the
-parliamentary discontent, or to note the strength of
-the current against absolutism, fell back upon the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_251">251</span>
-old Tudor doctrine of sovereignty, the doctrine of
-the high Anglican party in the Church of England,
-that the king was responsible for his acts to God
-alone. “Parliaments are altogether in my calling,”
-he replies to the House of Commons.</p>
-
-<p>Only twenty-five years had passed since Bacon
-had declared, “the Queen hath both enlarging and
-restraining power: she may set at liberty things
-restrained by Statute, and may restrain things which
-be at liberty.” Twenty-three years more were
-to see monarchy abolished and the king beheaded.
-Eliot, standing midway between Bacon and Bradshaw,
-cleaves to the theory of constitutional government
-and persists in the impeachment of a minister in
-whom parliament had no confidence.</p>
-
-<p>The prologue of impeachment declared in the
-plainest language the responsibility of the king’s
-ministers to parliament, and the responsibility of
-parliament to the nation: “The laws of England
-have taught us that kings cannot command ill or
-unlawful things, and whatsoever ill event succeed,
-the executioners of such designs must answer for
-them.”</p>
-
-<p>And now the issue was fairly set, and the battle
-begun between Charles and the House of Commons.
-In that year, 1626, no man in England could foretell
-the result.</p>
-
-<p>Charles, ill-advised to the end, believed he could
-overawe the Commons by a display of might, and
-was beaten. Twice he had Eliot arrested before the
-final imprisonment which ended Eliot’s life.</p>
-
-<p>The loyalty of the House of Commons to its
-leader compelled Charles to release Eliot, after sending
-him to the Tower for his attack on Buckingham.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_252">252</span>
-Then dissolving parliament in June, 1626, and
-falling back on a forced loan, the king was met
-by wide refusals, and Eliot, with Hampden and
-others, suffered imprisonment over this. Eliot was
-also deprived of his vice-admiralship and struck off
-the roll of justices of the peace.</p>
-
-<p>Driven to call a parliament for the third time in
-1628, the king was faced by a stronger opposition
-than ever.</p>
-
-<p>Eliot, now member for Cornwall, throughout the
-session continued the attack on arbitrary taxation,
-and with the lawyers Seldon and Coke carried the
-Petition of Right to stop the illegal imprisonments,
-the enforced billeting of soldiers, and forced loans.
-Buckingham, slain at Portsmouth, no longer troubled
-the commonwealth; but Wentworth, ambitious to
-use his powers in the service of the government,
-had left the popular side for the king; while Laud,
-and Weston, the chancellor of the exchequer, were
-daily preaching to Charles the divine right of kings
-and to his subjects the duty of passive obedience.</p>
-
-<p>The following year both Eliot and Pym attacked
-the ecclesiastical policy of Laud. To them the
-established religion of England, settled on the Protestant
-basis by Elizabeth, was being definitely
-changed in a Catholic direction without the sanction
-of parliament, and in the very teeth of the opposition
-of the House of Commons. High-church
-clergymen, like Montague and Mainwaring, holding
-to the full a Catholic interpretation of the Book of
-Common Prayer, were only censured by the House
-of Commons to be promoted by the crown. Laud
-preaching a royal supremacy undreamt of by the
-great archbishops before Henry VIII., combined<span class="pagenum" id="Page_253">253</span>
-with it a doctrine of ecclesiastical independence,
-owning no allegiance to Rome, equally novel.</p>
-
-<p>Eliot, stoical in his beliefs, and Pym, whose Calvinism
-was tempered by common sense, regarded
-with horror the revival in the Church of England of
-Catholic doctrines concerning the sacraments and
-the priesthood. They had done what they could to
-check any indulgence to Roman Catholics in
-England, and it was monstrous to them that the
-Church of England, whose formularies and ritual
-had been defined by parliament for the maintenance
-of Protestantism, should be expanded to reintroduce
-doctrines and practices essentially Catholic. But
-for the time the House of Commons was powerless
-in the matter, and only sixteen years later was Laud
-to expiate on the scaffold his Anglo-Catholicism,
-dying a veritable martyr for the high Anglican
-doctrine. “None have gone about to break parliaments
-but in the end parliaments have broken
-them,” declared Eliot on March 2nd, 1629, and
-Laud, no less than Charles and Wentworth, was to
-prove the truth of the warning.</p>
-
-<p>If parliament could do nothing in that year, 1629,
-to stop Laud’s policy, it could at least defend the
-privileges of its members. The goods of John
-Rolle, M.P., had been seized by the king’s officers
-because their owner had refused to pay tonnage and
-poundage on demand, and at once Eliot was up in
-arms in defence of the privileges of his fellow
-member, whose liberties had been interfered with.</p>
-
-<p>Pym was for a wider view of the matter—objecting
-to the question being narrowed down to a breach
-of privilege. “The liberties of this House,” he
-argued, “are inferior to the liberties of this kingdom.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_254">254</span>
-To determine the privilege of this House is
-but a mean matter, and the main end is to establish
-possession of the subjects, and to take off the commission
-and records and orders that are against us.”
-With Pym it was not Rolle, the member, who had
-been ill-used, but Rolle the British subject, and it
-was for the liberties of the subject he strove, holding
-the freedom of parliament as but a means to that end.</p>
-
-<p>Eliot, a House of Commons man, through and
-through, saw in the welfare of parliament the
-welfare of the nation, and stuck to his point, carrying
-the House with him, that the privileges of a
-member extended to his goods. To this Charles
-sent word that what had been done had been done
-by his authority. The only question now was, how
-long would it be before the king dissolved parliament.</p>
-
-<p>On the second of March, when the House met,
-the speaker’s first word was that the king had
-ordered an adjournment till the tenth, and that no
-business could be transacted. Eliot insisted on
-moving his resolutions, and the speaker was held
-down in his chair. Then the serjeant-at-arms
-attempted to remove the mace, and was promptly
-stopped, while the key of the House was turned
-from within.</p>
-
-<p>Eliot moved his declaration, beginning with the
-famous words: “By the ancient laws and liberties of
-England, it is the known birthright and inheritance
-of the subject, that no tax, tallage, or other charge
-shall be levied or imposed but by common consent
-in England; and that the subsidies of tonnage and
-poundage are no way due or payable but by a free
-gift and special act of parliament.”</p>
-
-<p>The resolutions were carried with loud shouts of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_255">255</span>
-assent, two members guarding the speaker, and the
-door was flung open; the sitting was over.</p>
-
-<p>A royal proclamation for dissolving parliament
-followed on the fourth of March, and Eliot, with eight
-other members, was summoned to appear before the
-Privy Council.</p>
-
-<p>From the hour of that summons John Eliot’s liberty
-was over, and not for eleven years was England to
-have another parliament.</p>
-
-<p>For the fourth time Eliot was a prisoner. He
-declined altogether to give an account of what he
-had said in parliament, or to acknowledge any right
-of interference with the proceedings in parliament.
-To the crown lawyers his reply was to stand on the
-privileges of a member of the House of Commons.
-“I refuse to answer,” he said, “because I hold that
-it is against the privilege of parliament to speak of
-anything which is done in the House.” He insisted
-that he was accountable to the House alone, and
-that no other power existed with a constitutional
-right to inquire into his conduct there.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of October Eliot was removed from
-the Tower to the Marshalsea, and then in January,
-1630, he was charged in the King’s Bench with two
-other members, Holles and Valentine, with conspiring
-to resist the king’s lawful order, to calumniate
-ministers of the crown, and to assault the speaker.
-Again Eliot refused to acknowledge the jurisdiction.
-He was fined £2,000, and sent back to the Tower.</p>
-
-<p>To the last Eliot’s loyalty to the House of
-Commons remained unshaken. He had but to
-acknowledge that he had done wrong, to admit that
-he had offended, and the prison doors would have
-opened to him. But to make this acknowledgment<span class="pagenum" id="Page_256">256</span>
-was to deny the sacred liberty of parliament, to
-admit wrong was to betray the House of Commons.
-To John Eliot the welfare of the House of Commons
-was a national cause—dearer than life. To
-betray its honour was to betray the State. The
-loyalty of John Eliot to the House of Commons was
-interwoven with his devotion to the State, but it
-was something England had never seen before, and
-never saw again. “He learned to believe, as no
-other man believed before or after him, in the
-representatives of the nation.” (Gardiner.)</p>
-
-<p>The character and temperament of Eliot must be
-taken into account in understanding this passionate
-belief in the House of Commons. It was not as a
-great thinker but as a great orator he had risen to
-the leadership of the House of Commons. He saw
-in his mind, as no other man saw at the time, a perfectly
-balanced constitution of king, lords, and
-commons. In parliament was the best wisdom of
-the country placed at the service of the crown. In
-the crown was the appointed ruler who, with his
-ministers, had but to come to parliament for advice
-and counsel. So it seemed to John Eliot; and
-single-minded himself, he could not realise that in
-the House of Commons were plenty of men of but
-passing honesty, and that Charles and Laud and
-Wentworth were fundamentally opposed to his views
-of constitutional government, and bitterly hostile to
-the growing powers of the commons.<a id="FNanchor_108" href="#Footnote_108" class="fnanchor">108</a></p>
-
-<div id="ip_257" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p256.jpg" width="1213" height="1711" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>JOHN PYM</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From an Engraving by Jacob Houbraken.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_257">257</span></p>
-
-<p>Months passed, and John Eliot’s health gave
-way in the confinement in the Tower, but his
-steadfastness was unchanged. He corresponded
-with his friend John Hampden, wrote his treatise
-on the <cite>Monarchy of Man</cite>, and calmly awaited his
-end. An application on behalf of his friends and
-his son for Eliot’s release was made in October, 1622,
-on the ground that “the doctors were of opinion he
-could never recover of his consumption until such
-time as he might breathe in purer air.” The reply
-of Chief Justice Richardson was “that, although
-Sir John were brought low in body, yet was he as
-high and lofty in mind as ever; for he would
-neither submit to the king nor to the justice of that
-court.”</p>
-
-<p>On November 27th, 1632, the spirit of John
-Eliot, unbroken by captivity, passed from the body
-his gaolers had deprived of life. A last appeal from
-his son to the king for the removal of his father’s
-body into Cornwall, there to lie with those of his
-ancestors at Port Eliot, received the curt refusal,
-“Let Sir John Eliot’s body be buried in the church
-of the parish where he died.” And so he was
-buried in the Tower, and no stone marks the spot
-where he lies.</p>
-
-<p>John Eliot was but forty-two when he laid down
-his life for the principle of parliamentary government.</p>
-
-<p>Any satisfaction that might have been felt by
-Charles and Laud at the death of the foremost
-antagonist to their policy of absolutism was fleeting.
-For if Eliot was dead, the cause he had championed
-with such conspicuous sincerity and courage was
-alive, and John Hampden and John Pym were at<span class="pagenum" id="Page_258">258</span>
-hand to carry on the fight till Cromwell and his
-Ironsides were ready to end the battle.</p>
-
-<p>Charles was determined that, until the commons
-should be more submissive, he would call no parliament,
-but would govern through his ministers alone.
-The difficulty was to find money.</p>
-
-<p>In 1634 London and the seaports were persuaded
-to furnish supplies for ships on the pretext that
-piracy must be prevented. A year later and the
-demand was extended to the inland counties, and
-John Hampden, taking his stand on the Petition of
-Right which Charles had granted in 1628, declined
-to pay. Ten out of twelve of the king’s judges had
-decided that ship-money might be enforced if the
-kingdom appeared to be in danger, but against this
-declared legality there was the decree of parliament
-forbidding forced loans or taxes without parliamentary
-sanction.</p>
-
-<p>On this resistance of the ship-money Hampden’s
-fame has been chiefly built up. The amount was
-small—only a matter of some twenty shillings—the
-issue was of a first importance. It was clear to
-Hampden that if the king could raise money by
-such methods, what need would there be in the
-royal mind for the calling of parliament at all? The
-question was forced upon him: Was parliament an
-essential part of the constitution? The judges had
-declared ship-money was legal, other taxation and
-forced loans could easily find justification on the
-judicial bench, and thus the crown obtain its revenue,
-and England ruled without any let or hindrance from
-its citizens. To admit the position was to see the
-work of centuries undone, and the old contest in the
-land for liberties in return for taxes abandoned.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_259">259</span></p>
-
-<p>Hampden’s refusal to pay ship-money was a
-declaration for parliamentary government. No
-more a republican than Eliot or Pym, Hampden
-could see that either crown or parliament must be
-supreme in the affairs of the nation.<a id="FNanchor_109" href="#Footnote_109" class="fnanchor">109</a> The constitution
-was not to be balanced so evenly as Eliot had
-believed. Eliot himself had been deprived of life
-for maintaining, not the supremacy but the liberty of
-parliament. For John Hampden the evils of royal
-supremacy were obvious and present: misrule, the
-restoration of a religion banished by authority of
-crown and parliament, and disliked and feared by
-the majority of serious-minded people in the country,
-and the imprisonment of all who claimed the old
-freedom of parliament.</p>
-
-<p>The case was decided against him in the law
-courts, but five of the twelve judges supported
-Hampden’s contention that the resistance to payment
-was valid, and the arguments for his defence
-were published far and wide. “The judgment
-proved of more advantage and credit to the gentleman
-condemned than to the king’s service.”<a id="FNanchor_110" href="#Footnote_110" class="fnanchor">110</a></p>
-
-<p>Three years later, and Charles was forced to
-summon parliament to get money for his war in
-Scotland—the “Bishop’s War,” perhaps the most
-hopeless of all his ventures.</p>
-
-<p>Parliament met in April, and its temper was so
-unfavourable to the desires of the king, for the
-forcible conversion of the Scots to episcopacy, that
-it was dissolved in three weeks. John Pym was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_260">260</span>
-notable in that “Short Parliament” as the spokesman
-of the aggrieved country party, and the commons
-decided that the grievances of the nation must be
-considered before supplies were voted. The Scotch
-war was intolerable to Pym and Hampden. They
-had no objection to episcopacy as long as bishops
-were men of Protestant convictions. It was Laud
-the “Anglo-Catholic,” Laud the preacher of the
-divine right of kings, not Laud the Archbishop of
-Canterbury, whom they detested, and they had no
-relish for the expenditure of English life and
-treasure in the forcing of Laudian doctrine on
-Protestant Scotland.</p>
-
-<p>In the long eleven years of silence from the utterance
-of parliament things had been going steadily
-from bad to worse in England, Pym made out.
-Naturally conservative in mind, seeing in the constitution
-of king and parliament an admirable
-instrument of government, and in the Established
-Church of England an excellent expression of the
-Protestant religion, Pym had found that with
-parliament suspended the Protestantism of the
-Established Church had been steadily undermined
-by Laud’s policy, and the revival of some estranged
-Catholic doctrines and practices had proceeded
-apace. Without parliament there was no security
-for national well-being. “Powers of parliament are
-to the body politic as rational faculties of the soul
-to man,” he declares in April, 1640.</p>
-
-<p>Pym had entered the House of Commons with
-Eliot in 1614, and had been imprisoned in that year
-for his boldness. In 1620 he had been one of the
-“twelve ambassadors” to James I., for whom that
-king had ordered chairs to be set in Whitehall.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_261">261</span>
-With Eliot and Hampden he had pressed for
-Buckingham’s impeachment and for the Petition of
-Right. Now in 1640, John Pym, in his fifty-sixth
-year, was about to become the accredited leader of
-the parliamentary party, to be called “King Pym”
-by his enemies at the court, and to pass away when
-the long constitutional struggle was being settled on
-the field of civil war. Unimaginative, and averse
-from new ideas, Pym had a quite clear perception
-of the business of the House of Commons, and of
-the fitting relations of king and parliament. The
-crown, the lords, the commons were all recognized
-and necessary elements in the constitution, but their
-importance was not equal. The collective assembly
-of parliament had prevailed over the crown more
-than once; to Pym, the Laudian “divine right”
-was a novelty, and nonsense at that. Parliament
-could do much of its work with or without royal
-approval, and of the two Houses, if the Lords
-were unwilling to work with the lower House, the
-Commons could “save the kingdom alone.”</p>
-
-<p>In the autumn Charles was driven again to appeal
-to parliament, and in November, 1640, the “Long
-Parliament” met, only to be dissolved thirteen
-years later by the arms of Cromwell. To the
-eleven years of “personal government” by Charles
-succeed thirteen years of parliamentary government,
-and then the House of Commons, now too
-enfeebled to endure, itself goes down before a
-military dictatorship.</p>
-
-<p>Pym anticipated the coming struggle by riding
-over England on the eve of the elections to the
-Long Parliament and urging the electors to return
-men to the House of Commons resolute and alive<span class="pagenum" id="Page_262">262</span>
-to the crisis. The response was unmistakable.
-Parliament assembled to find some remedy for the
-distresses of the country before voting any money
-for the purposes of the crown. Enormous numbers
-of petitions were presented, and the House of
-Commons appointed its committees to attend to
-and report on the complaints.<a id="FNanchor_111" href="#Footnote_111" class="fnanchor">111</a></p>
-
-<p>Before the year closed the House of Commons
-had struck at the power of Laud and Wentworth
-(now the Earl of Strafford), and the two ministers
-lay in prison impeached for high treason. Windebank,
-Charles’s secretary of state, and Finch, the
-chancellor, were already fled over seas.</p>
-
-<p>It was Pym who went to the bar of the House of
-Lords to summon Strafford to surrender, and it was
-Pym who opened the charge of impeachment the
-following March. As in Eliot’s time, Hampden is
-content to be overshadowed by his friend, though
-his was the greater influence in the House.</p>
-
-<p>Clarendon has given us his view of Hampden at
-the opening of the Long Parliament:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>When this parliament began the eyes of all men were fixed
-upon him, as their <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">patriae pater</i>, and the pilot that must steer
-the vessel through the tempests and rocks which threatened
-it. I am persuaded his power and interest at that time were
-greater to do good or hurt than any man’s in the kingdom, or
-than any man of his rank hath had in any time; for his reputation
-of honesty was universal, and his affections seemed
-so publicly guided, that no corrupt or private ends could bias
-them.</p></div>
-
-<p>Baxter, it may be recalled, had written in the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_263">263</span>
-<cite>Saints’ Rest</cite> that one of the pleasures which he
-hoped to enjoy in heaven was the society of John
-Hampden. The name of Hampden was blotted
-out in the copies published after the Restoration.
-“But,” wrote Baxter, “I must tell the reader that I
-did blot it out, not as changing my opinion of the
-person.”</p>
-
-<p>The work of Pym and Hampden is conspicuous
-at the beginning of the Long Parliament. The
-Star Chamber and High Commission Courts are
-abolished. Ship-money and all enforced taxation
-unauthorised by parliament are declared illegal.
-Oliver Cromwell’s motion for annual parliaments is
-amended into an act for triennial parliaments to be
-called with or without royal summons. Strafford—the
-only strong minister Charles had—perished on
-Tower Hill in May, both Pym and Hampden supporting
-impeachment instead of attainder, and
-voting for the fallen minister to be allowed the use
-of counsel at his trial. That Strafford was a
-criminal and a traitor ready to use his Irish army
-for the suppression of the English parliament Pym
-had no doubt.</p>
-
-<p>Still Charles would not admit the position lost,
-and still struggled to govern, not through parliament,
-but by personal rule. The death of Strafford,
-though approved by all supporters of the House of
-Commons, rallied the king’s friends. The House of
-Lords was no longer quite at one with the Commons
-in the contest. In the House of Commons a
-royalist party emerges to oppose Pym, and the
-beginning of party government is seen. Overtures
-are made by Pym to the queen—to be disregarded,
-of course; though the tide is setting towards<span class="pagenum" id="Page_264">264</span>
-revolution, yet Pym and Hampden are far from
-revolutionaries. They are willing to end the political
-power of the bishops by turning them out of the
-House of Lords, but have only moderate sympathy
-with the root-and-branch Puritans who would abolish
-episcopacy.</p>
-
-<p>In the Grand Remonstrance which Pym laid
-before the House of Commons in November, 1641,
-the case for the Parliament was stated with frankness,
-but the demands were not revolutionary. The
-main points were securities for the administration of
-justice, and insistence on the responsibility of the
-king’s ministers to parliament. The royalists fought
-the Remonstrance vigorously, and in the end it was
-only carried by a majority of eleven, 159 to 148.
-At the end of the debate the excitement was intense:
-“some waved their hats over their heads, and others
-took their swords in their scabbards out of their
-belts, and held them by the pummels in their hands,
-setting the lower part on the ground.” Violence
-seemed inevitable, “had not the sagacity and great
-calmness of Mr. Hampden, by a short speech,
-prevented it.”</p>
-
-<p>On the 1st of December the Remonstrance, with
-a petition for the removal of grievances, especially
-in matters of religion, was presented to the king at
-Hampton Court. “Charles had now a last chance
-of regaining the affection of his people. If he could
-have resolved to give his confidence to the leaders
-of the moderate party in the House of Commons,
-and to regulate his proceedings by their advice, he
-might have been, not, indeed, as he had been, a
-despot, but the powerful and respected king of a free
-people. The nation might have enjoyed liberty<span class="pagenum" id="Page_265">265</span>
-and repose under a government with Falkland
-at its head, checked by a constitutional opposition
-under the conduct of Hampden. It was not necessary
-that, in order to accomplish this happy end,
-the king should sacrifice any part of his lawful
-prerogative, or submit to any conditions inconsistent
-with his dignity.” So Macaulay wrote. But the
-days of “governments” and “constitutional oppositions”
-were far off in 1641, and only the germ of
-party government is seen in the division of the
-House of Commons. To “submit to any conditions”
-from parliament was inconsistent with the
-king’s notions of royal dignity, fostered by Laud to
-reject all criticisms as denials of the absolutism of
-the crown.</p>
-
-<p>Charles promised an answer to the deputation
-which waited on him, and the answer was seen on
-January 3, 1642, when the king’s attorney appeared
-at the bar of the Lords, impeached Pym, Hampden,
-Holles, Strode, and Hazlerig of high treason, in
-having corresponded with the Scots for the invasion
-of England, and demanded the surrender of the
-five members. “All constitutional law was set
-aside by a charge which proceeded personally from
-the king, which deprived the accused of their legal
-right to a trial by their peers, and summoned them
-before a tribunal which had no pretence to a jurisdiction
-over them.”</p>
-
-<p>The House of Commons simply declined to
-surrender their members, but promised to take the
-matter into consideration.</p>
-
-<p>Then Charles, with some three hundred cavaliers,
-went to Westminster, and entered the House of
-Commons to demand the accused. But the five<span class="pagenum" id="Page_266">266</span>
-members, warned of his coming, were out of the
-way and safe within the city of London. “It was
-believed that if the king had found them there, and
-called in his guards to have seized them, the members
-of the House would have endeavoured the defence
-of them, which might have proved a very unhappy
-and sad business.” As it was, the king could only
-retire discomfited, with some words about respecting
-the laws of the realm and the privileges of parliament,
-and “in a more discontented and angry passion
-than he came in.”</p>
-
-<p>The invasion of the Commons was the worst move
-Charles could have made, for parliament was in no
-temper favourable to royal encroachments, and it
-had a large population at hand ready to give substantial
-support. The city of London at once
-declared for the House of Commons, ignored the
-king’s writs for the arrest of the five members, and
-answered the royal proclamation declaring them
-“traitors” by calling out the trained bands for the
-escort of the members back to Westminster, and for
-the protection of the House of Commons.</p>
-
-<p>Falkland and the royalist members turned for the
-moment from Charles at his unexpected attack on
-the House, the cavaliers of Whitehall, menaced by
-the trained bands from Southwark and the city,
-fled, and Charles, standing alone, left London.</p>
-
-<p>War was now imminent. Pym and Hampden at
-once prepared for the struggle.</p>
-
-<p>Pym secured the arsenals of Portsmouth and Hull
-for the parliament, but his efforts to obtain the control
-of the militia in the counties were frustrated for
-a time by the king’s natural refusal to consent to
-the Militia Bill, which would have placed troops<span class="pagenum" id="Page_267">267</span>
-under the orders of country gentlemen of the
-parliamentary party.</p>
-
-<p>Both king and parliament had to break through
-all constitutional precedent. The king levied troops
-by a royal commission, and Pym got an ordinance
-of both Houses of Parliament passed appointing
-the lords-lieutenant to command the militia, and
-thereby published the supremacy of parliament over
-the crown. In April the king appeared at Hull to
-obtain arms, and was refused admission to the town
-by Sir John Hotham, the governor. Parliament
-expressed its approval of Hotham’s act, the royalists
-gathered round Charles at York, and the final proposals
-of parliament for ending absolute monarchy
-were rejected by the king in June with the words,
-“If I granted your demands I should be no more
-than the mere phantom of a king.”<a id="FNanchor_112" href="#Footnote_112" class="fnanchor">112</a></p>
-
-<p>With this refusal all negotiations were broken off.
-Essex was appointed commander of the parliamentary
-army, and in August Charles raised the
-royal standard at Nottingham, and war was begun.</p>
-
-<p>Hampden threw himself vigorously into the campaign.
-From his native county of Buckingham,
-the county which made him its representative in
-parliament in 1640, he raised a regiment of infantry.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_268">268</span>
-“His neighbours eagerly enlisted under his command.
-His men were known by their green
-uniform, and by their standard, which bore on one
-side the watchword of the parliament, ‘God with
-us,’ and on the other the device of Hampden,
-‘<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">Vestigia nulla retrorsum</i>.’” In the first stages of
-the war, before any decisive blow had been struck,
-Hampden was busy passing and repassing between
-the army and the parliament. Clarendon praises
-his courage and ability on the field.</p>
-
-<p>A skirmish at Chalgrove, on June 18th, 1643,
-between bodies of horse commanded by Rupert
-and by Hampden, ended in victory for the royalists.
-Hampden was seen riding off the field, “before the
-action was done, which he never used to do, and
-with his head hanging down, and resting his hands
-upon the neck of his horse.” He was mortally
-wounded, for two carbine balls were lodged in his
-shoulder, and reached Thame only to die six days
-later.</p>
-
-<p>The death of Hampden—at the age of 49—came
-at a dark hour in the early fortunes of the
-parliamentary army, and deepened the gloom.
-“The loss of Colonel Hampden goeth near the
-heart of every man that loves the good of his king
-and country, and makes some conceive little content
-to be at the army now that he is gone.” But Pym
-remained, and Cromwell and Vane, and many
-another resolute House of Commons man.</p>
-
-<p>Pym’s health was already broken when Hampden
-fell, but he lived to accomplish the alliance of the
-English Puritans and the Scotch army, and, as the
-price of this alliance, the abolition of episcopacy
-and the adoption of Presbyterianism in the Church<span class="pagenum" id="Page_269">269</span>
-of England. The Solemn League and Covenant
-was accepted by parliament, and imposed on the
-nation in September. Henceforth the parliamentary
-army was pledged to extirpate “Popery, prelacy,
-superstition, schism and profaneness”; to bring “the
-Churches of God in the three kingdoms to the
-nearest conjunction and uniformity in religion”; to
-“preserve the rights and privileges of the parliament
-and the liberties of the kingdom; and to
-unite the two kingdoms in a firm peace and union to
-all posterity.”</p>
-
-<p>The taking of the covenant—a political necessity—was
-John Pym’s last work. He was ten years
-older than Hampden, and his character was ruggeder
-and sterner and without the charm of the younger
-man. But Pym’s was the greater genius in politics,
-and his scheme of constitutional government was to
-be fulfilled in England at a later season.</p>
-
-<p>John Pym died on December 8th, 1643, and his
-body was buried in Westminster Abbey—only to be
-turned out at the Restoration and removed to St.
-Margaret’s churchyard.</p>
-
-<p>With Pym and Hampden gone, henceforth the
-conduct of parliament was in other hands, and the
-day of moderate statesmanship had passed.</p>
-
-<p>The war undertaken to preserve the liberties and
-establish the supremacy of the House of Commons
-was to bring in its train not only the abolition of
-monarchy and the House of Lords, but the suppression
-of the House of Commons itself.</p>
-
-<p>Important to the nation as the issues at stake
-were, most people in England took hardly any
-more part or interest in the great civil war than they
-had done in the Wars of the Roses. “A very large<span class="pagenum" id="Page_270">270</span>
-number of persons regarded the struggle with
-indifference.... In one case, the inhabitants
-of an entire county pledged themselves to remain
-neutral. Many quietly changed with the times
-(as people changed with the varying fortunes of
-York and Lancaster). That this sentiment of
-neutrality was common to the greater mass of the
-working classes is obvious from the simultaneous
-appearance of the club men in different parts of the
-country, with their motto, ‘If you take our cattle, we
-will give you battle.’”<a id="FNanchor_113" href="#Footnote_113" class="fnanchor">113</a></p>
-
-<p>How could it be otherwise? Supremacy of King,
-or supremacy of Commons,—seed time and harvest
-remain, and the labourer and the artizan must needs
-do their day’s work.</p>
-
-<p>Not till the deposing of the Stuarts—forty-five
-years after John Hampden’s death—is the supremacy
-of parliament over the crown arrived at by general
-consent, to become a recognized and settled thing
-in British politics. By the middle of the nineteenth
-century the House of Commons is unmistakably the
-ruling power in the constitution, and the labours of
-Eliot, Hampden and Pym are vindicated.</p>
-
-<p>In our own day changes in the balance of constitutional
-power may be noted. The supremacy of
-the House of Commons is quietly disappearing
-before the growing popularity of the crown, the reawakened
-activity of the House of Lords, and the
-steady gathering of the reins of power into the hands
-of the Cabinet and Executive. As the crown in
-the last twenty years has increased in popular
-esteem, so the influence and importance of the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_271">271</span>
-Commons has waned in the country; and this
-waning influence of the Lower House has been
-further diminished by the frequent rejection and
-revision of its measures by the House of
-Lords.</p>
-
-<p>The power of the Executive has also been
-obtained at the expense of the power of the
-Commons. The Cabinet, rather than the House of
-Commons, holds the supremacy to-day, and the
-direction of foreign policy, and the making of international
-treaties are no more within the authority of
-the House of Commons than are the administration
-of Egypt and India. Pym and Hampden fought
-and gave their lives for the right of the House of
-Commons to control the ministers of the crown and
-to order the policy of these ministers. By its own
-consent, and not from pressure from without, the
-House of Commons has silently surrendered this
-right, and has agreed that the policy of its Foreign
-Minister for the time being—whether he be Liberal
-or Conservative—must not be subject to reproof,
-still less to correction. In home affairs administrative
-order steadily supersedes statute law.</p>
-
-<p>In theory ministers are still subject to the House
-of Commons. In actual practice they can rely on
-not being interfered with as long as their party has a
-majority in the House. When the price of effective
-interference with the conduct of affairs is a defeat
-of the Cabinet and a consequent dissolution, the
-payment is more than members of parliament are
-prepared to make.</p>
-
-<p>Given the sense of security of social order and of
-the administration of justice, the nation, generally,
-no more heeds the passing of the supremacy from the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_272">272</span>
-House of Commons, than it heeded the winning of
-that supremacy.</p>
-
-<p>The Laudian doctrine in the Church of England,
-revived at the Restoration, disappeared with the
-passing of the non-jurors at the close of the seventeenth
-century. But its Anglo-Catholic teaching
-was renewed by the Oxford Movement, early in
-Queen Victoria’s reign, and has largely changed the
-whole appearance of the Church of England. The
-modern high Anglican, claiming, as Laud claimed,
-the right to interpret the Book of Common Prayer
-as a Catholic document, but no longer the advocate
-of any theory of divine right of kings, or the
-champion of any particular political creed, has
-travelled indeed far beyond Laud’s very limited
-success in winning support for Catholic doctrine and
-ritual in the Church of England. Laud was beaten
-by the opposition of parliament; his present day
-successors in the Church of England have prospered
-in spite of that opposition, and have triumphed over
-acts of parliaments, adverse judicial sentences,
-privations and imprisonments. But with Laud the
-movement was directed by bishops and approved
-by the king, the modern Laudian movement was
-banned by bishops and disfavoured by all in high
-authority.</p>
-
-<p>To-day nearly every Catholic doctrine, save papal
-supremacy, has its expounders and defenders in the
-Church of England, and Catholic rites and ceremonies
-are freely practised.</p>
-
-<p>Laud, dying on the scaffold in 1645 at the hands
-of parliament, is amply avenged in the twentieth
-century by the victorious high-churchman. The
-Laudian clergy of the Established Church can now<span class="pagenum" id="Page_273">273</span>
-maintain their Anglo-Catholic faith and practice,
-without any fear of parliamentary interference. For
-generally they enjoy a popularity and respect that
-the House of Commons does not willingly venture
-to assail.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_12">John Lilburne and the
-Levellers<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1647–1653</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Lilburne’s Pamphlets; <cite>Calendar of
-State Papers</cite>; <cite>Charles I. and the Commonwealth</cite>; <cite>State
-Trials</cite>; <cite>House of Commons’ Journals</cite>; Whitelocke—<cite>Memorials
-of English Affairs</cite>; Clarendon—<cite>History of
-the Rebellion</cite>; W. Godwin—<cite>History of the Commonwealth</cite>;
-S. R. Gardiner—<cite>History of the Great Civil
-War</cite>; <cite>History of the Commonwealth and Protectorate</cite>;
-G. P. Gooch—<cite>History of Democratic Ideas in the Seventeenth
-Century</cite>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_277">277</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">JOHN LILBURNE AND<br />
-THE LEVELLERS
-<span class="subhead">1647–1653.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">From</span> his coming of age in 1637 till the near
-approach of death, when he turned, a dying
-man, to the peaceful tenets of the Quakers,
-the life of John Lilburne is a record of
-twenty years of strife and battle with the rulers
-of the land.</p>
-
-<p>He came of pugnacious stock, for John Lilburne’s
-father, a well-to-do Durham squire, was the last
-man to demand the settlement of a lawsuit by the
-ordeal of battle, and came into court armed accordingly—only
-to be disappointed by an order from the
-crown, forbidding the proposed return to such
-ancient and obsolete methods of deciding the
-differences of neighbours.</p>
-
-<p>Apprenticed to a wholesale cloth-merchant in
-London, John Lilburne soon became acquainted
-with Bastwick and Prynne, then busy over anti-episcopal
-pamphlets, and, keeping such company,
-naturally fell into the clutches of the Star Chamber.
-The charge against him was that he had helped to
-print and circulate unlicensed books, in particular,
-Prynne’s <cite>News from Ipswich</cite>; and though Lilburne
-declared the charge to be false, on his refusal to
-take the usual oath to answer truly all questions put
-to him, the Star Chamber adjudged him guilty, and
-passed sentence—Lilburne was to be whipped from<span class="pagenum" id="Page_278">278</span>
-the Fleet to Westminster, to stand in the pillory,
-and to be kept in prison.</p>
-
-<p>The sentence was carried out on February 13th,
-1638, but Lilburne was not cowed, for he scattered
-some of Bastwick’s offending pamphlets on the
-road, and was gagged in the pillory to reduce him
-to silence. In prison things went hardly with
-Lilburne, for the authorities had him placed in irons
-and kept in solitary confinement, and only the
-compassion of fellow prisoners saved him from actual
-starvation in the two years and nine months of his
-imprisonment.</p>
-
-<p>It was a rough beginning, and John Lilburne
-was henceforth an agitator and a rebel.</p>
-
-<p>At the end of 1640 one of the first things done
-by the Long Parliament was to order Lilburne’s
-release, and in the following May the sentence was
-pronounced “illegal and against the liberties of the
-subject.” But illegal or not, the punishment had
-been inflicted, and with unbroken spirit, passionately
-resenting the tyranny that could so wrong men,
-Lilburne flew quickly to the attack on the authors of
-the injustice.</p>
-
-<p>At Edgehill Lilburne held a captain’s commission,
-and at Brentford he was taken prisoner by the
-royalists. Only the threat of swift reprisals by the
-parliamentary army saved him from being shot as
-“a traitor,” and the following year he was again at
-liberty on an exchange of prisoners. Again, after
-fighting at Marston Moor, he fell into the hands of
-the royalists, and, shot through the arm, was kept in
-prison at Oxford for six months.</p>
-
-<p>Brave soldier as Lilburne was, he left the army
-in 1645 (with the rank of Lieutenant-Colonel and<span class="pagenum" id="Page_279">279</span>
-with £880 arrears of pay owing to him) rather than
-take the covenant and subscribe to the requirements
-of Cromwell’s “new model.”</p>
-
-<p>And now monarchy having fallen from its high
-estate, Lilburne at once saw elements of tyranny in
-the Parliamentary government, and did not hesitate
-to say so. Courageous and intrepid, with considerable
-legal knowledge, a passion for liberty, and clear
-views on democracy, John Lilburne might have
-given invaluable service to the commonwealth. He
-had shown skill and daring in the war, his character
-for fearless endurance had been proved, his ability as
-a pamphleteer was considerable, and his capacity
-for work enormous; the government had either to
-treat Lilburne as a friend or foe—he was not to
-be ignored. The government, unwisely, decided
-Lilburne was an enemy, and for the next ten years
-he fought the rule of parliament and the army, his
-popularity increasing with every new pamphlet he
-produced. The price the commonwealth government
-paid for its opposition to Lilburne was to
-be seen on the death of Cromwell.<a id="FNanchor_114" href="#Footnote_114" class="fnanchor">114</a></p>
-
-<p>From 1645 to 1649 Lilburne’s vigorous criticisms
-of the men in power provoked retaliation, and
-brought him to Newgate. But in prison or out of
-prison Lilburne went on hammering away to establish
-a democratic constitution. The time was to come
-when Cromwell would find the Long Parliament
-had outlived its usefulness and would end it by main
-force. Lilburne was anxious in 1647 for a radical
-reform of parliament and a general manhood<span class="pagenum" id="Page_280">280</span>
-suffrage. His proposals were popular in the army,
-and had Cromwell supported him the whole future
-of English politics would have been changed.</p>
-
-<p>When the Presbyterian majority in parliament
-proposed the disbandment of the army in 1647, the
-regiments chose their agitators, and, refusing to
-disband, drew up the “Agreement of the People”
-and the “Case for the Army.” These documents
-give the political standpoint of the Levellers and the
-particular grievances to be remedied.</p>
-
-<p>The distribution of parliamentary seats according
-to the number of inhabitants was the chief proposal
-in the “Agreement of the People,” and the principles
-maintained are that “no man is bound to a government
-under which he has not put himself,” and that
-“all inhabitants who have not lost their birthright
-should have an equal voice in elections.”</p>
-
-<p>The particular demands in the “Case for the
-Army” were the abolition of monopolies, freedom
-of trade and religion, restoration of enclosed common
-lands, and abolition of sinecures.</p>
-
-<p>While Cromwell and Ireton were both bitterly
-against manhood suffrage, the council of officers to
-whom the Levellers appealed agreed to support it,
-without approving the rest of the programme.</p>
-
-<p>Cromwell, relying on the army to prevent a
-royalist reaction—for Charles was plotting from
-Carisbrooke for aid from Scotland, and the royalists
-in the House of Commons were anxious to effect a
-reconciliation—would give neither time nor patience
-to the demands of Lilburne and the Levellers.</p>
-
-<p>In vain the Levellers exclaimed, in 1648, “We
-were ruled before by King, Lords, and Commons,
-now by a General, Court Martial, and Commons:<span class="pagenum" id="Page_281">281</span>
-and, we pray you, what is the difference?” Cromwell,
-at all costs, was determined to preserve the
-discipline of the army, and to suppress mutiny with
-an iron hand. For him the army which had beaten
-the cavaliers was the one safeguard against the
-return of the old order in Church and State. Lilburne
-and the Levellers, with the “Fifth Monarchy” men,
-had been the strength, the very life of the army that
-had conquered at Marston Moor and Naseby. The
-petition of the Fifth Monarchy men for the reign of
-Christ and His saints (which, according to prophecy,
-was to supersede the four monarchies of the ancient
-world) had no terrors for Cromwell; in other words,
-they demanded government exclusively by the godly,
-Independents and Presbyterians combining to elect
-all representatives, “and to determine all things
-by the Word.” “Such a proposal might attract
-fanatics; it could not attract the multitude. The
-Levellers who stood up for an exaggeration of the
-doctrine of parliamentary supremacy were likely to
-be far more numerous.”<a id="FNanchor_115" href="#Footnote_115" class="fnanchor">115</a> To Cromwell the immediate
-thing was the royalist danger; it was no season
-for embarking on democratic experiments with which
-he had no sympathy. The breach between Cromwell
-and the Levellers widened, and as Cromwell
-became more and more impatient of their agitation,
-distrust and suspicion of Cromwell and of the newly-appointed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_282">282</span>
-Council of State ripened, in 1649, into
-revolt.<a id="FNanchor_116" href="#Footnote_116" class="fnanchor">116</a> It is the perennial misunderstanding between
-the statesman and the agitator. The one weighted
-by responsibility can rarely travel at the pace of the
-other, untrammelled by office, and as the distance
-between the two lengthens, it seems they are not
-even pursuing the same course—as, indeed, very
-often they are not.</p>
-
-<p>Lilburne had none of Cromwell’s anxieties as to
-a possible royalist reaction; for him the danger
-could not come from the dethroned king and his
-defeated cavaliers, but from a parliamentary oligarchy
-or a military dictatorship. But he overestimated
-the strength of the Leveller movement in the army.
-With the presentation of the “Agreement of the
-People” the bulk of the discontent in the army
-diminished, and while the Levellers who remained
-became in several regiments openly mutinous, the
-movement generally died down, so that when the
-revolt came, it was suppressed without difficulty.<a id="FNanchor_117" href="#Footnote_117" class="fnanchor">117</a></p>
-
-<p>Lilburne was out of prison at the beginning of
-1649. He took no part in the trial of Charles I.,
-and let it be known that he doubted the wisdom of
-abolishing monarchy before a new constitution had
-been drawn up.</p>
-
-<p>As neither the remnant of the Long Parliament<span class="pagenum" id="Page_283">283</span>
-nor Cromwell and Fairfax were doing anything to
-set up this new constitution, Lilburne proceeded to
-lay a remonstrance before parliament, and to follow
-this up by his two pamphlets on “England’s New
-Chains.” He now urged that “committees of short
-continuance” should supersede the Council of State,
-that the Self-denying Ordinance should be put in
-force, “seeing how dangerous it was for one and the
-same persons to be continued long in the highest
-commands of a military power,”<a id="FNanchor_118" href="#Footnote_118" class="fnanchor">118</a> that a new parliament
-should be elected, and the “Agreement of the
-People” proceeded with heartily. At the same time
-he called for army reform by a reconstruction of the
-General Council and the election of agitators.</p>
-
-<p>The expulsion of five troopers from the army for
-directly petitioning parliament provoked another
-pamphlet—“The Hunting of the Foxes from Newmarket
-to Whitehall by five small beagles late of
-the army.” The argument here was that Cromwell,
-Ireton, and Harrison ruled the council of officers,
-and that the council of officers ruled parliament and
-the nation. “The old king’s person and the old
-lords are but removed, and a new king and new
-lords with the commons are in one House, and so
-we are under a more absolute arbitrary monarchy
-than before.”</p>
-
-<p>There was only one answer to be made to
-Lilburne’s pen, and that was to arrest the man who
-held it, for the commonwealth had no one on its
-side who could reply to him. At the end of March
-Lilburne and three of his supporters, Walwyn,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_284">284</span>
-Prince, and Richard Overton were arrested as
-traitors, “England’s New Chains” having been voted
-by parliament seditious and destructive of the
-government, and were committed to the Tower to
-await trial.</p>
-
-<p>At once a petition was got up and signed by
-80,000 persons for Lilburne’s release, and a fortnight
-later—April 18th—another petition was taken
-to the bar of the House of Commons to the same
-effect. Parliament promised that the prisoners
-should have a legal trial, but declared the course of
-justice must not be interfered with. A large deputation
-of women also appeared at Westminster on
-April 23rd with a similar petition; but these were
-forbidden to enter the House, and, admonished by
-members to “go home and wash their dishes,”
-answered they would soon have no dishes to wash.<a id="FNanchor_119" href="#Footnote_119" class="fnanchor">119</a></p>
-
-<p>Lilburne was not brought to trial till October, and
-in the six months’ interval, though the output of
-democratic pamphlets continued from the Tower,
-the Leveller movement in the army ended in open
-mutiny and defeat.</p>
-
-<p>Carlyle tells the story accurately enough of the
-mutiny in Whalley’s regiment in Bishopsgate,
-London, on April 25th:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>They want this and that; they seize their colours from the
-cornet, who is lodged at the “Bull” there; the general
-(Fairfax) and lieutenant-general (Cromwell) have to hasten
-thither, quell them, pack them forth on their march, seizing
-fifteen of them first to be tried by court-martial. Tried by
-instant court-martial, five of them are found guilty, doomed
-to die, but pardoned; and one of them, Trooper Lockyer, is<span class="pagenum" id="Page_285">285</span>
-doomed and not pardoned.<a id="FNanchor_120" href="#Footnote_120" class="fnanchor">120</a> Trooper Lockyer is shot in
-Paul’s Churchyard on the morrow. A very brave young man,
-they say; though but three-and-twenty. “He has served
-seven years in these wars,” ever since the wars began.
-“Religious,” too, “of excellent parts and much beloved”;
-but with hot notions as to human freedom, and the rate at
-which the milleniums are attainable. Poor Lockyer! He
-falls shot in Paul’s Churchyard on Friday, amid the tears of
-men and women. Lockyer’s corpse is watched and wept
-over, not without prayer, in the eastern regions of the city,
-till a new week come; and on Monday, this is what we see
-advancing westward by way of funeral to him:</p>
-
-<p>About one thousand went before the corpse, five or six in a
-file; the corpse was then brought, with six trumpets sounding
-a soldier’s knell, then the trooper’s horse came, clothed
-all over in mourning, and led by a footman. The corpse was
-adorned with bundles of rosemary, one half stained in blood,
-and the sword of the deceased along with them. Some
-thousands followed in ranks and files, all had sea-green and
-black ribbon tied on their hats and to their breasts, and the
-women brought up the rear.</p>
-
-<p>At the new churchyard at Westminster some thousands
-more of the better sort met them, who thought not fit to
-march through the city. Many looked upon this funeral as
-an affront to parliament and the army; others called these
-people “Levellers”; but they took no notice of any of them.<a id="FNanchor_121" href="#Footnote_121" class="fnanchor">121</a></p></div>
-
-<p>In May one Corporal William Thompson rallied
-a body of Levellers at Banbury, published a manifesto
-called “England’s Standard Advanced,” and
-inveighed against the tyranny of courts-martial.
-Overwhelmed by force of numbers, Thompson<span class="pagenum" id="Page_286">286</span>
-escaped, and later died fighting alone near Wellingborough.
-Some twenty of his followers joined the
-mutineers of Scrope’s regiment at Salisbury. Numbering
-some 1,200, these Levellers made their way
-by Marlborough and Wantage to Burford. Here
-Cromwell came up with the mutineers, and surprised
-them at midnight. Resistance was hopeless,
-and the majority at once surrendered. All were
-pardoned except Cornet Thompson (brother to
-William), and two corporals—Church and Perkins—who
-showed neither fear nor admitted any wrong
-on their part. These three men were shot in
-Burford churchyard on May 15th,<a id="FNanchor_122" href="#Footnote_122" class="fnanchor">122</a> and with their
-deaths the Leveller movement was at an end.</p>
-
-<p>But Lilburne was unsubdued. His new “Agreement
-of the Free People,” published on May 1st,
-called for annual parliaments elected by manhood
-suffrage—pensioners, militant royalists, and lawyers
-excluded—and for the free election of unendowed
-church ministers in each parish. At the same time
-he disclaimed all connection with Winstanley’s
-“Diggers”—political reform was Lilburne’s
-demand.<a id="FNanchor_123" href="#Footnote_123" class="fnanchor">123</a></p>
-
-<p>Released on bail in July, Lilburne issued in
-August an “Impeachment for High Treason against
-Oliver Cromwell and his son-in-law, James Ireton.”
-In this his hatred of government by the army
-compels the admission that monarchy is preferable
-to a military despotism: “If we must have a king,
-I for my part would rather have the prince than any<span class="pagenum" id="Page_287">287</span>
-man in the world.... For the present army
-to set up the pretended Saint Oliver or any other as
-their elected king, there will be nothing thereby
-from the beginning of the chapter to the end
-thereof but wars and the cutting of throats year
-after year; yea, and the absolute keeping up of a
-perpetual army under which the people are absolute
-and perfect slaves.”</p>
-
-<p>Thereupon, instead of bringing him to trial, the
-government merely issued a warrant for Lilburne’s
-arrest. The agitator met this by a stronger
-manifesto, “An Outcry of the Young Men and
-Apprentices of London,” calling on the army to rise in
-support of a democratic parliament and to vindicate
-the men executed at Burford. Some response came
-from the garrison at Oxford, who summoned their
-officers to join in the demand for a free parliament,
-but no success attended this step.</p>
-
-<p>At last in October Lilburne was brought to trial
-at the Guildhall, not on the charge for which he had
-been first committed to the Tower in March, but
-for the “treason” of his later pamphlets. The trial
-is memorable for Lilburne’s demand that counsel
-should be assigned to him in the event of legal
-technicalities arising, and for his bidding the jury
-remember they were judges of law as well as of fact.
-His real defence lay in the question he had put so
-often: Was England to be governed by the sword
-and a mock parliament, or by duly elected representatives
-of the People? The jury understood
-that Lilburne was on trial for putting that question,
-and, agreeing with him, they acquitted
-him. The verdict was received with tremendous
-applause, and “a loud and unanimous shout” of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_288">288</span>
-triumph went up from the citizens of London in the
-Guildhall.<a id="FNanchor_124" href="#Footnote_124" class="fnanchor">124</a></p>
-
-<p>In December Lilburne was elected to the common
-council of the city, but parliament promptly declared
-the election void. “Fiercely as Lilburne attacked
-Cromwell, there was at times considerable liking
-between the two men, and they met on friendly
-terms before Cromwell went to Scotland in 1650.
-Cromwell assured Lilburne of his desire to make
-England enjoy the real fruit of all the army’s promises
-and declarations,” and friendly relations lasted
-till Cromwell’s return. But, in Cromwell’s absence,
-Lilburne charged Hazlerigg with corruption in the
-administration of justice concerning a disputed
-colliery lease in Durham, and parliament took up
-the matter. In January, 1652, it declared Lilburne’s
-petition for redress a libel, and imposed a fine of
-£7,000 with a sentence of banishment for life.</p>
-
-<p>This proceeding by parliament revived the
-methods of the Star Chamber in imposing a conviction
-and a sentence without trial, but the House
-of Commons was determined to stop Lilburne’s
-activities at all cost.</p>
-
-<p>Cromwell made no effort to hinder the conviction,
-and Lilburne insisted that Cromwell’s professions of
-friendship were hypocritical, and that the general
-himself was responsible for the sentence.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_289">289</span></p>
-
-<p>For the time Lilburne retired to Holland, where
-he discussed favourably the chances of a royalist
-restoration. But on the expulsion of the Rump of
-the Long Parliament the agitator at once wrote off
-to Cromwell for permission to return to England,
-and getting no answer crossed to London in June,
-1653, and settled in lodgings in Moorfields. He petitioned
-Cromwell and the Council of State for leave
-to remain unmolested, promising to live peacefully,
-but Cromwell, with the whole government on his
-shoulders, had no willingness to incur the risk
-Lilburne and his doctrine of popular rights involved
-to the safety of the State.</p>
-
-<p>Lilburne was promptly arrested by Cromwell’s
-order and brought to trial at the Old Bailey on July
-13th. The government case was that he had returned
-to England knowing that a sentence of death
-was decreed by parliament if he broke his exile.</p>
-
-<p>Lilburne’s defence, in the main, was that the
-parliament which had passed sentence was dead,
-and that if Cromwell had acted justly in dissolving
-it, then its unjust actions ought not to be maintained;
-if Cromwell had acted unjustly, why was he not
-punished?</p>
-
-<p>Again the jury acquitted him, and again the people
-of London expressed their satisfaction at the verdict,
-“the very soldiers sent to guard the court joining in
-the shouts, and beating their drums and sounding
-their trumpets as they passed along the streets to
-their quarters.”</p>
-
-<p>But “for the peace of the nation” Cromwell
-would not let Lilburne be at large. Back in the
-Tower, then at Guernsey, and then in Dover Castle
-for more than two years Lilburne was a prisoner.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_290">290</span></p>
-
-<p>His health was broken in 1656, and consumption
-had set in. Death was near, and for John Lilburne
-the days of “carnal sword-fighting and fleshly
-hustlings and contests” were over. He wrote to
-Cromwell from Dover Castle telling the Lord
-Protector of his conversion to Quakerism, and
-Cromwell, assured that there was to be no more
-agitation from “Free-Born John,” granted his
-release, and a pension of 40s. a week.</p>
-
-<p>The battle was over for John Lilburne, liberty
-could not stay the hand of death. The many imprisonments
-and close confinements had done their
-work, and rapid consumption marked down the man
-who had stood up against the whole might of
-Cromwell’s government.</p>
-
-<p>John Lilburne died at Eltham in August, 1657,
-at the age of forty. A year later, and his old
-antagonist, and older comrade-in-arms, Oliver
-Cromwell, Lord Protector, was dead, and the
-Commonwealth government which had contemned
-the agitation for democracy was doomed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_13">Winstanley the Digger<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1649–1650</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: Winstanley’s Pamphlets; Whitelocke—<cite>Memorial
-of English Affairs</cite>; Clarke Papers; L. H.
-Berens—<cite>Digger Movement in the days of the Commonwealth</cite>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_293">293</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">WINSTANLEY THE DIGGER
-<span class="subhead">1649–1650.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">In</span> the spring of 1649, the “Digger” movement
-revealed a strange and unexpected manifestation
-of the democratic spirit in England.
-Free communism had been the creed of more
-than one Protestant sect on the continent in the
-sixteenth century, and the Anabaptists had been
-conspicuously identified with the proposal. But in
-England John Lilburne and the Levellers were
-attacking the parliamentary government in the
-name of political democracy, and social agitation
-had been unknown since the Norfolk Rising of
-1549, save for a riot against land enclosures at the
-beginning of James I.’s reign.</p>
-
-<p>Gerrard Winstanley was the leader at the sudden
-outbreak of social discontent, and his “Digger”
-movement was to end this discontent and all other
-miseries of the time by getting rid of enclosures of
-common lands, and allowing people to plough these
-common lands and waste spaces, “that all may feed
-upon the crops of the earth, and the burden of
-poverty be removed.”</p>
-
-<p>Little is known of Winstanley, and the movement
-is shortlived. The “Diggers” never threatened
-the safety of the Commonwealth government as
-Lilburne and the Levellers did, for Winstanley’s
-social doctrine included the non-resistance principles
-that later found exponents in the Society of Friends,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_294">294</span>
-and the agrarian revolution he preached could
-hardly be accomplished without force of arms.
-What is notable about Winstanley is his witness to
-the fact that a social question existed—that he saw
-beyond the Civil War, and the strife for political
-liberties, a great mass of poverty unheeded; and
-seeing the miseries of his fellows resolutely thought
-out some cure for their distress, and did his best, as
-it seemed to him, to get this cure adopted.</p>
-
-<p>Neither the Council of State nor the republican
-army had time or patience for Winstanley’s schemes,
-and the “Diggers” were dispersed with little
-trouble; but Winstanley’s religious teaching was
-to exercise considerable influence in the world
-when George Fox became its preacher, and his
-social teaching on the land question has thousands
-of disciples in Great Britain to-day.</p>
-
-<p>Gerrard Winstanley was born in Lancashire in
-1609.<a id="FNanchor_125" href="#Footnote_125" class="fnanchor">125</a> He seems to have settled in London as a
-small trader and to have lost what money he had in
-business—cheated he says, “in the thieving art of
-buying and selling, and by the burdens of and for
-the soldiery in the beginning of the war”—so that
-he was obliged “to accept of the good-will of
-friends to live a country life.” In the country Winstanley
-ponders the source of the ills around him,
-and, having some considerable gift of expression,
-gives utterance, in a number of pamphlets, to a cry
-for reform, and gathers followers.</p>
-
-<p>In December, 1648, Winstanley (or one of his
-friends) issued the earliest of the Digger publications
-under the title of “Light Shining in Buckinghamshire—A<span class="pagenum" id="Page_295">295</span>
-Discovery of the Main Ground,
-Original Cause of all the Slavery of the World, but
-chiefly in England. Presented by way of a Declaration
-of many of the Well-affected in that County, to
-all their poor oppressed Countrymen in England.
-And also to the consideration of the present army
-under the conduct of the Lord Fairfax.”</p>
-
-<p>A month later and Winstanley publishes his
-“New Law of Righteousness: Budding forth to
-restore the whole Creation from the Bondage of the
-Curse. Or a glimpse of the new Heaven and the
-new Earth, wherein dwells Righteousness.” Here,
-with a good deal of mystical religious phrasing (the
-author explains that when he was in a trance the
-message came to him), Winstanley proclaims his
-calling and unfolds his agrarian proposals:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>And when the Lord doth show unto me the place and
-manner, how He will have us that are called common people
-manure and work upon the common lands, I will then go
-forth and declare it by my action, to eat my bread by the
-sweat of my brow, without either giving or taking hire,
-looking upon the land as freely mine as another’s.</p></div>
-
-<p>There is to be no forcible expropriation of landlords:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>If the rich still hold fast to this propriety of Mine and
-Thine, let them labour their own lands with their own
-hands. And let the common people, that say the earth is
-<em>ours</em>, not <em>mine</em>, let them labor together, and eat bread
-together upon the commons, mountains, and hills.</p>
-
-<p>For as the enclosures are called such a man’s land, and
-such a man’s land, so the Commons and Heath are called the
-common people’s. And let the world see who labor the
-earth in righteousness, and those to whom the Lord gives
-the blessing, let them be the people that shall inherit the
-earth.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_296">296</span></p>
-
-<p>None can say that their right is taken from them. For
-let the rich work alone by themselves; and let the poor work
-together by themselves. The rich in their enclosures, saying,
-<em>This is mine</em>; and the poor upon the commons, saying, <em>This
-is ours, the earth and its fruits are common</em>. And who can be
-offended at the poor for doing this? None but covetous,
-proud, idle, pampered flesh, that would have the poor work
-still for this devil (particular interest) to maintain his greatness
-that he may live at ease.</p>
-
-<p>Was the earth made for to preserve a few covetous,
-proud men to live at ease, and for them to bag and barn up
-the treasures of the earth from others, that these may beg or
-starve in a fruitful land: or was it made to preserve all her
-children? Let Reason and the Prophets’ and Apostles’
-writings be judge.... For the earth is the Lord’s;
-that is the spreading Power of Righteousness, not the
-inheritance of covetous proud flesh that dies. If any man
-can say that he makes corn or cattle, he may say, <em>That is
-mine</em>. But if the Lord made these for the use of His creation,
-surely then the earth was made by the Lord to be a Common
-Treasury for all, not a particular treasury for some.</p>
-
-<p>Leave off dominion and lordship one over another; for
-the whole bulk of mankind are but one living earth. Leave
-off imprisoning, whipping, and killing, which are but the
-actings of the curse. Let those that have hitherto had no
-land, and have been forced to rob and steal through poverty;
-henceforth let them quietly enjoy land to work upon, that
-everyone may enjoy the benefit of his creation, and eat his
-own bread with the sweat of his own brows. For surely this
-particular propriety of mine and thine hath brought in all
-misery upon people. First it hath occasioned people to steal
-from one another. Secondly it hath made laws to hang
-those that did steal. It tempts people to do an evil action,
-and then kills them for doing of it. Let all judge whether
-this be not a great evil.</p></div>
-
-<p>In April, 1649, the time was ripe—so Winstanley
-and his friends judged—for making a start to get
-rid of this evil.</p>
-
-<p>The Council of State, but a few months old, and
-much occupied with dangers in Scotland and Ireland,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_297">297</span>
-and with mutinous Levellers in the army, was suddenly
-informed of the strange activities of “a
-disorderly and tumultuous sort of people” by one
-Henry Sanders, of Walton-upon-Thames.</p>
-
-<p>Sanders’ testimony affirmed that “there was one
-Everard, once of the army but was cashiered, who
-termeth himself a prophet, one Stewer and Colten,
-and two more, all living at Cobham, came to St.
-George’s Hill in Surrey, and began to dig on that
-side the hill next to Camp Close, and sowed the
-ground with parsnips, carrots, and beans. On
-Monday following they were there again, being
-increased in their number, and on the next day they
-fired the heath, and burned at least forty rood of
-heath, which is a very great prejudice to the town.
-On Friday last they came again, between twenty
-and thirty, and wrought all day at digging. They
-did then intend to have two or three ploughs at
-work, but they had not furnished themselves with
-seed-corn, which they did on Saturday at Kingston.
-They invite all to come in and help them, and
-promise them meat, drink, and clothes. They do
-threaten to pull down and level all park pales, and
-lay open, and intend to plant there very shortly.
-They give out they will be four or five thousand
-within ten days, and threaten the neighbouring
-people there, that they will make them all come up
-to the hills and work: and forewarn them suffering
-their cattle to come near the plantation; if they do,
-they will cut their legs off. It is feared they have
-some design in hand.”<a id="FNanchor_126" href="#Footnote_126" class="fnanchor">126</a></p>
-
-<p>The date of this information was April 16th, and
-Bradshaw, the President of the Council, at once<span class="pagenum" id="Page_298">298</span>
-asked General Fairfax “to disperse the people so
-met, and to prevent the like for the future, that a
-malignant and disaffected party may not under colour
-of such ridiculous people have any opportunity to
-rendezvous themselves in order to do a greater
-mischief.”</p>
-
-<p>Fairfax sent Captain John Gladman to attend to
-the matter, and Gladman reports three days later
-that Mr. Winstanley and Mr. Everard are the chief
-men responsible, that he “cannot hear that there
-have been above twenty of them together since they
-first undertook the business,” and that Mr. Winstanley
-and Mr. Everard will wait upon Lord Fairfax.
-He adds; “I believe you will be glad to be rid of
-them again, especially Everard, who is no other
-than a mad man. I intend to go with two or three
-men to St. George’s Hill this day and persuade
-these people to leave this employment if I can, and
-if then I see no more danger than now I do I shall
-march back again to London to-morrow.” Gladman’s
-opinion is that “the business is not worth the
-writing nor yet taking notice of.”</p>
-
-<p>The interview between Fairfax and Winstanley
-and Everard took place on April 20, and Everard
-explained that the Diggers “did not intend to
-meddle with any man’s property nor to break down
-any pales or enclosures, but only to meddle with
-what was common and untilled, and to make it
-fruitful for the use of man: that they will not defend
-themselves by arms, but will submit unto authority;
-that as their forefathers lived in tents, so it would
-be suitable to their condition now to live in the
-same.”</p>
-
-<p>Fairfax evidently decided that the movement was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_299">299</span>
-not so alarming as the Council of State had represented,
-for Winstanley and his Diggers resumed
-their work, and at the end of May, Fairfax, with
-the officers of the army, paid a visit to St. George’s
-Hill. Winstanley returned “sober answers” to the
-inquiries of Fairfax, “though they gave little satisfaction
-(if any at all) in regard of the strangeness of
-their action.” Winstanley’s argument, often enlarged
-in his pamphlets, was that the people were dispossessed
-of their lands by the crown at the Norman
-Conquest, and that “the king who possessed them
-by the Norman Conquest being dead, they were
-returned again, being Crown Lands, to the Common
-People of England.”</p>
-
-<p>This was not conclusive to their visitors, and
-“some officers wished they had no further plot in
-what they did, and that no more was intended than
-what they did pretend.” To the objection that the
-ground was too poor to repay cultivation, “the
-Diggers answered they would use their endeavours
-and leave the success to God, who had promised to
-make the barren ground fruitful.” Public opinion
-gave out that the Diggers were “sober, honest
-men,” and that “the ground will probably in a short
-time yield them some fruit of their labour, how
-contemptible soever they do yet appear to be.”</p>
-
-<p>Encouraged by Fairfax’s “kindness and moderation,”
-Winstanley appeals to him in June against
-the interference of the local landowners, and getting
-no response (for Fairfax had said that the Diggers
-were to be left to “the Gentlemen of the County
-and the Law of the Land”), publishes an appeal to
-the House of Commons against his arrest for trespass
-by the Lords of Manors in Surrey. The<span class="pagenum" id="Page_300">300</span>
-House of Commons, occupied with State matters,
-turned an indifferent ear to Winstanley’s complaint,
-and the leader of the Diggers sent a “Watchword
-to the City of London and the Army,” telling the
-wrongs the Diggers suffered at the hands of the
-law for “digging upon the barren common”—how
-they were mulcted in damages at £10 a man, with
-costs at twenty-nine shillings and a penny, and taken
-in execution, and how their cows were seized by the
-bailiffs. At the end of November the very huts
-they had built were pulled down, and it was a hard
-winter for the little colony still left on St. George’s
-Hill.</p>
-
-<p>Winstanley does not merely relate his injuries in
-these publications, he is all the time urging that his
-plan for setting people upon the common lands is
-the needful thing in England, that a common ownership
-of land is God’s will, and that the crown lands
-taken by the Normans must revert to the people on
-the execution of the king.</p>
-
-<p>In the spring of 1650 an attempt was made to
-extend the digging propaganda—for the planting of
-St. George’s Hill was doomed—and some of Winstanley’s
-disciples made a tour through the counties
-of Middlesex, Bedford, Hertford, Huntingdon, and
-Northampton, settling down at last on some waste
-ground near Wellingborough. Here they were
-very soon arrested by a local justice of the peace,
-the Council of State ordered their prosecution, and
-the movement was suppressed.</p>
-
-<p>To the Council of State these Diggers were
-“Levellers,”<a id="FNanchor_127" href="#Footnote_127" class="fnanchor">127</a> “intruders upon other men’s properties,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_301">301</span>
-“seditious and tumultuous,” against whom the
-public peace must be preserved.</p>
-
-<p>Of Winstanley’s future, when the days of the
-digging were over, nothing seems to be known.
-Only one pamphlet is issued by him after 1650—“The
-Law of Freedom in a Platform; or, True
-Magistracy Restored”—an open letter to Oliver
-Cromwell, February, 1652. With this final manifesto
-on the land question, and on the whole social
-question, as he saw it, Gerrard Winstanley disappears
-from history. In the multitude of prophets
-and preachers, visionaries and practical reformers of
-the Commonwealth, Winstanley is little heeded by
-his contemporaries. The importance of his mission
-is seen more clearly to-day, when statesmen, politicians,
-and philanthropists all urge agrarian changes
-and the excellence of land culture.</p>
-
-<p>As to Winstanley’s claim on behalf of the people
-to the common lands, the advantage of possession
-of these lands was realized by the landowners in
-the eighteenth century, and from 1760 to 1830 more
-than a thousand acts of parliament were passed for
-enclosing these lands.<a id="FNanchor_128" href="#Footnote_128" class="fnanchor">128</a></p>
-
-<p>In “The Diggers Song,” (of unknown authorship<a id="FNanchor_129" href="#Footnote_129" class="fnanchor">129</a>),
-the outlook of Winstanley and his followers is
-expressed in popular form:</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">You noble Diggers all, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">You noble Diggers all, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The waste land to maintain, seeing Cavaliers by name,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Your digging do disdain; and persons all defame.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, stand up now.</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_302">302</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Your houses they pull down, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Your houses they pull down, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Your houses they pull down to fright poor men in town,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But the Gentry must come down, and the poor shall wear the crown.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">With spades, and hoes, and plowes, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">With spades, and hoes, and plowes, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Your freedom to uphold, seeing Cavaliers are bold</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To kill you if they could, and rights from you withhold.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Their self-will is their law, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Their self-will is their law, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Since tyranny came in, they count it now no sin</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To make a gaol a gin, to starve poor men therein.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, stand up now.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Gentry are all round, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The Gentry are all round, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Gentry are all round, on each side they are found,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Their wisdoms so profound to cheat us of our ground.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, stand up now.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The Lawyers they conjoin, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To arrest you they advise, such fury they devise,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The devil in them lies, and hath blinded both their eyes.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, stand up now.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Clergy they come in, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The Clergy they come in, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Clergy they come in, and say it is a sin</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">That we should now begin our freedom for to win.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The tithes they yet will have, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The tithes they yet will have, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The tithes they yet will have, and Lawyers their fees crave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And this they say is brave, to make the poor their slave.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div><span class="pagenum" id="Page_303">303</span>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">’Gainst Lawyers and ’gainst Priests, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">’Gainst Lawyers and ’gainst Priests, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For tyrants they are both, even flat against their oath,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To grant us they are loath, free meat, and drink and cloth.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The club is all their law, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The club is all their law, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The club is all their law, to keep poor men in awe,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">But they no vision saw, to maintain such a law.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now, stand up now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The Cavaliers are foes, stand up now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Cavaliers are foes, themselves they do disclose</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By verses, not in prose, to please the singing boys.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Stand up now, Diggers all!</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">To conquer them by love, come in now, come in now,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">To conquer them by love, come in now;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">To conquer them by love, as it does you behove,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For He is King above, no Power is like to Love.</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Glory here, Diggers all.</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_14">Major Cartwright<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">“The Father of Reform”</span>
-
-<span class="subhead">1775–1824</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: <cite>Life and Correspondence of Major
-Cartwright</cite>, edited by his Niece, 1826; <cite>A Memoir of
-John Cartwright the Reformer</cite>, 1831; <cite>The Times</cite>, September
-25th, 1824; Graham Wallas—<cite>Francis Place</cite>.</p>
-
-<div id="ip_307" class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/i_p306.jpg" width="1516" height="1840" alt="" />
- <div class="caption"><p>MAJOR CARTWRIGHT</p>
-
-<p>(<cite>From a Contemporary Drawing.</cite>)</p></div></div>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_307">307</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">MAJOR CARTWRIGHT<br />
-“THE FATHER OF REFORM”
-<span class="subhead">1775–1824.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> substance of Major Cartwright’s life is
-told on the pedestal beneath his statue in
-the dingy garden of Burton Crescent, to
-the south of Euston Road, in London.</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p class="center large wspace">JOHN CARTWRIGHT,</p>
-
-<p class="center">Born 28th September, 1740. Died 23rd September, 1824.</p>
-
-<p class="in0">The Firm, Consistent and Persevering Advocate of <em>Universal
-Suffrage</em>, Equal Representation, Vote by Ballot and Annual
-Parliaments.</p>
-
-<p class="in0">He was the first English Writer who openly maintained the
-Independence of the United States of America, and although
-his distinguished merits as a Naval Officer in 1776 presented
-the most flattering Prospects of Professional Advancement,
-yet he nobly refused to draw his Sword against the Rising
-Liberties of an oppressed and struggling People.</p>
-
-<p class="in0">In Grateful Commemoration of his inflexible integrity, exalted
-Patriotism, “profound Constitutional Knowledge,” and in sincere
-admiration of the unblemished Virtues of his Private Life,</p>
-
-<p class="center larger">THIS STATUE</p>
-
-<p class="center">was erected by Public Subscription near the spot where he
-closed his useful and meritorious career.</p></div>
-
-<p>There is nothing false or exaggerated in this
-epitaph. Fox, in the House of Commons, testified
-to Cartwright’s “profound constitutional knowledge.”
-Hazlitt, who never met Cartwright, classed<span class="pagenum" id="Page_308">308</span>
-him with the men of one idea (and lingered over the
-subject), but the charge is ill-founded. It is true that
-for nearly fifty years, in season and out of season,
-Cartwright, a pupil of Locke in politics, contended
-publicly for annual parliaments and manhood suffrage,
-claiming personality and not property as the
-ground for enfranchisement, and insisting that while
-the right of the rich and the poor to the vote was
-equal, the need of the latter was far greater. But
-this agitation was by no means the limit either of his
-ideas or his activities.</p>
-
-<p>Entering the navy at eighteen, John Cartwright,
-who came of an old Nottingham family, devised
-improvements in the gun service, and, made a lieutenant,
-was marked for high promotion. The revolt
-of the American colonies cut short his professional
-career. An innate love of liberty compelled the
-young naval officer to side with the colonists, and he
-writes in 1776 that it is a mistaken notion that the
-planting of colonies and the extending of empire are
-necessarily the same things. Self-governing colonies,
-he declares, bound to England only by “the ties of
-blood and mutual interests, by sincere love and
-friendship, which abhors dependence, and by
-every other cementing principle which hath power
-to take hold of the human heart,” are to be
-desired.</p>
-
-<p>Lord Howe put Cartwright’s principles to the test
-by inviting him to join the expedition against the
-Americans, and Cartwright, who was “passionately
-attached to the navy,” and had an immense admiration
-for Howe, could only answer that he was unable
-to take part in a war he thought unjust. With this
-refusal his naval services were ended, in spite of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_309">309</span>
-Howe’s quiet and dignified reply that “opinions in
-politics are to be treated like opinions in religion.”
-(No word of reproach came from Howe, no taunt of
-want of courage or lack of patriotism.)</p>
-
-<p>Cartwright never condemned all war. He urged
-in a letter to a nephew in the army that the answer
-to the question of the justice or injustice of a war
-decided whether justifiable homicide or wilful murder
-was committed by those engaged in battle. He
-hated standing armies and barracks and barrack life,
-and all the pomp and glory of militarism, as heartily
-as he hated the attempt to coerce the colonists. But
-no sooner was he out of the navy than, with a major’s
-commission, he at once set to work to train the Nottinghamshire
-militia, only retiring from this post in
-1791 when the government cancelled his appointment
-for attending a meeting called to celebrate the
-fall of the Bastille.</p>
-
-<p>The militia in Cartwright’s view was strictly a
-citizen army for home defence. “The militia,” he
-wrote, “by its institution is not intended to spread
-the dominion or to vindicate in war the honour of
-the crown, but it is to preserve our laws and liberties,
-and therein to secure the existence of the State.”
-Thirteen years before the fall of the Bastille Major
-Cartwright had the cap of liberty displayed on the
-banners and engraved on the buttons of the Nottinghamshire
-Militia. A greater service than providing
-symbols of liberty was rendered to the army by
-Cartwright in the matter of better clothing for the
-men. The misery endured by ill-clad sentries
-aroused his compassion and indignation, and Cartwright
-worried the government until it provided
-great-coats for all private soldiers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_310">310</span></p>
-
-<p>The humaner courage is as conspicuous in John
-Cartwright’s long life as his political enthusiasm.</p>
-
-<p>Four times he risked his life to save others from
-drowning, rescuing two men from the Trent, a naval
-officer at sea, and, in late middle-life, a small boy
-who had fallen into the New River, near London.
-In the year 1800, hearing of a riot planned at
-Sheffield, Cartwright made his way alone to the
-barn where the conspirators were assembled, and
-stayed all night, reasoning with them against their
-project. In the morning the confederates, dissuaded
-from violence, quietly dispersed, and the riot was
-prevented.</p>
-
-<p>An untiring advocacy of democratic politics earned
-for Cartwright, justly, the title of “The Father of
-Reform.” He was the real founder of that movement
-for political reform, which in the nineteenth
-century swept away rotten boroughs, gave representation
-to all towns of importance, and extended
-the franchise to the great bulk of male householders
-in town and country; which to-day presses towards
-a general suffrage for men and women.</p>
-
-<p>Major Cartwright began his speeches and
-pamphlets on behalf of political reform in 1776,
-just after his retirement from the navy, and his
-acceptance of the commission in the militia.</p>
-
-<p>The ideas of the French Encyclopædists, the
-writings of Rousseau, and the revolt of the American
-colonists, had aroused a belief in social equality,
-and the “natural” rights of man, and this belief
-Cartwright championed till his death. His early
-pamphlets, beginning with “Legislative Rights of
-the Commonalty Vindicated,” (1777) are heavy
-reading to-day, but in them Cartwright argued for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_311">311</span>
-all the famous “six points” of the People’s Charter
-of fifty years later—Universal Manhood Suffrage,
-Annual Parliaments, Vote by Ballot, Abolition of
-Property Qualification for Parliamentary Candidates,
-Payment of Members, and Equal Electoral Districts.
-He even uses the modern phrase in urging “one
-man one vote.”</p>
-
-<p>Unlike Thomas Paine, and many of the “Radical
-Reformers,” Cartwright pleads for political democracy
-as the natural outcome of the Christian faith, maintaining
-that “No man can have a right sense and
-belief of Christianity who denies the equality of all
-conditions of men.” Incidentally, challenged on the
-point of why not Votes for Women? Cartwright
-could only fall back on certain passages in the
-Bible to justify his objection to Women’s Enfranchisement.
-Nothing was more abhorrent to his
-mind than the notion that government was a matter
-for “experts,” an exclusive affair for persons with
-specially trained intelligences. “Of all the errors
-to which mankind have ever submitted their understandings,”
-he wrote, “there is no one to be more
-lamented than that of conceiving the business of
-civil government to be above the comprehension of
-ordinary capacities.”</p>
-
-<p>The poor, because of their very poverty, had a
-need for the vote and for parliamentary representation
-which the man of property could not experience.
-This Cartwright emphasised in a petition he presented
-to the House of Commons as late as 1820:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-
-<p>And when your Honourable House shall further consider
-that the humblest mortal on earth is equally a co-heir of an
-immortality with the most exalted who now wears stars, or
-coronets, or crowns, your petitioner hopes that your Honourable<span class="pagenum" id="Page_312">312</span>
-House will rise superior to the mean thoughts and vulgar
-prejudices of the uncharitable among the wealthy, the ignorant,
-the interested, the vain, and the proud; and will acknowledge
-that, in reference to the respective claims of legislative representation
-by the poor and the rich, the poor have equal right
-but far more need.</p></div>
-
-<p>Enthusiasm and an entirely disinterested zeal for
-democracy kept the spirit of youth in Cartwright,
-and carried him at the age of 80 over a trial for
-sedition undisturbed. His zeal was not to be
-quenched. “Moderation in practice may be commendable,”
-he declared, “but moderation in principle
-is detestable. Can we trust a man who is moderately
-honest, or esteem a woman who is moderately
-virtuous?”</p>
-
-<p>This very allegiance to principle had its drawbacks
-in the world of practical politics, of corruption
-and compromise. Three times Major Cartwright
-stood for parliament: for the county of Nottingham
-in 1780, for Boston in 1806 and 1807; and on each
-occasion he was at the bottom of the poll. His
-nominations for Westminster in 1818 and 1819
-received no serious support at all. The old major
-was no more distressed by any feeling of personal
-disappointment at these defeats than he was cast
-down at seeing no signs of the triumph of political
-democracy in his lifetime. At eighty-four we find
-him writing cheerfully, “To despair in a good cause
-is to approach towards atheism.”</p>
-
-<p>Cartwright did not live to see the passage of the
-great Reform Bill of 1832. Wilkes’ motion for
-reform in 1776 had been negatived in the House of
-Commons without a division. In 1780 the Duke
-of Richmond’s motion in the House of Lords for<span class="pagenum" id="Page_313">313</span>
-manhood suffrage and annual parliaments was
-mocked by the outbreak of the Gordon (“No
-Popery”) Riots in London on the very day the
-motion was made. Pitt’s third and last effort for
-parliamentary reform was rejected in 1785. The
-French Revolution turned men’s minds in Great
-Britain towards democracy, but reaction followed
-hard on the Terror in Paris, and for a time a
-government terror crushed every expression in
-favour of political liberty in England. Sir Francis
-Burdett became the parliamentary leader of the
-“radical reformers” early in the nineteenth century,
-and in 1809 found fifteen supporters in the House of
-Commons. Ten years later the government, in the
-face of a strong working-class movement for political
-reform, brought out the military against the people
-at a peaceful meeting held at Peterloo, near Manchester,
-and followed this up by six repressive acts
-of parliament, and a general prosecution of the
-leaders of the reform agitation.</p>
-
-<p>Cartwright was eighty when, with several friends, he
-was charged “with being a malicious, seditious, evil-minded
-person, and with unlawfully and maliciously
-intending and designing to raise disaffection and
-discontent in the minds of his majesty’s subjects.”</p>
-
-<p>All England knew that Major Cartwright was a
-single-minded and high-principled man, in whose
-heart was neither guile nor malice, a man who had
-proved his loyalty and patriotism over and over
-again, and was no more seditious than he was evil-minded
-or disaffected. Apart from his advocacy of
-political reform and his services to the militia, Cartwright
-had done much for farming and agriculture,
-he had helped Clarkson and Wilberforce in their<span class="pagenum" id="Page_314">314</span>
-anti-slavery work, and he had called the attention
-of the government, as loudly as he could, to the
-defenceless state of the east coast against foreign
-invasion. Yet in 1820 a British jury, obedient
-to the orders of a political judge, found John
-Cartwright guilty of “maliciously intending and
-designing to raise disaffection and discontent,” and
-a fine of £100 was inflicted.</p>
-
-<p>Francis Place, the radical tailor of Charing Cross,
-in whose shop the later Chartists and Reformers were
-to be found, gives his impression of Major Cartwright
-as he knew him in old age:</p>
-
-<p>“When he was in town he used frequently to sup
-with me, eating some raisins he brought in his pocket,
-and drinking weak gin and water. He was cheerful,
-agreeable, and full of curious anecdote. He was,
-however, in political matters exceedingly troublesome
-and sometimes as exceedingly absurd. He
-had read but little, or to little purpose, and knew
-nothing of general principles. He entertained a
-vague and absurd notion of the political arrangements
-of the Anglo-Saxons, and sincerely believed
-that these semi-barbarians were not only a political
-people, but that their ‘twofold polity,’ arms-bearing
-and representation, were universal and perfect.”<a id="FNanchor_130" href="#Footnote_130" class="fnanchor">130</a></p>
-
-<p>To Place, chief political wire-puller of his age,
-industrious and persistent in getting things done,
-with a typical cockney politician’s scorn of disinterested
-enthusiasm, Major Cartwright appeared
-“troublesome” and “absurd”—Francis Place had
-quite an honest liking for the “old gentleman,” as
-he called him, all the same. By the government
-Cartwright stood convicted as a “seditious, evil-minded<span class="pagenum" id="Page_315">315</span>
-person.” Posterity is content to know
-John Cartwright by the title his contemporaries
-conferred upon him—the Father of Reform—and
-to rank him as the foremost man in England in
-the eighteenth century to raise the standard of
-Political Democracy.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 id="hdr_15">Ernest Jones and Chartism<br />
-
-<span class="subhead">1838–1854</span></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p><span class="smcap">Authorities</span>: R. G. Gamage—<cite>History of the Chartist
-Movement</cite>; Thos. Frost—<cite>Forty Years’ Recollections</cite>;
-Ernest Charles Jones—<cite>Songs of Democracy</cite>; Graham
-Wallas—<cite>Life of Francis Place</cite>; J. A. Hobson—<cite>Ernest
-Jones</cite>, in <cite>Dictionary of National Biography</cite>; <cite>The Times</cite>,
-Jan. 27, 29; Mar. 31, 1869.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_319">319</span></p>
-
-<h3 class="left">ERNEST JONES AND<br />
-CHARTISM
-<span class="subhead">1838–1854.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">The</span> Chartist agitation was at once the
-largest, the most revolutionary, and the
-least successful of all the serious political
-movements of the first half of the nineteenth
-century. For ten years, with varying
-fortune, it threatened the authority of parliament,
-and then slowly expired—destroyed by its own
-internal weakness and the quarrels of its leaders
-rather than by the repression of the government.</p>
-
-<p>The failure of the great Reform Act of 1832 to
-accomplish any particular improvement in the lot of
-the mass of working people brought the Chartist
-movement to life,<a id="FNanchor_131" href="#Footnote_131" class="fnanchor">131</a> and roused the politically minded
-leaders of the workmen to agitate for changes in the
-constitution that would place political power in the
-hands of the whole people.</p>
-
-<p>The six points of the Charter, embodied in the
-“People’s Charter” drawn up by Francis Place and
-Lovett in 1838, revived the old programme of
-Major Cartwright and, in substance, the earlier
-demands of John Lilburne and the Levellers.
-Universal manhood suffrage, the ballot, payment of
-members of parliament, equal electoral districts,<span class="pagenum" id="Page_320">320</span>
-abolition of property qualification for members, and
-annual parliaments, these were the “six points” of
-the Charter, the platform of its advocates, and for
-ten years the hope of multitudes of earnest and
-devoted men and women.</p>
-
-<p>Francis Place and the Working-Men’s Association
-which gave Chartism its name and programme
-never had any considerable voice in its direction.<a id="FNanchor_132" href="#Footnote_132" class="fnanchor">132</a></p>
-
-<p>Feargus O’Connor, who had sat in parliament
-from 1832 to 1835 for an Irish constituency, was
-from the first the real leader of the movement. His
-personality and his rhetorical powers roused the
-manufacturing districts in the North and the
-Midlands to form political unions for the Charter in
-1838, and his presence dominated the first Convention,
-held in London, with Lovett for its
-secretary. Later, O’Connor’s obvious weaknesses,
-his vanity and egotism, his want of self-control and
-that “one fatal disqualification for a leader of
-revolt—the fear of the police”<a id="FNanchor_133" href="#Footnote_133" class="fnanchor">133</a>—left leadership in
-his hands, but left him a leader without followers.</p>
-
-<p>Next to O’Connor stood another Irish orator,
-James Bronterre O’Brien, a man of finer character,
-and clearer head, but smaller gifts of command.</p>
-
-<p>South Wales, the manufacturing districts of
-Lancashire and Yorkshire, and towns like Birmingham,
-Leicester, and Northampton, were the strongholds
-of Chartism, and “in the dark days of the late
-thirties and early forties it was a real and dangerous
-power.”<a id="FNanchor_134" href="#Footnote_134" class="fnanchor">134</a> Feargus O’Connor never advocated an
-armed rising, and advised the abandonment of the
-huge torchlight processions; but pikes were being<span class="pagenum" id="Page_321">321</span>
-fashioned and men were being drilled in preparation
-for a revolution that was to end the Whig rule, and
-give the working classes the reins of government.
-The circulation of the <i>Northern Star</i>, O’Connor’s
-weekly paper, stood at 50,000 in those days.</p>
-
-<p>Riots at Newport (Monmouth) and Birmingham
-in 1839, followed by several arrests and imprisonments
-of the Chartist leaders the following year,
-ended for the time all notions of a successful
-revolution. Lord John Russell declared strongly
-against manhood suffrage when the question was
-raised in the House of Commons, and on a division
-in the House the petition for the Charter was rejected
-by 237 to 48 votes.</p>
-
-<p>The outbreak at Birmingham, provoked, in the
-first place, by the interference of a body of London
-police with an orderly meeting in the Bull Ring,
-was put down in two days by the soldiers; but not
-till many houses had been attacked and a considerable
-amount of property destroyed. No robberies
-or petty thefts accompanied the riot.</p>
-
-<p>At Newport the harsh prison treatment of Vincent,
-a Chartist advocate, convicted for what was held to
-be a political offence, brought a crowd of 10,000
-men, led by Frost, William, and Jones, to demand
-his release. The insurgents had a few rifles and
-pikes, but were generally unarmed, and the fire of
-the military soon overpowered them. But lives
-were lost on both sides, and Frost and his two
-lieutenants were sentenced to death, though the
-sentence was at once reduced to transportation for
-life, and some years later to simple banishment from
-British dominions.</p>
-
-<p>Feargus O’Connor, Bronterre O’Brien, and all the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_322">322</span>
-chief speakers of the movement were brought to
-trial for seditious utterance in 1840, and in most
-cases sent to prison either for twelve months or two
-years.</p>
-
-<p>With these imprisonments and the general election
-of 1841 came the first serious disintegration of the
-Chartist movement.<a id="FNanchor_135" href="#Footnote_135" class="fnanchor">135</a> O’Brien and O’Connor differed
-vigorously on the question of election policy, and
-before they were released from prison were expressing
-their opinions in the <i>Northern Star</i>. O’Connor,
-full of wrath at the repressive treatment meted out
-to Chartists by the Whig Government, was for
-attacking the Whigs at the election, and O’Brien
-objected to this as a pro-Tory policy.<a id="FNanchor_136" href="#Footnote_136" class="fnanchor">136</a></p>
-
-<p>The decision to run independent Chartist candidates
-for parliament in certain constituencies, and
-the failure of these candidates to get returned on
-the limited franchise of 1832, increased disunion in
-the Chartist ranks and brought demoralisation.</p>
-
-<p>To make matters worse for the movement, several
-prominent Chartists left prison with fresh notions
-and ideas of reform, which had come to them in
-their long hours of solitude and reflection. Lovett,
-imprisoned in connection with the Birmingham riot,
-though he was entirely innocent of giving any
-encouragement to violence, on his release was full
-of vast plans for national education, convinced that<span class="pagenum" id="Page_323">323</span>
-education must precede political democracy. Vincent
-had become a strong temperance advocate, and
-henceforth must give himself to the work of a
-teetotal lecturer. Other men were for bringing in
-religion by “Chartist Churches.”<a id="FNanchor_137" href="#Footnote_137" class="fnanchor">137</a> Antagonism to
-the anti-corn law league of Cobden and Bright,
-and later his own “National Land Company” experiments,
-withdrew Feargus O’Connor from actual
-Chartist propaganda.</p>
-
-<p>The movement languished. But in spite of
-government repression, the indifference of parliament,
-the hostility of the wealthier classes, and its
-own jarring elements of discord, Chartism was not
-dead.<a id="FNanchor_138" href="#Footnote_138" class="fnanchor">138</a></p>
-
-<p>The misery of the English people kept it from
-death. With one in every eleven of the industrial
-population a pauper in 1842, general satisfaction with
-the state of government was impossible for men of
-strong social sympathies. Some exerted themselves,
-like Sadler and Oastler, in following Lord Shaftesbury’s
-entirely disinterested and successful crusade
-against the horrors of factory oppression. Others
-supported the Free Trade agitation.</p>
-
-<p>To one man, Ernest Jones, it seemed, in 1845,
-that before all else must come political enfranchisement,
-that the social miseries and discontents of<span class="pagenum" id="Page_324">324</span>
-England were not to be cured save by the people
-of England. The evils might be mitigated by
-ameliorative legislation, but it was not enough that
-the decencies of life—then very far beyond the
-reach of the mass of town and country labourers—should
-be secured for people; the main thing
-was that people should have freedom to work out
-their own industrial salvation.</p>
-
-<p>So in 1846, Ernest Jones plunged boldly into
-Chartism. He quickly became a leader, and his
-reputation has endured: for Ernest Jones was the
-most respected, single-minded, and steadfast of the
-many who sat in Chartist conventions. Chartism
-for him was the cry of the uncared-for, because
-voteless, multitudes, and Ernest Jones was ready to
-give his life that the cry should move the rulers of
-the nation.</p>
-
-<p>It was a bad time for England in 1846,
-that was plain,<a id="FNanchor_139" href="#Footnote_139" class="fnanchor">139</a> and Ernest Jones, believing with
-the average Englishman that in politics lay the key
-to necessary change, was henceforth a Chartist
-advocate and till his death the faithful preacher of
-democracy. Without becoming a socialist, Ernest
-Jones, in his “Songs of Democracy” and in his
-speeches and newspaper writings, is clear that
-political enfranchisement was but the high road to
-social and economic reform, that the Charter was
-to bring a better distribution of wealth as the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_325">325</span>
-consequence of a better distribution of political
-power.<a id="FNanchor_140" href="#Footnote_140" class="fnanchor">140</a></p>
-
-<p>Ernest Jones was twenty-seven when he joined
-the Chartist movement. The son of an army
-officer—who had been equerry to the Duke of
-Cumberland—and educated on the continent,
-Ernest Jones came to England when he was
-nineteen, and was duly presented to Queen Victoria
-(as Robert Owen had been) by Lord Melbourne
-in 1841. He married a Miss Atherley, of Cumberland,
-and settled down in London, writing
-novels, verses, and newspaper articles. In 1844
-he was called to the Bar, and two years later
-took the step which separated him from the friends
-and acquaintances of his social order, and placed
-him on the hard and strenuous road of the political
-agitator.</p>
-
-<p>Averse from faction, realising the fatal folly of
-internal jealousies and strife, and alive to the importance
-of discipline in the army of revolt, Ernest
-Jones did his best to work with O’Connor—and was
-naturally charged with cowardice by the Chartists
-who hated O’Connor’s supremacy. In 1847 he
-began writing in the <i>Northern Star</i>, and was joint
-editor with O’Connor of <i>The Labourer</i>. His
-“Songs of Democracy” were to the Chartists what
-Ebenezer Elliott’s “Corn-Law Rhymes” were to
-the Free Traders, and his “Song of the Lower<span class="pagenum" id="Page_326">326</span>
-Classes” has retained a place in the song-books of
-social democrats to our own day.</p>
-
-<p>At the general election of 1847, when, to everybody’s
-astonishment, Feargus O’Connor was elected
-member for Nottingham, Ernest Jones stood for
-Halifax, but though immensely popular at the
-hustings, he only polled 280 votes.</p>
-
-<p>1848, the memorable year of revolutions abroad,
-saw Chartism once more a formidable movement
-in England. An enormous petition was again
-prepared for parliament, and the Chartists decided
-to carry the petition to the House of Commons
-after a mass meeting on Kennington Common on
-April 10th. Lord John Russell and his Whig
-government became thoroughly alarmed. The
-Duke of Wellington, as commander-in-chief, undertook
-to guard the safety of London, and garrisoned
-the city with troops, and protected the bridges,
-while 70,000 special constables (of whom Prince
-Louis Napoleon was one) were quickly enrolled.
-But on the government prohibition of any procession
-to Westminster, Feargus O’Connor at once
-decided against any collision between the people
-and the authorities. The mass meeting was held,
-some 50,000 persons were present, and O’Connor
-and Ernest Jones made speeches. Then the
-petition was sent off in a cab to parliament, and all
-was over.</p>
-
-<p>O’Connor had boasted that the monster petition
-contained 5,000,000 signatures, but on investigation
-it was found that the signatures only amounted to
-1,975,496, and many of these were duplicates and
-forgeries. Anti-Chartists had signed in several
-places, using ridiculous names, like “Pugnose,”<span class="pagenum" id="Page_327">327</span>
-“Punch,” and “Fubbs,” or boldly signing as
-“Queen Victoria” and “Duke of Wellington.”<a id="FNanchor_141" href="#Footnote_141" class="fnanchor">141</a>
-Parliament gladly took advantage of O’Connor’s
-characteristic exaggeration to discredit the whole
-movement. At the same time the government
-hastily prepared a bill to suppress the renewed
-agitation, and the “Treason Felony” bill was passed,
-making “open and advised speaking with seditious
-intent” a crime. This clause in the act only remained
-on the statute book for two years, but it was
-sufficient for securing the conviction of all prominent
-Chartist speakers.</p>
-
-<p>Ernest Jones, unlike Feargus O’Connor, believed
-that the people should arm, and that a display of
-force was necessary for carrying the Charter. The
-failure of April 10th strengthened this belief, and
-for the next two months he was busy speaking in
-England and Scotland, urging the necessity for
-enrolling a national guard and forming a provisional
-government.</p>
-
-<p>But in spite of great public meetings the movement
-was already breaking up. The Chartist
-Convention, which met in London on May 1st,
-dissolved on May 13th in hopeless disagreement, and
-Ernest Jones, who had attended as a member of
-the executive committee, exclaimed that “amid the
-desertion of friends, and the invasion of enemies,
-the fusee had been trampled out, and the elements
-of their energy were scattered to the winds of
-heaven.” Still he tried to rally the broken ranks,
-and the government decided that the time had come
-to put the movement down by means of the new<span class="pagenum" id="Page_328">328</span>
-“Treason Felony” Act. Feargus O’Connor, now
-a member, was no longer dangerous to the authorities.
-His attendance in the House kept him from
-the agitation in the country, and Ernest Jones was
-the man to be struck at.</p>
-
-<p>On May 29th and 30th Ernest Jones addressed
-great, but quite orderly, meetings in London, on
-Clerkenwell Green and Bishop Bonner’s Fields, and
-then proceeded to Manchester. Here he was arrested
-and put on trial with five other Chartists—Fussell,
-Sharpe, Williams, Vernon, and Looney. The
-judge had little patience for the prisoners, and
-Ernest Jones was frequently interrupted in his
-defence. In the end, he and his fellows were all
-found guilty of seditious speech, and Ernest Jones
-was sentenced to two years’ imprisonment, to find
-sureties, himself in £200 and two persons in £150,
-and to keep the peace for five years.</p>
-
-<p>A number of police spies procured many more
-arrests and convictions by gaining admission to
-Chartist meetings, joining Chartist unions and inciting
-the members to violent speech and an armed conspiracy.
-By these means at the end of the year
-1848 the government had succeeded in getting the
-prominent Chartists into prison, as it had done in
-1840. That Ernest Jones exhorted his followers to
-learn to bear arms is indisputable; that the success
-of the revolutionary movements on the continent
-encouraged the belief amongst a certain number of
-Chartists that an armed rising was desirable and
-could be successful in England is equally true. But
-as no serious attempt was made in 1848 by the
-“physical force” Chartists to organize such a rising,
-no rising took place, and “the conspiracy,” as it was<span class="pagenum" id="Page_329">329</span>
-called, was chiefly the work of the government’s
-police spies.</p>
-
-<p>The riots at Newport and Birmingham gave some
-excuse to the government for repression in 1839–40;
-in 1848 no outbreaks were even threatened to justify
-the sentences on Ernest Jones and other Chartist
-speakers. The government’s chief concern was to
-end the agitation, even if this could only be accomplished
-by means of a special act of parliament, and
-the unsavoury methods of <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">agents provocateurs</i>. Lord
-John Russell and his Whig colleagues were not the
-men to be kept from their purpose by any nice
-discrimination in the choice of weapons. It was not
-the time, when crowns were falling on the continent,
-to hesitate about crushing a movement which seemed
-to menace public safety in England. That the
-strength of Chartism was in the sober, law-abiding
-character of most of its adherents the government
-knew no more than they knew that the movement
-was already doomed for want of cohesion.</p>
-
-<p>The bitter hostility of the government pursued
-Ernest Jones in prison, and left him to be treated as
-a common felon. Ordered to pick oakum he refused,
-and was put on a diet of bread and water. The
-struggle between the prisoner and his gaolers was at
-last brought before the House of Commons,<a id="FNanchor_142" href="#Footnote_142" class="fnanchor">142</a> and in
-the end Ernest Jones was allowed to purchase
-exemption from the allotted prison tasks by a small
-payment of money.</p>
-
-<p>On his release from prison the Chartist movement
-was flickering out. It was impossible to work with
-O’Connor, who, now looking favourably on household
-suffrage, was already failing in health and showing<span class="pagenum" id="Page_330">330</span>
-signs of the insanity which possessed him two years
-later. The trade-union movement and the co-operative
-store were attracting the attention of
-intelligent workmen, to whom for the time political
-enfranchisement seemed a lost cause. Contesting
-Halifax in 1852, Ernest Jones only polled 52 votes,
-and the <i>People’s Paper</i>, which he started in that
-year and edited, never had the success of the
-<i>Northern Star</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Feargus O’Connor was led away from the House
-of Commons hopelessly insane, to die in 1855, and
-Chartism utterly disintegrated could not be revived
-by Ernest Jones. In 1854 the movement was
-extinct, and from that time till his death Ernest
-Jones gave his political support to the advanced
-Radicals. He contested Nottingham in 1853 and
-1857, but without success, returned to his old
-practice at the Bar, and wrote novels and poems.
-In 1868, the year of household suffrage in the towns,
-he was adopted by the Radicals as parliamentary
-candidate for Manchester, and then on January 26,
-1869, came a sudden failure of the heart, and death
-ended all earthly hopes and plans for Ernest Jones.
-He was just fifty when he died, and though Chartism
-had passed away, Ernest Jones had not outlived his
-usefulness or his popularity with all those who believed
-in the ultimate triumph of democracy, and he
-had gained the respect of many earlier foes.</p>
-
-<p>The People’s Charter remains unfulfilled, but two
-of its points have long been granted—the ballot,
-and the abolition of a property qualification for
-members of parliament. Annual parliaments are no
-longer desired by any section of political reformers,
-the extension of the franchise to the agricultural<span class="pagenum" id="Page_331">331</span>
-labourer in 1884 brought manhood suffrage appreciably
-nearer, equal electoral districts were never
-more than a plan of quite reasonable political
-theorists, and the demand for payment of members,
-never altogether dropped by Radicals, is once more
-heard in the land.</p>
-
-<p>The great contention of Ernest Jones and the
-Chartists that political liberty should precede the
-granting of reforms by parliament, that the people
-should have the power to control and direct the
-deliberations of parliaments still has its advocates;
-but government is passing—almost unnoticed—once
-more into the hands of an executive, for that “eternal
-vigilance” which is the price of political liberty is
-oftentimes relaxed.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum" id="Page_335">335</span></p>
-<h2 id="CONCLUSION">Conclusion</h2>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<h3 class="left">CONCLUSION</h3>
-
-<p class="drop-cap"><span class="firstword">Two</span> political movements may be noted
-to-day in Great Britain by all who are
-interested in such things: the Labour
-movement and the Women’s movement
-for political enfranchisement.</p>
-
-<p>The efforts of the past twenty-five years to
-establish a separate socialist party in parliament
-have not been directly successful, but the Labour
-Party has managed to return a group of some thirty
-workmen to the House of Commons, and these
-men are the responsible and trusted leaders of the
-trade-unions and the Independent Labour Party.
-Without requiring any formal acknowledgment of
-socialist belief, the Labour Party is largely inspired
-by socialist teaching, and its goal is the conquest
-of government by the labouring people, and a
-more even distribution of wealth by the gradual
-expropriation of the landlord and the capitalist.
-While adhering strictly to constitutional methods of
-agitation, giving full respect to the procedure of
-parliament and the legal conduct of elections, the
-leaders of the Labour Party, in their speeches at
-public meetings, use much of the old revolutionary
-talk of John Ball and Robert Ket, and the arguments
-of Winstanley for the popular ownership of
-the land. To the Labour Party as to the Chartists
-democratic politics are but a stepping-stone to social
-reform, and as in the days of the Chartists the<span class="pagenum" id="Page_336">336</span>
-strength of the Labour Party is in the industrial
-districts of the North of England, and in South
-Wales.</p>
-
-<p>The Women’s movement, on the other hand, while
-demanding nothing but the right to the franchise,
-and claiming this right to a voice in the affairs of
-the State on the old constitutional ground of Pym
-and Hampden—that those who pay direct taxation
-to the government must have some political control
-of the expenditure—boldly avows in the face of
-government refusal the necessity for revolutionary
-methods to acquire the franchise. More than 600
-women have gone to prison in the last four years in
-the cause of Women’s Suffrage, and the methods
-adopted have startled the public, created an enthusiasm,
-and generally aroused the attention of a
-formerly indifferent parliament to the claim of
-women to political enfranchisement.</p>
-
-<p>Mary Wollstonecraft, in her <cite>Vindication of the
-Rights of Women</cite>, published in 1792, struck the
-first note of this movement. In the latter half of
-the nineteenth century it received the support of
-John Stuart Mill and a certain number of parliamentary
-radicals, and Women’s Suffrage societies
-were formed. Then, five years ago, the Women’s
-Social and Political Union was started at Manchester
-by Mrs. Pankhurst and her daughter Miss Christabel
-Pankhurst, and the extraordinary energy and activity
-of this union and the daring and resource of its
-members have made the women’s demand for the
-vote a vital question in politics.</p>
-
-<p>Both these movements—the agitation of the
-Labour Party for a fuller and more abundant life
-for wage-earners, and the agitation of the women<span class="pagenum" id="Page_337">337</span>
-for political enfranchisement are proceeding in our
-midst—a guarantee that the centuries of struggle
-for freedom are not fruitless.</p>
-
-<p>“The battle of freedom is never done and the
-field never quiet,” and while ever sun and moon
-endure and man seeks to dominate his neighbour, so
-long in England shall men and women be found to
-resist such dominance. For “to meet such troubles
-and overcome them, or to die in strife with them—this
-is a great part of a man’s life.”</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center wspace larger"><span class="smcap">The End.<span class="pagenum" id="Page_339">339</span></span></p>
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="footnotes">
-<h2 class="nobreak left p1" id="FOOTNOTES">FOOTNOTES</h2>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="fnanchor">1</a> “By the mouth of the clergy spoke the voice of the helpless, defenceless
-multitudes who shared with them in the misery of living in a time
-when law was the feeblest and most untrustworthy stay of right, and
-men held everything at the mercy of masters, who had many desires
-and less scruples, were quickly and fiercely quarrelsome, impatient of
-control, superiority and quiet, and simply indifferent to the suffering,
-the fear, the waste that make bitter the days when society is enslaved
-to the terrible fascination of the sword.”—Church, <cite>Saint Anselm</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>“Unrestrained by religion, by principle or by policy, with no family
-interests to limit his greed, extravagance and hatred of his kind, a foul
-incarnation of selfishness in its most abhorrent form, the enemy of God
-and man, William Rufus gave to England and Christendom a pattern of
-absolutism.”—Stubbs, <cite>Constitutional History</cite>. Vol. I.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="fnanchor">2</a> No Archbishop of Canterbury has received the pallium since
-Cranmer, but the sign of it remains in the archiepiscopal arms of
-Canterbury.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="fnanchor">3</a> “No one in those days imagined Christianity without Christendom,
-and Christendom without a Pope: and all these bishops understood
-exactly as Anselm did the favourite papal text, ‘Thou art Peter, and on
-this rock I will build my Church.’ Nobody in those days doubted the
-divine authority of the Pope.”—Church, <cite>Saint Anselm</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="fnanchor">4</a> “The boldness of Anselm’s attitude not only broke the tradition
-of ecclesiastical servitude, but infused through the nation at large a new
-spirit of independence.”—J. R. Green.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="fnanchor">5</a> “When in Anglo-Norman times you speak of the ‘King’s Court,’
-it is only a phrase for the king’s despotism.”—Sir F. Palgrave, <cite>History
-of Normandy and England</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="fnanchor">6</a> “The see of St. Peter was the acknowledged constitutional centre of
-spiritual law in the West.... It was looked upon as the guide and
-regulator of teaching, the tribunal and court from which issued the
-oracles of right and discipline, the judgment seat to which an appeal
-was open to all, and which gave sentence on wrong and vice without
-fear or favour, without respect of persons, even the highest and the
-mightiest.... If ever there was a time when the popes honestly
-endeavoured to carry out the idea of their office, it was just at this
-period of the Middle Ages. They attempted to erect an independent
-throne of truth and justice above the passions and the force which
-reigned in the world around.”—Church, <cite>Saint Anselm</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>“Under the rule of William the Red, law had become unlaw, and in
-appealing from him to the apostolic throne Anselm might deem he was
-appealing from mere force and fraud to the only shadow of right that
-was still left on earth.”—Freeman, <cite>Norman Conquest</cite>, Vol. V.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="fnanchor">7</a> “In England Anselm had stood only for right and liberty; he, the
-chief witness for religion and righteousness, saw all round him vice
-rampant, men spoiled of what was their own—justice, decency, honour
-trampled under foot. Law was unknown, except to ensnare and
-oppress. The King’s Court was the instrument of one man’s selfish and
-cruel will, and of the devices of a cunning and greedy minister. The
-natural remedies of wrong were destroyed and corrupted; the king’s
-peace, the king’s law, the king’s justice, to which men in those days
-looked for help, could only be thought of in mocking contrast to the
-reality. Against this energetic reign of misrule and injustice, a resistance
-as energetic was wanted; and to resist it was felt to be the call
-and bounden duty of a man in Anselm’s place. He resisted, as was the
-way in those days, man to man, person to person, in outright fashion
-and plain-spoken words. He resisted lawlessness, wickedness, oppression,
-corruption. When others acquiesced in the evil state, he refused;
-and further, he taught a lesson which England has since largely learned,
-though in a very different way. He taught his generation to appeal
-from force and arbitrary will to law. It was idle to talk of appealing to
-law in England; its time had not yet come.”—Church, <cite>Saint Anselm</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="fnanchor">8</a> “No discipline restrained them (the king’s attendants); they plundered,
-they devastated, they destroyed. What they found in the houses
-which they invaded and could not consume, they took to market to sell
-for themselves or they burnt it. If it was liquor they would bathe the
-feet of their horses in it or pour it on the ground. It shames me to
-recall the cruelties they inflicted on the fathers of families and the
-insults on their wives and daughters. And so, whenever the king’s
-coming was known beforehand, people fled from their houses and hid
-themselves and their goods, as far as they could, in the woods or wherever
-safety might be found.”—Eadmer.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn1"><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="fnanchor">9</a> “If the Church had continued to buttress the thrones of the king’s
-whom it annointed, or if the struggle had terminated in an undivided
-victory, all Europe would have sunk down under a Byzantine or Muscovite
-despotism.”—Acton, <cite>History of Freedom in Christianity</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="fnanchor">10</a> “By the surrender of the significant ceremony of delivering the
-bishopric by the emblematic staff and ring, it was emphatically put on
-record that the spiritual powers of the bishop were not the king’s to
-give; the prescription of feudalism was broken.”—Church, <cite>Saint
-Anselm</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="fnanchor">11</a> “With regard to Thomas’ dealings with the Church, if one thing is
-clear it is this—that he was not in the least a man who pushed his Order
-at the expense of his loyalty. More than once he refused to listen to an
-ecclesiastical claim against the king, even when his old friend Theobald
-was behind it: he was perfectly impartial: he taxed churchmen as he
-taxed laymen, and in fact, so loyal and reasonable was he that Henry,
-when he made him archbishop, seems to have thought that he was wholly
-on his side. There were innumerable questions to be decided between
-Church and State. Again and again small points came up as to the
-appointment of this man or the other, as to the infliction or remission of
-a fine; and again and again Thomas decided the cause and advised the
-king on the merits of the case.... He was as zealous now for the
-State as he was for the Church afterwards. There he stood Chancellor
-of England; his business was to administer the laws, and he knew and
-did his business.”—R. H. Benson, <cite>St. Thomas of Canterbury</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="fnanchor">12</a> “The only instance which has occurred of the chancellorship being
-voluntarily resigned either by layman or ecclesiastic.”—Campbell,
-<cite>Lives of the Chancellors</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="fnanchor">13</a> “It must be held in mind that the archbisholp had on his side the
-Church or <em>Canon Law</em>, which he had sworn to obey, and certainly the
-law courts erred as much on the side of harshness and cruelty as those
-of the Church on that of foolish pity towards evil-doers.”—F. York Powell.</p>
-
-<p>“We have to take ourselves back to a state of society in which a
-judicial trial was a tournament, and the ordeal an approved substitute
-for evidence, to realise what civilization owes to the Canon Law and the
-canonists, with their elaborate system of written law, their judicial
-evidence, and their written procedure.”—Rashdall, <cite>Universities of
-Europe during the Middle Ages</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="fnanchor">14</a> W. H. Hutton.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="fnanchor">15</a> This conversation is reported by Roger of Pontigny, who ministered
-to St. Thomas when the latter was in exile at that place.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="fnanchor">16</a> Garnier was a poet, and he protests passionately against this law,
-maintaining that God has called us all to His service. Much more
-worth is the villein’s son who is honourable than a nobleman’s son who
-is false.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="fnanchor">17</a> W. FitzStephen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_18" href="#FNanchor_18" class="fnanchor">18</a> W. FitzStephen.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_19" href="#FNanchor_19" class="fnanchor">19</a> Dean Stanley.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_20" href="#FNanchor_20" class="fnanchor">20</a> Freeman, <cite>Historical Essays</cite>. First series.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_21" href="#FNanchor_21" class="fnanchor">21</a> “Hubert was very gracious in the eyes of all the host that lay
-before Acre, and in warlike things so magnificent that he was admired
-even by King Richard. He was in stature tall, in council prudent, and
-though not having the gift of eloquence, he was an able and shrewd
-wit. His mind was more on human than divine things, and he knew all
-the laws of the realm.”—Gervase.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_22" href="#FNanchor_22" class="fnanchor">22</a> It is notable that in our day only peerages and knighthoods are
-sold, and these by political leaders to their partisans. Government
-offices, the judicial bench and bishoprics are still fortunately not in the
-market, though frequently allotted for partisan reasons.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_23" href="#FNanchor_23" class="fnanchor">23</a> “Owing to the craft of the richer citizens the main part of the
-burden fell on the poor.”—Matthew Paris.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_24" href="#FNanchor_24" class="fnanchor">24</a> Some writers say 50,000.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_25" href="#FNanchor_25" class="fnanchor">25</a> William of Newburgh.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_26" href="#FNanchor_26" class="fnanchor">26</a> “Hubert, Archbishop of Canterbury, was a shrewd financier, and
-an honourable, conscientious statesman; but as a prelate he is noted
-chiefly for his quarrels with his chapter.”—W. H. Hutton, <cite>Social
-England</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_27" href="#FNanchor_27" class="fnanchor">27</a> Matthew Paris.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_28" href="#FNanchor_28" class="fnanchor">28</a> “If he was to give up all for which he had been fighting, and
-fighting successfully, against the pope and the Church for the past six
-years, he must make quite sure of gaining such an advantage as would
-be worth the sacrifice. Mere release from excommunication and
-interdict was certainly, in his eyes, not worth any sacrifice at all. To
-change the pope from an enemy into a political friend was worth it, but—from
-John’s point of view—only if the friendship could be made something
-much more close and indissoluble than the ordinary official
-relation between the pope and every Christian sovereign. He must
-bind the pope to his personal interest by some special tie of such a
-nature that the interest of the papacy itself would prevent Innocent
-from casting it off or breaking it.... To outward personal
-humiliation of any kind John was absolutely indifferent, when there was
-any advantage to be gained by undergoing it. To any humiliation
-which the crown or the nation might suffer in his person, he was indifferent
-under all circumstances. His plighted faith he had never had a
-moment’s hesitation in breaking, whether it were sworn to his father, his
-brother, his allies or his people, and he would break it with equal
-facility when sworn to the supreme pontiff.... There seems, in
-short, to be good reason for believing that John’s homage to the pope
-was offered without any pressure from Rome and on grounds of
-deliberate policy.”—K. Norgate, <cite>John Lackland</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_29" href="#FNanchor_29" class="fnanchor">29</a> K. Norgate, <cite>John Lackland</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_30" href="#FNanchor_30" class="fnanchor">30</a> “By the intervention of the Archbishop of Canterbury, with several
-of his bishops and some barons, a sort of peace (<i xml:lang="la" lang="la">quasi pax</i>) was made
-between the king and the barons.”—Ralph of Coggeshall.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_31" href="#FNanchor_31" class="fnanchor">31</a> Matthew Paris, <cite>Greater Chronicle</cite>, quoted by K. Norgate.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_32" href="#FNanchor_32" class="fnanchor">32</a> “The Charter was a treaty between two powers neither of which
-trusted, or even pretended to trust, the other.”—Stubbs, <cite>Constitutional
-History</cite>. Vol. II.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_33" href="#FNanchor_33" class="fnanchor">33</a> Luard. Preface to <cite>Grosseteste’s Letters</cite>. Rolls’ Series. 1861.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_34" href="#FNanchor_34" class="fnanchor">34</a> A well-known passage in Matthew Paris, vol. v, gives the monk’s
-point of view of Grosseteste, the reformer:—“At this time the Bishop
-of Lincoln made a visitation of the religious houses in the diocese. If
-one were to tell all the acts of tyranny he committed therein, the bishop
-would seem not merely unfeeling but inhuman in his severity. For
-amongst other things when he came to Ramsey he went round the
-whole place, examined each one of the monks’ beds in the dormitory,
-scrutinized everything, and if he found anything locked up destroyed it.
-He broke open the monks’ coffers as a thief would, and if he found any
-cups wrought with decoration and with feet to stand on he broke them
-to pieces, though it would have been wiser to have demanded them
-unbroken for the poor. He also heaped the terrible curses of Moses on
-the heads of those who disobeyed his injunctions and the blessings of
-Moses on those who should observe the same.... And it is believed
-all this he hath done to restrain from sin those over whom he hath
-authority, and for whose souls he must give account.” This was written
-in 1251, when Grosseteste had been sixteen years at Lincoln.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_35" href="#FNanchor_35" class="fnanchor">35</a> Wright, <cite>Political Songs</cite>. Camden Society, 1839.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_36" href="#FNanchor_36" class="fnanchor">36</a> Grosseteste had been unable to get his way with the barons on the
-question of legitimacy of children before legal wedlock. By the old
-church law marriage made such children legitimate, and at the council
-of Merton, in 1236, Grosseteste, with the bishops, tried to bring the
-common law into union with the church view on this matter. He was
-defeated, and to this day these children are illegitimate. “It would
-indeed have been better if the independence exhibited by the majority
-who opposed the prelates at Merton had been reserved for another
-occasion; for it cannot be deemed that the perpetuation of a law contrary
-to that which prevails on the subject in almost every European
-country, and which still differentiates Scotland from England by abroad,
-though unintelligible line of demarcation, has been open to grave
-objection on grounds of public convenience, apart from any inherent
-merits or demerits it may possess.”—F. S. Stevenson, <cite>Robert Grosseteste</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_37" href="#FNanchor_37" class="fnanchor">37</a> “Grosseteste, then, may be regarded in a threefold aspect; first, as a
-reformer who sought to reform the Church from within and not from
-without, by the removal of existing abuses, by the encouragement he
-gave to the great religious revival of the early part of the 13th century,
-and by the example of unflinching fearlessness and rectitude which he
-set in his performance of the episcopal office; secondly, as the teacher
-who guided the rising fortunes of the University of Oxford; and thirdly,
-as the statesman who, applying to new conditions the policy associated
-with the name of Stephen Langton, endeavoured to combine into one
-effort the struggle of the clergy for the liberties of the Church with the
-struggle of the laity for the liberties of the nation, imbued Simon de
-Montfort with principles of ‘truth and justice’ which went far beyond
-the mere maintenance of the privileges of his own order, and at the
-same time, by his effort to reconcile him with his sovereign, and by the
-whole tenour of his actions, showed that had he lived a few years longer,
-his influence would have been directed to the task of achieving by
-peaceful means the constitutional advance brought about by those
-who, taking the sword, perished by the sword.”—Stevenson, <cite>Robert
-Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_38" href="#FNanchor_38" class="fnanchor">38</a> See recent article on “Grosseteste” in <cite>Catholic Encyclopædia</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_39" href="#FNanchor_39" class="fnanchor">39</a> Yet out of this letter and out of his great knowledge and love of the
-Scriptures a notion has been current that Grosseteste was a forerunner
-of Protestantism, and “a harbinger of the Reformation.” “If this
-implies that he had any tendency towards the doctrinal changes
-brought about in the Church at the Reformation, or that he evidenced
-any idea of a separation of the Church of England from that of Rome,
-a more utterly mistaken statement has never been made.”—Luard, Preface
-to <cite>Grosseteste’s Letters</cite>. (Rolls Series.)</p>
-
-<p>As for Grosseteste’s Scriptural knowledge, “The thorough familiarity
-with the Old Testament is, perhaps, only what we might expect; but
-the use which is made of the actions of all the characters of Scripture,
-and the forced and sometimes outrageous way in which they are introduced
-to illustrate his argument, show how thoroughly ‘biblical’ the age
-was, and how completely the Old Testament history was regarded
-rather as the guide of men’s conduct in Christian times, than as a mere
-historical record of past events.”—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_40" href="#FNanchor_40" class="fnanchor">40</a> “The king acted as if he had sent him abroad simply to ruin his
-fortunes and wreck his reputation.”—Stubbs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_41" href="#FNanchor_41" class="fnanchor">41</a> Matthew Paris.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_42" href="#FNanchor_42" class="fnanchor">42</a> Rishanger, the chronicler for St. Albans, puts the case for the
-national <span class="locked">party:—</span></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“The king that tries without advice to seek his people’s weal</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Must often fail, he cannot know the wants and woes they feel.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Parliament must tell the king how he may serve them best,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And he must see their wants fulfilled and injuries redressed.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">A king should seek his people’s good and not his own sweet will,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Nor think himself a slave because men hold him back from ill.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">For they that keep the king from sin serve him the best of all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Making him free that else would be to sin a wretched thrall.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">True king is he, and truly free, who rules himself aright,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And chooses freely what he knows will ease his people’s plight.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Think not it is the king’s goodwill that makes the law to be,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For law is steadfast, and a king has no stability.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">No! law stands high above the king, for law is that true light</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Without whose ray the king would stray and wander from the right.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When a king strays he ought to be called back into the way</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">By those he rules, who lawfully his will may disobey</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Until he seeks the path, but when his wandering is o’er,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">They ought to help and succour him and love him as before.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="attrib">(Translated by F. York Powell.)</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_43" href="#FNanchor_43" class="fnanchor">43</a> “The new form of government bears evidence of its origin; it is
-intended rather to fetter the king than to extend or develop the action
-of the community at large. The baronial council clearly regards itself
-as competent to act on behalf of all the estates of the realm, and the
-expedient of reducing the national deliberations to three sessions of
-select committees, betrays a desire to abridge the frequent and somewhat
-irksome duty of attendance in parliament rather than to share the
-central legislative and deliberative power with the whole body of the
-people. It must however be remembered that the scheme makes a very
-indistinct claim to the character of a final arrangement.”—Stubbs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_44" href="#FNanchor_44" class="fnanchor">44</a> A board of twenty-four—half chosen by the king and half by the
-barons—had laid a body of resolutions before the Oxford Parliament,
-and the first of these resolutions declared that all castles and estates
-alienated from the crown should be at once resumed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_45" href="#FNanchor_45" class="fnanchor">45</a> “The first time, as far as we know, English was used in any public
-document.”—Blaauw, <cite>The Barons’ War</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_46" href="#FNanchor_46" class="fnanchor">46</a> </p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indentq">“End, O Earl of Gloster, what thou hast begun!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Save thou end it fitly, we are all undone.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Play the man, we pray thee, as thou hast promised,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Cherish steadfastly the cause of which thou wast the head.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">He that takes the Lord’s work up, and lays it down again,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Shamed and cursed may he be, and all shall say Amen.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">Earl Simon, thou of Montfort, so powerful and brave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bring up thy strong companies thy country now to save,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Have thou no fear of menaces or terrors of the grave,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Defend with might the nation’s cause, naught else thine own needs crave.”</div>
- </div>
- <div class="attrib">—Rishanger, <cite>Political Songs</cite>.</div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_47" href="#FNanchor_47" class="fnanchor">47</a> Stubbs.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_48" href="#FNanchor_48" class="fnanchor">48</a> “The Song of Lewes”—<cite>Political Songs</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_49" href="#FNanchor_49" class="fnanchor">49</a> I am indebted to my friend Fr. Bede Jarrett, O.P., for this interesting
-and, I believe, hitherto unpublished suggestion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_50" href="#FNanchor_50" class="fnanchor">50</a> It was to a Dominican Convent at Montargis that Simon’s widow,
-the Princess Eleanor, retired after the fatal battle of Evesham.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_51" href="#FNanchor_51" class="fnanchor">51</a> An appeal was lodged at Rome by several English bishops against
-the threatened excommunication, but the papal legate himself became
-pope early in 1265, and, as Pope Clement V., was the strongest enemy of
-Simon and the national cause. It was only after Evesham and the
-death of Simon that Clement urged a wise policy of mercy on Henry
-and the royalists.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_52" href="#FNanchor_52" class="fnanchor">52</a> “In this year, while Edward, the king’s son, was still held in ward in
-the Castle of Hereford, dissension arose between Simon, Earl of
-Leicester, and Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester....</p>
-
-<p>“For which cause the old friendship was turned into hate, so much so
-that neither the consideration of his oath nor former devotion could
-thenceforth pacify the said Gilbert.... An endeavour was made
-by certain prelates to restore the Earls of Leicester and Gloucester to
-their former union; but they could in no wise succeed.”—W. Rishanger.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_53" href="#FNanchor_53" class="fnanchor">53</a> J. R. Green, “The Ban of Kenilworth,” <cite>Historical Studies</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_54" href="#FNanchor_54" class="fnanchor">54</a> “The triumph over Earl Simon had been a triumph over the
-religious sentiment of the time, and religion avenged itself in its own
-way. Everywhere the earl’s death was viewed as a martyrdom, and
-monk and friar, however they might quarrel on other points, united in
-praying for the souls of the dead as for ‘soldiers of Christ.’”—J. R.
-Green, “The Ban of Kenilworth,” <cite>Historical Studies</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_55" href="#FNanchor_55" class="fnanchor">55</a> <cite>Chronicles of Melrose.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_56" href="#FNanchor_56" class="fnanchor">56</a> <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_57" href="#FNanchor_57" class="fnanchor">57</a> Wright, <cite>Political Songs</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_58" href="#FNanchor_58" class="fnanchor">58</a> See J. R. Green, “Annals of Osney and Wykes,” <cite>Historical Studies</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_59" href="#FNanchor_59" class="fnanchor">59</a> “The project was clearly to set up a new order of things founded on
-social equality—a theory which in the whole history of the Middle Ages
-appears for the first time in connection with this movement.”—Gairdner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_60" href="#FNanchor_60" class="fnanchor">60</a> It may be said that to-day the idea of political and social equality is
-generally accepted and that of brotherhood denied. In the fourteenth
-century brotherhood was esteemed, but equality was a strange, intruding
-notion.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_61" href="#FNanchor_61" class="fnanchor">61</a> “The bias of Wyclif in theory and practice is secular, and aristocratic,
-and royalist: it is not really socialistic or politically revolutionary,”—Figgis,
-<cite>Studies of Political Thought</cite>. Nevertheless, many
-writers have tried to discredit Lollardy by associating it with social
-revolt, just as others have tried to discredit John Ball by making him out
-a “heretic,” and a follower of Wycliff.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_62" href="#FNanchor_62" class="fnanchor">62</a> Froissart seems to be mainly responsible for the belief that this
-John Tyler became the great leader of the movement, confusing him
-with Wat Tyler, of Maidstone, the real leader. Several writers allege
-the indecency of the tax-collectors.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_63" href="#FNanchor_63" class="fnanchor">63</a> “Tyler, according to Walsingham, was a man of ready ability
-and good sense. Save in some excesses, which, perhaps, were politic,
-possibly unavoidable, and certainly exaggerated, the rebels under him
-are admitted to have kept good order, and to have readily submitted to
-discipline.”—Thorold Rogers. To Froissart Tyler appears merely as “a
-bad man, and a great enemy of the nobility.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_64" href="#FNanchor_64" class="fnanchor">64</a> “Fearful lest their voyage should be prevented, or that the populace
-should attack them, they heaved their anchors and with some difficulty
-left the harbour, for the wind was against them, and put to sea, when
-they cast anchor for a wind.”—Froissart.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_65" href="#FNanchor_65" class="fnanchor">65</a> Two names at least have been preserved—Squire Bertram Wilmington
-of Wye and John Corehurst of Lamberhurst.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_66" href="#FNanchor_66" class="fnanchor">66</a> Seven years later this Earl of Salisbury, fleeing from Henry Bolingbroke,
-was hanged in the streets of Cirencester at the hands of the
-people.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_67" href="#FNanchor_67" class="fnanchor">67</a> This law of Winchester was the statute of Edward I., 1285, which
-authorised local authorities to appoint constables and preserve the
-peace. Tyler’s aim was to strengthen local government in the counties,
-making them as far as possible self-governing communes.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_68" href="#FNanchor_68" class="fnanchor">68</a> “It was in the preaching of John Ball that England first listened to
-the knell of feudalism, and the declaration of the rights of man.”—J. R.
-Green.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_69" href="#FNanchor_69" class="fnanchor">69</a> “Observe how fortunate matters turned out, for had the rebels
-succeeded in their intentions they would have destroyed the whole
-nobility of England, and after their success other countries would have
-rebelled.”—Froissart.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_70" href="#FNanchor_70" class="fnanchor">70</a> See Durrant Cooper—<cite>John Cade’s Followers in Kent</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_71" href="#FNanchor_71" class="fnanchor">71</a> “These two bishops were wonder covetous men, evil beloved among
-the common people and holden suspect of many defaults; assenting and
-willing to the death of the Duke of Gloucester, as it were said.”—(<cite>A
-Chronicle of Henry VI</cite>). According to Gasgoigne—<cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Loci e Libro Veritatum</cite>—the
-people said of Ayscough: “He always kept with the king
-and was his confessor, and did not reside in his own diocese of Sarum
-with us, nor maintain hospitality.”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_72" href="#FNanchor_72" class="fnanchor">72</a> “He himself asserted that he had been a captain under the Duke of
-York, and that his real name was Mortimer, which may possibly have
-been true, for there were several illegitimate branches of the house of
-March.”—Professor Oman, <cite>Political History of England</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_73" href="#FNanchor_73" class="fnanchor">73</a> “A young man of a godly nature and right pregnant of wit.”—Holinshed.
-Shakspeare’s farcical account of the rising in <cite>King
-Henry VI.</cite>, Part II., is, of course, entirely misleading.—See the author’s
-<cite>True Story of Jack Cade</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_74" href="#FNanchor_74" class="fnanchor">74</a> See the letter of John Payn in the <cite>Paston Letters</cite>. But Payn
-wrote fifteen years afterwards, and seems to have been a person of no
-very scrupulous honesty.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_75" href="#FNanchor_75" class="fnanchor">75</a> A special act of parliament was passed in 1452 to cancel all that
-Cade had accomplished.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_76" href="#FNanchor_76" class="fnanchor">76</a> Cocke was a well-known supporter of Henry VI. and a man of note.
-He was sheriff of London 1453, alderman in 1456, and mayor and M.P.
-1462–3. Knighted by Henry in 1465, he fell from his high estate when
-Edward IV. was king, and languished in prison on a charge of high
-treason, only escaping with his life on payment of £8,000.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_77" href="#FNanchor_77" class="fnanchor">77</a> “What answer to this demand was returned I find not, but like it is
-the same was granted and performed; for I find not the said captain and
-Kentishmen at their being in the city to have hurt any stranger.”—Stow.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_78" href="#FNanchor_78" class="fnanchor">78</a> When, by order of the Privy Council, the Exchequer seized all
-Cade’s goods, these jewels were sold with the rest. They fetched £114,
-and a payment of £86 7s. was subsequently made to the Duke of York.
-So the crown made some profit on the transaction, but Malpas was
-unrecompensed.—See Devon’s <cite>Exchequer Rolls</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_79" href="#FNanchor_79" class="fnanchor">79</a> “Whereof he lost the people’s favour and hearts. For it was to be
-thought if he had not executed that robbery he might have gone far and
-brought his purpose to good effect.”—Fabyan.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_80" href="#FNanchor_80" class="fnanchor">80</a> This church has long been pulled down. It was absorbed into St.
-Saviour’s parish the following year. St. Margaret’s Hill is now part of
-High Street, Borough, and the present St. George’s Church stands near
-the site of old St. Margaret’s Church.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_81" href="#FNanchor_81" class="fnanchor">81</a> <cite>Acts of Privy Council</cite>, 1451.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_82" href="#FNanchor_82" class="fnanchor">82</a> “In the interests of truth, I must declare at the outset that I cannot
-find the very slightest foundation for the assertion of Stapleton, copied
-by Cresacre More and many others, that in the course of time their
-friendship cooled. Abundant proofs of the contrary will appear.”—Rev.
-T. E. Bridgett, <cite>Life and Writings of Sir Thomas More</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_83" href="#FNanchor_83" class="fnanchor">83</a> “Indeed, it was he who pushed me to write the <cite>Praise of Folly</cite>,
-that is to say, he made a camel frisk.”—Erasmus to Ulrich von Hutten,
-1519.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_84" href="#FNanchor_84" class="fnanchor">84</a> “He had a purpose to be a priest, yet God had allotted him for
-another estate, not to live solitary, but that he might be a pattern to
-married men: how they should carefully bring up their children, how
-dearly they should love their wives, how they should employ their
-endeavour wholly for the good of their country, yet excellently perform
-the virtues of religious men, as piety, charity, humility, obedience and
-conjugal chastity.”—Cresacre More.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_85" href="#FNanchor_85" class="fnanchor">85</a> Erasmus to Ulrich von Hutten.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_86" href="#FNanchor_86" class="fnanchor">86</a> “It is clear that Sir Thomas had a little Utopia of his own in his
-family. He was making an experiment in education, and he was delighted
-with its success. The fame of his learned daughters became
-European through the praises of Erasmus, and was so great in England
-that in 1529, when they were all married ladies, they were invited by
-the king to hold a kind of philosophical tournament in his presence....
-More will ever stand foremost in the ranks of the defenders of
-female culture.”—Rev. T. E. Bridgett, <cite>Life and Writings of Sir
-Thomas More</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_87" href="#FNanchor_87" class="fnanchor">87</a> “He most warily retired from every opposition but that which
-conscience absolutely required. He displayed that very peculiar
-excellence of his character, which, as it showed his submission to be
-the fruit of sense of duty, gave dignity to that which in others is apt to
-seem to be slavish.”—Sir James Mackintosh, <cite>Life of More</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_88" href="#FNanchor_88" class="fnanchor">88</a> “Parliament is discussing the revocation of all synods and other
-constitutions of the English clergy, and the prohibition of holding
-synods without express license of the king. This is a strange thing.
-Churchmen will be of less account than shoemakers, who have the
-power of assembling and making their own statutes.”—Chapuys,
-<cite>Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.</cite> (Rolls Series).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_89" href="#FNanchor_89" class="fnanchor">89</a> Chapuys, <cite>Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.</cite> (Rolls Series).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_90" href="#FNanchor_90" class="fnanchor">90</a> <cite>Lives of the Chancellors.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_91" href="#FNanchor_91" class="fnanchor">91</a> <cite>Letters and Papers of Henry VIII.</cite> (Rolls Series).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_92" href="#FNanchor_92" class="fnanchor">92</a> Roper.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_93" href="#FNanchor_93" class="fnanchor">93</a> “To More a heretic was neither a simple man erring by ignorance,
-nor a learned man using his freedom in doubtful points: he was a man
-whose heart was ‘proud, poisoned, and obstinate,’ because he denied
-the Divine guidance of the Church while he claimed special Divine inspiration
-for himself.”—Rev. T. E. Bridgett.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_94" href="#FNanchor_94" class="fnanchor">94</a> More’s <cite>English Works—Apology</cite>. It is only thirty years after his
-death that Foxe suggests More as a persecutor. All the evidence is in
-the opposite direction.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_95" href="#FNanchor_95" class="fnanchor">95</a> Sir James Mackintosh, <cite>Life of More</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_96" href="#FNanchor_96" class="fnanchor">96</a> See Dr. Jessop, <cite>The Great Pillage</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_97" href="#FNanchor_97" class="fnanchor">97</a> <cite>See State Papers, Domestic, Edward VI.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_98" href="#FNanchor_98" class="fnanchor">98</a> The common lands engrossed in the 15th and 16th centuries were
-the farm lands cultivated in common by the peasants. The enclosure of
-the commons was left to a later date, and took place between 1760 and
-1830.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn2"><a id="Footnote_99" href="#FNanchor_99" class="fnanchor">99</a> This Flowerdew had distinguished himself at the destruction of the
-abbey at Wymondham by Henry VIII., by tearing off the lead from the
-roof of the church and pulling down the choir, for the sake of the stones,
-after the people had raised a large sum of money for the king in order to
-save the church.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_100" href="#FNanchor_100" class="fnanchor">100</a> “By bearing a confident countenance in all his actions the vulgars
-took him (Ket) to be both valiant and wise and a fit man to be their
-commander.”—Sir John Hayward, <cite>Life of Edward VI.</cite></p>
-
-<p>“This Ket was a proper person to be a ringleader of mischief, for he
-was of a bold, haughty spirit, and of a cankered mind against the
-Government.”—John Strype, <cite>Ecclesiastical Memorials</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_101" href="#FNanchor_101" class="fnanchor">101</a> These two “were partly fain to agree, lest they being out of favour
-and place, others might come to bring all out of frame that now might
-partly be well framed, and the rather they assented to keep the
-people in better order during answer from the prince.”—Nicholas
-Sutherton.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_102" href="#FNanchor_102" class="fnanchor">102</a> “That a populous and wealthy city like Norwich should have been
-for three weeks in the hands of 20,000 rebels, and should have escaped
-utter pillage and ruin speaks highly for the rebel leaders.”—W. Rye,
-<cite>Victoria County History of Norfolk</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_103" href="#FNanchor_103" class="fnanchor">103</a> A few years later, and John Dudley, Earl of Warwick, now Duke of
-Northumberland, again visited East Anglia to proclaim his daughter-in-law,
-Lady Jane Grey, Queen of England. No one rose at his call.
-Neither peasant nor landowner responded to the proclamation; and
-John Dudley, Earl of Warwick and Duke of Northumberland, died, as
-his father before him had died, convicted of treason, beheaded by the
-executioner’s axe on Tower Hill. It was August 22nd, 1553, just four
-years after the suppression of the peasants’ rising in Norfolk when
-Northumberland was put to death.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_104" href="#FNanchor_104" class="fnanchor">104</a> “Robert Ket was not a mere craftsman: he was a man of substance,
-the owner of several manors: his conduct throughout was
-marked by considerable generosity: nor can the name of patriot be
-denied to him who deserted the class to which he might have belonged
-or aspired, and cast in his lot with the suffering people.”—Canon Dixon,
-<cite>History of the Church of England</cite>.</p>
-
-<p>In 1588 a grandson of Robert Ket was burnt as a Nonconformist
-heretic by order of Elizabeth.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_105" href="#FNanchor_105" class="fnanchor">105</a> The three were Oxford men. Sir John Eliot was at Exeter (1607),
-Hampden at Magdalen (1609) and Pym at Broadgate Hall, afterwards
-called Pembroke (1599).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_106" href="#FNanchor_106" class="fnanchor">106</a> “In Eliot’s composition there was nothing of the dogmatic orthodoxy
-of Calvinism, nothing of the painful introspection of the later
-Puritans. His creed, as it shines clearly out from the work of his
-prison hours, as death was stealing upon him—<cite>The Monarchy of Man</cite>—was
-the old heathen philosophic creed, mellowed and spiritualised by
-Christianity. Between such a creed and Rome there was a great gulf
-fixed. Individual culture and the nearest approach to individual perfection
-for the sake of the State and the Church, formed a common ground
-on which Eliot could stand with the narrowest Puritan.”—S. R. Gardiner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_107" href="#FNanchor_107" class="fnanchor">107</a> Eliot’s argument “was a claim to render ministerial responsibility
-once more a reality, and thereby indirectly to make parliament
-supreme.”—S. R. Gardiner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_108" href="#FNanchor_108" class="fnanchor">108</a> “He (Eliot) was to the bottom of his heart an idealist. To him the
-parliament was scarcely a collection of fallible men, just as the king
-was hardly a being who could by any possibility go deliberately
-astray. If he who wore the crown had wandered from the right path,
-he had but to listen to those who formed, in more than a rhetorical
-sense, the collective wisdom of the nation.”—S. R. Gardiner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_109" href="#FNanchor_109" class="fnanchor">109</a> “His (Hampden’s) distinction lay in his power of disentangling the
-essential part from the non-essential. In the previous constitutional
-struggle he had seen that the one thing necessary was to establish the
-supremacy of the House of Commons.”—S. R. Gardiner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_110" href="#FNanchor_110" class="fnanchor">110</a> Clarendon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_111" href="#FNanchor_111" class="fnanchor">111</a> “The same men who, six months before, were observed to be of
-very moderate tempers, and to wish that gentle remedies might be
-applied, talked now in another dialect both of kings and persons; and
-said that they must now be of another temper than they were in the last
-parliament.”—Clarendon.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_112" href="#FNanchor_112" class="fnanchor">112</a> The Nineteen Propositions fairly express the views of Pym and
-Hampden at this time on the supremacy of the Commons. The main
-proposals were the authority of parliament: in the <em>sole</em> choice of the
-ministers of the crown, in the regulation of state policy, in the management
-of the militia, in the education of the royal children, in the
-remodeling of the discipline of the Church of England; and the
-guardianship by parliament of all forts and castles. It was of first
-importance in Pym’s mind that parliament should have the control in
-military matters. Without the power of the sword the House of
-Commons could not ensure the personal safety of its members or the
-privileges of free debate against the enmity of the king. To command
-the army was to govern the country.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_113" href="#FNanchor_113" class="fnanchor">113</a> See G. P. Gooch, <cite>History of Democratic Ideas in the Seventeenth
-Century</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_114" href="#FNanchor_114" class="fnanchor">114</a> “By its injudicious treatment of the most popular man in England,
-parliament was arraying against itself a force which only awaited an
-opportunity to sweep it away.”—G. P. Gooch, <cite>History of Democratic
-Ideas in the Seventeenth Century</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_115" href="#FNanchor_115" class="fnanchor">115</a> “Advocating direct government by a democratic Parliament and
-the fullest development of individual liberty, the Levellers looked with
-suspicion on the Council of State as a body which might possibly be
-converted into an executive authority independent of parliament, and
-thoroughly distrusted Cromwell as aiming at military despotism. Well-intentioned
-and patriotic as they were, they were absolutely destitute
-of political tact, and had no sense of the real difficulties of the situation,
-and, above all, of the impossibility of rousing the popular sympathy on
-behalf of abstract reasonings.”—S. R. Gardiner, <cite>History of the Commonwealth
-and Protectorate</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_116" href="#FNanchor_116" class="fnanchor">116</a> S. R. Gardiner.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_117" href="#FNanchor_117" class="fnanchor">117</a> The movement “had sprung into existence in response to a widely
-spread apprehension that the victory of the people might be rendered
-fruitless. Its call had found an echo in the ranks of the army, and by
-its admirable organization it had insisted that the leaders should hear
-what it had to say. It had powerfully influenced their conduct and had
-introduced a radical element into their programme. When this had
-been done, the soldiers felt that its <i xml:lang="fr" lang="fr">raison d’être</i> as a separate party had
-come to an end. The battle had been fought, and the victory, at least
-for the time, had fallen to Ireton.”—G. P. Gooch, <cite>History of Democratic
-Ideas in the Seventeenth Century</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_118" href="#FNanchor_118" class="fnanchor">118</a> “In other words, not only Cromwell and Ireton, but also Fairfax,
-who had recently been elected a member of the House, were to be summarily
-cashiered.”—S. R. Gardiner, <cite>History of the Commonwealth</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_119" href="#FNanchor_119" class="fnanchor">119</a> See the pamphlet “A Petition of Well-affected Women,” 1649.
-There is something curiously familiar in the exhortation to the women.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_120" href="#FNanchor_120" class="fnanchor">120</a> “Unfortunately his friends, in petitioning for his release, rested
-their case on the ground that all sentences given by a court-martial
-were made illegal by the Petition of Right and the law of the land.
-Such a doctrine would have dissolved the army into chaos, and when
-Lilburne and Overton wrote to Fairfax, threatening him with the fate of
-Joab and Strafford, all chance of pardon was at an end. Lockyer
-firmly believed himself to be a martyr to the cause of right and justice.”—S.
-R. Gardiner, <cite>History of the Commonwealth</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_121" href="#FNanchor_121" class="fnanchor">121</a> See Whitelocke’s <cite>Memorials</cite>, “The Army’s Martyr,” “A True
-Narrative,” and “The Moderate” (1649).</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_122" href="#FNanchor_122" class="fnanchor">122</a> “So die the Leveller corporals. Strong they, after their sort, for
-the liberties of England; resolute to the very death.”—Carlyle.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_123" href="#FNanchor_123" class="fnanchor">123</a> Lilburne’s attitude to Winstanley’s propaganda was similar to the
-attitude of the political Chartists in the 19th century to Robert Owen’s
-socialism.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_124" href="#FNanchor_124" class="fnanchor">124</a> “Then ensued a scene, the like of which had in all probability never
-been witnessed in an English court of justice, and was never again to be
-witnessed till the seven bishops were freed by the verdict of a jury from
-the rage of James II.”—S. R. Gardiner.</p>
-
-<p>“In a revolution, where others argued about the respective rights
-of king and parliament, he spoke always of the rights of the people.
-His dauntless courage and his power of speech made him the idol of the
-mob.”—Professor C. H. Firth, “Lilburne,” <cite>Dictionary of National Biography</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_125" href="#FNanchor_125" class="fnanchor">125</a> See L. A. Berens, <cite>Digger Movement in the Days of the Commonwealth</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_126" href="#FNanchor_126" class="fnanchor">126</a> <cite>Clarke Papers</cite>, vol. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_127" href="#FNanchor_127" class="fnanchor">127</a> Government rarely distinguishes between different schools of
-agitators.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_128" href="#FNanchor_128" class="fnanchor">128</a> Between 1710 and 1867 the number of acres so enclosed was
-7,660,439.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_129" href="#FNanchor_129" class="fnanchor">129</a> <cite>Clarke Papers</cite>, vol. ii.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_130" href="#FNanchor_130" class="fnanchor">130</a> See Graham Wallas, <cite>Life of Francis Place</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_131" href="#FNanchor_131" class="fnanchor">131</a> “Disappointment bitter and wide-spread was following closely upon
-the inevitable failure of the extravagant expectations and overheated
-hopes which the agitation for parliamentary reform had kindled.”—F.
-York Powell, <cite>The Queen’s Reign: a Survey</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_132" href="#FNanchor_132" class="fnanchor">132</a> See Graham Wallas, <cite>Life of Francis Place</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_133" href="#FNanchor_133" class="fnanchor">133</a> Herbert Paul, <cite>History of Modern England</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_134" href="#FNanchor_134" class="fnanchor">134</a> <cite xml:lang="la" lang="la">Ibid.</cite></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_135" href="#FNanchor_135" class="fnanchor">135</a> “Want of leaders and organization, and the great difference in
-objects among the Chartists themselves, led to their failure. For a while
-Chartism was stayed.”—Professor T. F. Tout, <cite>England from 1689</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_136" href="#FNanchor_136" class="fnanchor">136</a> The differences between the two became more acute when Feargus
-O’Connor started his land colonization schemes a few years later.
-O’Brien opposed these schemes, which all ended in heavy financial
-losses, and urged sticking to political reform. From 1842 O’Brien was
-practically outside the Chartist movement, though it was not till 1848 he
-formally retired. He died in poverty in 1864, after giving some help to
-the middle-class radical movement for household suffrage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_137" href="#FNanchor_137" class="fnanchor">137</a> A similar impulse fifty years later brought “Labour Churches” into
-existence.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_138" href="#FNanchor_138" class="fnanchor">138</a> “The ministers had met the Chartist outbreaks with strong,
-repressive measures, and here they had the concurrence of parliament,
-which had no sympathy with the movement. The House of Commons,
-indeed, had little understanding of the processes that were maturing
-outside its walls. The industrial and the social evolution went on
-almost unnoticed by statesmen and politicians absorbed in the party
-controversy.”—Sidney Low and Lloyd Sanders, <cite>Political History
-of England</cite>, 1837–1901. See also Hansard’s <cite>Parliamentary Debates</cite> for
-these years.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_139" href="#FNanchor_139" class="fnanchor">139</a> “The least satisfactory feature of English life in 1846 was the
-condition of the labouring classes. Politically they were dumb, for they
-had no parliamentary votes. Socially they were depressed, though
-their lot had been considerably improved by an increased demand for
-labour and by the removal of taxes in Peel’s great Budget of 1842.
-That was the year in which the misery of the English proletariat
-reached its lowest depth.”—Herbert Paul, <cite>History of Modern
-England</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_140" href="#FNanchor_140" class="fnanchor">140</a> Stephens, a “hot-headed” Chartist preacher, put the case as he, a
-typical agitator of the day, saw it in 1839: “The principle of the
-People’s Charter is the right of every man to have his home, his hearth,
-and his happiness. The question of universal suffrage is after all a
-knife-and-fork question. It means that every workman has a right to
-have a good hat and coat, a good roof, a good dinner, no more work
-than will keep him in health, and as much wages as will keep him in
-plenty.”—See R. G. Gamage, <cite>History of the Chartist Movement</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_141" href="#FNanchor_141" class="fnanchor">141</a> Charles Kingsley, who is said to have signed the petition, gives his
-view of April 10th in <cite>Alton Locke</cite>.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p class="fn3"><a id="Footnote_142" href="#FNanchor_142" class="fnanchor">142</a> See Hansard, June, 1849.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="index">
-<h2 class="nobreak left p1" id="INDEX">INDEX</h2>
-
-<ul class="index">
-<li class="ifrst">Adam of Marsh, Franciscan friar, friend of Grosseteste and de Montfort, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>, <a href="#Page_130">130</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Aldrich, an Alderman of Norwich, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Alexander III., Pope, <a href="#Page_45">45</a>, <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Anselm, Abbot of Bec, <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">called to court of William II., <a href="#Page_8">8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appointed Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_9">9</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses to give up church lands, <a href="#Page_11">11</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">firm attitude at Council of Rockingham, <a href="#Page_15">15</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">semblance of peace with the king, <a href="#Page_16">16</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves England, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">returns at request of Henry I., <a href="#Page_19">19</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his services to the king, <a href="#Page_21">21</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dispute with the king, <a href="#Page_23">23</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reconciliation, <a href="#Page_26">26</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death and character, <a href="#Page_27">27–30</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his birthplace, <a href="#Page_30">30</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Appleton, William, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ayscough, Bishop of Salisbury, impeached for treason, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">murdered at Erdington, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Bailey, John, hanged by Cade, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ball, John, itinerant priest from York, preaches social revolution, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">released from Maidstone prison by Wat Tyler, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">preaches to Tyler’s followers at Blackheath, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hanged as a rebel, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Barton, Elizabeth, “Holy Maid of Kent,” <a href="#Page_206">206</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Becket, Thomas, his parentage, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">early years, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appointed Chancellor of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ordained priest and appointed to Archbishopric, <a href="#Page_38">38</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dispute with the king, <a href="#Page_41">41–45</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">yields to king’s demands at Council of Clarendon, <a href="#Page_47">47</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">refutes charges at Council of Northampton, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves England and appeals to the pope, <a href="#Page_55">55</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">reconciliation with the king, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lands at Sandwich, <a href="#Page_57">57</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">ill-will of the bishops, <a href="#Page_58">58</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Henry’s sudden rage, <a href="#Page_59">59</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his murder, <a href="#Page_63">63</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his canonisation, <a href="#Page_64">64</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Belknap, Chief Justice, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Berksted, Stephen, Bishop of Chichester, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bigod, Hugh of Norfolk, <a href="#Page_121">121</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bigod, Roger, <a href="#Page_126">126</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Boniface of Savoy, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Bradshaw, John, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Buckingham, Duke of, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burdett, Sir Francis, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Burley, Sir Simon, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Cade, Jack, leader of the revolt of Kentish commons, 1450, <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">uncertainty as to real name and family, <a href="#Page_176">176</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">marches to Blackheath at head of <a href="#Page_46">46</a>,000 followers, <a href="#Page_177">177</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">draws up and presents petition to Henry VI., <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">no answer returned, <a href="#Page_178">178</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">withdraws to Sevenoaks and defeats small body of Henry’s troops, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gathers reinforcements in Kent, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Henry VI. treats with him fruitlessly, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">enters London without opposition, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">preserves strict discipline in his force, <a href="#Page_184">184</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">forced to levy toll for support of his followers, <a href="#Page_185">185</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">after first good reception London turns against him, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unsuccessful fight for London Bridge, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">treats with Henry’s representatives, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">many of his adherents return to their homes, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses to lay down arms till parliament issues legal pardon, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_340">340</span>proclaimed a traitor, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">defeated at Queenborough, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies fighting as a fugitive, in Sussex, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">head exposed on London Bridge, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cartwright, John, enters Navy and begins promising career, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">it is cut short by his siding with the Americans at outbreak of war, 1776, <a href="#Page_308">308</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">trains the Nottinghamshire Militia, <a href="#Page_309">309</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">pioneer of political reform, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">writes and speaks on the subject, <a href="#Page_310">310</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unsuccessful efforts to enter parliament, <a href="#Page_312">312</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at age of 80 charged with sedition and fined, <a href="#Page_313">313</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">known as “Father of Reform,” <a href="#Page_315">315</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Catherine of Aragon, <a href="#Page_203">203</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cantilupe, Bishop of Worcester, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cantilupe, Thomas, Chancellor, <a href="#Page_128">128</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cave, Robert, <a href="#Page_148">148</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Chalton, Sir John, Lord Mayor of London, <a href="#Page_183">183</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Charles I., <a href="#Page_250">250</a> <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et seq.</i>, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_282">282</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Church, Corporal, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarendon, Earl of (quoted), <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarendon, Council of, <a href="#Page_46">46</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Clarkson, Thomas, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cocke (or Cooke) Thomas, friend to both Henry VI. and Cade, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cod, Thomas, Mayor of Norwich, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>, <a href="#Page_233">233</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Coke, Lord Justice, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Colet, Dean of St. Paul’s, <a href="#Page_199">199</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Conyers, Dr., Vicar of St. Martin, Norwich, <a href="#Page_231">231</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cranmer, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_204">204</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromwell, Oliver, <a href="#Page_279">279</a> <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et seq.</i></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Cromwell, Thomas, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Crowmer, Sheriff of Kent, <a href="#Page_180">180</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrested and sent to Tower, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beheaded by Cade’s orders, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Curtis (Girste, or Ghirstis) City Merchant, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">De Burgh, Hubert, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Gray, John, Bishop of Norwich, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Morville, Hugh, <a href="#Page_59">59–63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Derby, Henry, Earl of (afterwards Henry IV.), <a href="#Page_157">157</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Despenser, Henry, Bishop of Norwich, <a href="#Page_168">168</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Des Roches, Peter, Bishop of Winchester, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Tracy, William, <a href="#Page_59">59–63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">De Valence, William, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Eadmer (quoted), <a href="#Page_6">6</a>, <a href="#Page_7">7</a>, <a href="#Page_14">14</a>, <a href="#Page_17">17</a>, <a href="#Page_26">26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Edward, Prince, son of Henry III., afterwards King-Edward I.;</li>
-<li class="isub1">takes oath of reform to barons, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">takes Gloucester in civil war, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">taken prisoner at Battle of Lewes, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">escapes to Welsh marshes, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">intercepts de Montfort’s relief force at Evesham, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Eliot, John, enters parliament as member for St. Germans, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">knighted and becomes Vice-Admiral of Devon, <a href="#Page_249">249</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">captures the pirate Nutt, but eventually finds himself in Marshalsea prison over the affair, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">released and is returned for Newport, 1624, <a href="#Page_250">250</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">quarrels with Buckingham and insists upon his impeachment, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">imprisoned in Tower in connection therewith, but soon released, <a href="#Page_251">251</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses forced loan and again imprisoned and deprived of Vice-Admiralship, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">carries Petition of Right, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attacks policy of Laud, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">supports John Rolle in refusing payment of taxes, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">summoned before Privy Council, imprisoned for fourth time, and fined, <a href="#Page_255">255</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">remains passionately loyal to House of Commons, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">health gives way in confinement, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies in the Tower, 1632, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his son’s appeal for his burial at Port Eliot, Cornwall, refused, <a href="#Page_257">257</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Erasmus, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_211">211</a>, <a href="#Page_212">212</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Essex, Earl of, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ethelmar, half-brother to Henry III., <a href="#Page_106">106</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_341">341</span>Everard, <a href="#Page_297">297</a>, <a href="#Page_298">298</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Fairfax, General, <a href="#Page_298">298</a>, <a href="#Page_299">299</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Falkland, Lord, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_266">266</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Finch, Chief Justice, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">FitzOsbert, William, called Longbeard; his early life, <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">lays his grievances before Richard I., <a href="#Page_72">72</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">defies Archbishop Hubert, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his arrest and death, <a href="#Page_75">75</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">FitzStephen, W. (quoted), <a href="#Page_35">35</a>, <a href="#Page_49">49</a>, <a href="#Page_53">53</a>, <a href="#Page_59">59</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">FitzUrse, Reginald, <a href="#Page_59">59–63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Flowerdew, Sergeant, <a href="#Page_222">222</a>, <a href="#Page_223">223</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Frost, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fulke, follower of Ket, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Fussell, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Gilbert, Earl of Gloucester, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_131">131</a>, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gough, Matthew, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green, J. R. (quoted), <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_92">92</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Green, Squire of Wylby, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gregory IX., Pope, letter to, from Grosseteste, <a href="#Page_102">102</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grindcobbe, William, supporter of John Ball in Hertford, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">follows Wat Tyler, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Mile End, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hanged at St. Albans, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Grosseteste, Bishop of Lincoln, born in Suffolk of humble parentage, goes to Oxford, rises to foremost honours there, and becomes bishop, at sixty, <a href="#Page_101">101</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">institutes reforms at Oxford, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">befriends Dominican and Franciscan friars, <a href="#Page_102">102</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">withstands Henry III.’s rapacity, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attends council in London, recites grievances of Henry III.’s misrule, <a href="#Page_107">107</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">resists seizure of English Church revenues by Innocent IV., <a href="#Page_108">108–111</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">refuses canonry of Lincoln to pope’s nephew, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Cardinals uphold Grosseteste against Innocent IV., <a href="#Page_112">112</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">makes appeal to whole realm on behalf of rights of English Church, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies, 1235, and is buried in Lincoln Cathedral, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Edward I.’s application for canonization refused, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Gunnell, Tutor in Sir Thomas More’s family, <a href="#Page_199">199</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Hales, Sir Robert, Treasurer to Richard II., <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advises no conference with Tyler’s followers, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beheaded on Tower Hill, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hampden, John, refuses to pay ship-money, <a href="#Page_258">258</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">case decided against him, <a href="#Page_259">259</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">acts with Eliot against Buckingham, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">strong influence in House of Commons, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prominent work in Long Parliament, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">impeached for high treason, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">takes refuge from Charles in city, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">prepares for war, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">raises regiment of infantry in Bucks, <a href="#Page_267">267</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">mortally wounded at Chalgrove, <a href="#Page_268">268</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hazlerig, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>, <a href="#Page_288">288</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henry I., <a href="#Page_19">19–26</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henry II.; appoints Thomas Becket Chancellor of England, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">their close friendship, <a href="#Page_35">35</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">determines to appoint Thomas to the archbishopric, <a href="#Page_36">36</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his dispute with Thomas, and its cause, <a href="#Page_41">41</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">draws up the Constitutions of Clarendon, <a href="#Page_46">46</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his dissatisfaction with the result, <a href="#Page_48">48</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">charges Thomas with corrupt practices, <a href="#Page_48">48–54</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his sudden rage and hasty words, resulting in the murder of the archbishop, <a href="#Page_63">63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henry III.; appeals for money at Council of Westminster, 1244, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">confronts bishops with Innocent IV.’s letter exhorting them to give liberally, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishops evade coercion, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">king again tries in 1252, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bishops, led by Grosseteste, refuse, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his miserable misrule, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dealings with Simon of Montfort in Gascony, <a href="#Page_118">118–120</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_342">342</span>his financial difficulties reach climax, 1257, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">continued quarrels with barons, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">obtains dispensation from promises to barons, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">civil war is declared, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">defeated by Simon of Montfort, and peace made, 1264, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">war again breaks out, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">is victorious, <a href="#Page_137">137</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Henry VIII., <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holland, Sir John, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Holles, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horne, Alderman, <a href="#Page_182">182</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Horne, Alderman, supports Tyler, and welcomes him to London, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hotham, Sir John, <a href="#Page_267">267</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Howe, Lord, <a href="#Page_308">308</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Hugh of Lincoln, <a href="#Page_77">77</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Herbert of Bosham (quoted), <a href="#Page_38">38</a>, <a href="#Page_58">58</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Iden, Alexander, <a href="#Page_189">189</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innocent III., Pope, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Innocent IV., Pope, <a href="#Page_104">104</a>, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a>, <a href="#Page_111">111</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ireton, General, <a href="#Page_280">280</a>, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Islip, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">John, King, refuses to acknowledge Stephen Langton’s appointment to archbishopric, <a href="#Page_81">81</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">seizes estates of Canterbury, and drives chapter into exile, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">is excommunicated, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">meets primate at Winchester and is formally absolved, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">strife with barons, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his campaign to recover lost Angevine provinces, <a href="#Page_87">87</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">capitulation to the barons, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">signs the Great Charter, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">John of Gaunt, calls parliament at Northampton, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his unpopularity with the people, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his palace of the Savoy and its valuable contents destroyed, <a href="#Page_157">157</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">John of Salisbury (quoted), <a href="#Page_56">56</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Jones, Ernest, <a href="#Page_324">324</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">joins Chartist movement at <a href="#Page_27">27</a>, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">son of an officer and educated abroad, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">works with Feargus O’Connor, <a href="#Page_325">325</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attends Chartist convention, <a href="#Page_327">327</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">addresses large meetings in London, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrested, tried, found guilty of seditious speech and imprisoned, <a href="#Page_328">328</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">on his release Chartist movement declining, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">contests Halifax unsuccessfully, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">gives support to advanced radicals, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">stands twice unsuccessfully for Nottingham, <a href="#Page_330">330</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies suddenly at the age of <a href="#Page_50">50</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Kemp, Cardinal, Archbishop of York, Chancellor to Henry VI., <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a>, <a href="#Page_190">190</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Kent, Earl of, <a href="#Page_159">159</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ket, Robert, landowner in Norfolk, a tanner by trade, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sympathies on the side of the people, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">offers to lead the movement against enclosures of land, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">he is eagerly accepted as captain, and leads large army towards Norwich, <a href="#Page_224">224</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">issues manifesto attacking landlords, <a href="#Page_225">225</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">advances to Mousehold, and his force increases to 20,000, <a href="#Page_228">228</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sends statement to Edward VI., <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">king replies by herald, <a href="#Page_229">229</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sets about organising and victualling his followers, as he is not content with vague promises, <a href="#Page_230">230</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrests landowners, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">repudiates king’s “pardon” as being a just and innocent man, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his arrest ordered by king’s messenger, but impossible in the presence of his followers, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">friction arises between Norwich authorities and the rebels, <a href="#Page_232">232</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fight ensues, Norwich in his hands, <a href="#Page_233">233</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unsuccessfully opposed by Marquis of Northampton, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">commands in Norwich for three weeks, <a href="#Page_235">235</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disappointed at rising not becoming general, <a href="#Page_236">236</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">negotiates with Earl of Warwick, sent to suppress revolt, <a href="#Page_237">237</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_343">343</span>abrupt conclusion, and battle follows, <a href="#Page_238">238</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his mistaken tactics and defeat, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his followers surrender to Warwick, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his flight and capture, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tried, found guilty of high treason and condemned to death, <a href="#Page_241">241</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hanged in chains in Norwich, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Ket, William, <a href="#Page_223">223</a>, <a href="#Page_239">239</a>, <a href="#Page_240">240</a>, <a href="#Page_241">241</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knolles, Sir Robert, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Knyvett, Sir Edmund, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Langham, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_144">144</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langland, Robert, <a href="#Page_145">145</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Langton, Stephen, appointed to archbishopric of Canterbury against King John’s wishes by Innocent III., <a href="#Page_81">81</a>, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">is driven into exile by the king, <a href="#Page_82">82</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">returns six years later, <a href="#Page_85">85</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">starts the movement for the Great Charter, <a href="#Page_86">86</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">frames articles for the Charter, <a href="#Page_90">90</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">disagreement with papal legate, <a href="#Page_94">94</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">works for preservation of peace during early years of Henry III.’s reign, <a href="#Page_95">95</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his character and place in history, <a href="#Page_96">96</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Laud, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_253">253</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_257">257</a>, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_272">272</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Legge, John, <a href="#Page_147">147</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">le Despenser, Hugh, Justiciar, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>, <a href="#Page_128">128</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lilburne, John, apprenticed to a cloth merchant in London and becomes friend of Prynne, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">charged before Star Chamber with circulating unlicensed books, and sentenced to be whipped, pilloried, and imprisoned, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">released by order of Long Parliament, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fights at Edgehill and Marston Moor, where he is taken prisoner, <a href="#Page_278">278</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves army in 1645 rather than take the Covenant, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">resists the tyranny of parliamentary government, <a href="#Page_279">279</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">heads the party in the army called the Levellers, <a href="#Page_281">281</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">again imprisoned and released in 1649, <a href="#Page_282">282</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">writes pamphlets against the government and is again imprisoned, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">petition presented to parliament for his release, <a href="#Page_284">284</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">tried for treasonable writings, <a href="#Page_287">287</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fined and banished, <a href="#Page_288">288</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Holland, and returns, without permission, to London, in 1653, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrested and acquitted, <a href="#Page_289">289</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">again imprisoned by Cromwell for two years, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">converted to Quakerism, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">released and pensioned, <a href="#Page_290">290</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies at Eltham, <a href="#Page_290">290</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Litster, Geoffrey, follower of John Ball in Norfolk, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Looney, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lovett, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Luard (quoted), <a href="#Page_101">101–2</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Lyons, Richard, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Macaulay, Lord (quoted), <a href="#Page_264">264</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Malpas, Philip, <a href="#Page_185">185</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Martin, Papal Legate, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Matthew of Westminster (quoted), <a href="#Page_127">127</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Maurice, C. E. (quoted), <a href="#Page_95">95</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mendall, John, a name by which Jack Cade was known, <a href="#Page_175">175</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Moleyns, Bishop of Chichester, supporter of Duke of Suffolk, killed at Portsmouth, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montfort, Henry of, eldest son of Earl of Leicester, <a href="#Page_133">133</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montfort, Simon of, second son of Earl of Leicester, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>, <a href="#Page_133">133</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Montfort, Simon of, Earl of Leicester, son of first Earl of Leicester, marries Eleanor, sister of Henry III., and widow of Earl of Pembroke, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">boyhood passed in France, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves for crusades, distinguished career in Palestine, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">returns in 1242, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">works with Grosseteste in his reforms, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">goes to Gascony for five years (1248–53) and deals with turbulent nobles, <a href="#Page_118">118</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">saves Gascony for English crown, and restores order in the province, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Henry III.’s ingratitude, <a href="#Page_119">119</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_344">344</span>recognized leader of the barons on his return to England, <a href="#Page_120">120</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">successful in “Mad Parliament,” 1258, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">as “foreigner” yields castles of Kenilworth and Odiham, <a href="#Page_123">123</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fresh difficulties with Henry III. in carrying out Provisions of Oxford, <a href="#Page_124">124</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">civil war imminent, 1264;</li>
-<li class="isub1">and many bishops and barons desert Simon, <a href="#Page_125">125</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">offers £<a href="#Page_30">30</a>,000 to king to make peace and adhere to Provisions of Oxford—proposal rejected, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Battle of Lewes won by Simon, <a href="#Page_126">126</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">peace made, <a href="#Page_127">127</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">draws up new scheme of reform, the precursor of later representative government, <a href="#Page_129">129</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fresh disturbances and defections, followed by renewal of war, <a href="#Page_132">132</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Battle of Evesham, and death of Simon, <a href="#Page_134">134</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">interred in Evesham Abbey, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">More, Sir Thomas, born 1478, member of Cardinal Morton’s household, leaves there for Oxford, and later studies law in Lincoln’s Inn, <a href="#Page_193">193</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">friendship with Erasmus, <a href="#Page_194">194</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">spends four years with Carthusians, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leaves Charterhouse, marries and enters parliament, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">opposes Henry VII.’s exactions, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Under-Sheriff for the City, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">embassies to Flanders and Calais, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">enters Henry VIII.’s service, and rises rapidly to highest offices of State, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">happy domestic life, <a href="#Page_198">198</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">withholds support from king on his divorce from Catherine of Aragon, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">resigns chancellorship, <a href="#Page_205">205</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">declines to be present at Anne Boleyn’s coronation, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">unsuccessful attempt to implicate him in the “treason” of Holy Maid of Kent, <a href="#Page_206">206</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">finds himself unable to take oath denying papal supremacy, and is sent to Tower, <a href="#Page_207">207</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">indicted for treason, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sentenced to death, <a href="#Page_209">209</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beheaded on Tower Hill, <a href="#Page_210">210</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beatified, <a href="#Page_213">213</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mortimer, name by which Jack Cade was popularly known, <a href="#Page_176">176</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Mortimer, Roger, <a href="#Page_132">132</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Newton, Sir John, Governor of Rochester Castle, taken prisoner by Tyler, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sent with message from Tyler to the king, <a href="#Page_154">154</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Nicholas, papal legate, <a href="#Page_86">86</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Norfolk, Duke of, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northampton, Council of, <a href="#Page_48">48</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Northampton, Marquis of (William Parr), <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Oastler, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Brien, James Bronterre, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_322">322</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">O’Connor, Feargus, <a href="#Page_320">320</a>, <a href="#Page_323">323</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a>, <a href="#Page_330">330</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Otho, papal legate, <a href="#Page_109">109</a>, <a href="#Page_110">110</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Overton, Richard, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Palgrave, Sir Francis (quoted), <a href="#Page_22">22</a>, <a href="#Page_23">23</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pandulf, papal legate, <a href="#Page_83">83</a>, <a href="#Page_94">94</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pankhurst, Mrs., <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pankhurst, Christabel, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Paris, Matthew (quoted), <a href="#Page_100">100</a>, <a href="#Page_105">105</a>, <a href="#Page_108">108</a>, <a href="#Page_113">113</a>, <a href="#Page_117">117</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Parker, Matthew, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_231">231</a>, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Perkins, Corporal, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Petibone, John, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Place, Francis, <a href="#Page_314">314</a>, <a href="#Page_319">319</a>, <a href="#Page_320">320</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Powell, Professor York (quoted), <a href="#Page_30">30</a>, <a href="#Page_65">65</a>, <a href="#Page_91">91</a>, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_135">135</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Prince, <a href="#Page_284">284</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Pym, John, enters House of Commons, 1614, <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conspicuous in “Short Parliament,” <a href="#Page_260">260</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">supports Eliot in Buckingham’s impeachment, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">becomes leader of parliamentary party, <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">canvasses England on horseback before “Long Parliament,” <a href="#Page_261">261</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">opens charge of impeachment against Strafford, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">active work in parliament, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>, <a href="#Page_264">264</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_345">345</span>makes overtures to the queen, <a href="#Page_263">263</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">impeached for high treason, <a href="#Page_265">265</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">takes refuge in city from Charles, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">secures Portsmouth and Hull for the parliament, <a href="#Page_266">266</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his “solemn league and covenant” accepted by parliament, <a href="#Page_269">269</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">dies, 1643, and buried in Westminster Abbey, <a href="#Page_269">269</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Rich, Edmund, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_106">106</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">retires to Pontigny, 1240, and dies, <a href="#Page_109">109</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richard II., agrees to interview with Tyler, <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">allows himself to be dissuaded, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sends to Tyler for written statement of grievances, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">agrees to a meeting at Mile End, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">assents to Tyler’s requests, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">second meeting at Smithfield, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">again agrees to Tyler’s demands, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">after Tyler’s death personally disperses his followers, <a href="#Page_166">166</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the danger passed, rebels fiercely punished, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">formally annuls charters granted to Tyler, <a href="#Page_168">168</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richard the Breton, <a href="#Page_59">59–63</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richard, Earl of Cornwall, half brother to Henry III., became King of the Romans, <a href="#Page_118">118</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Richard, Earl of Gloucester, <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_122">122</a>, <a href="#Page_124">124</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rishanger, Chronicler for St. Albans (quoted), <a href="#Page_121">121</a>, <a href="#Page_134">134</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Rockingham, Council of, <a href="#Page_13">13</a>, <a href="#Page_15">15</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roger of Wendover (quoted), <a href="#Page_88">88</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roper, William, son-in-law to Sir Thomas More, <a href="#Page_195">195</a>, <a href="#Page_196">196</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Roper, Margaret (his wife), <a href="#Page_198">198</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Russell, Lord John, <a href="#Page_321">321</a>, <a href="#Page_326">326</a>, <a href="#Page_329">329</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Sadler, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Salisbury, Earl of, counsels Richard II. not to interview Tyler, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Smithfield, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sanders, Henry, <a href="#Page_297">297</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Say-and-Sele, Lord, treasurer to Henry VI., impeached for treason, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">arrested and taken to Tower, <a href="#Page_181">181</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beheaded by Cade’s order, <a href="#Page_184">184</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Scales, Lord, guardian of prisoners in Tower, <a href="#Page_182">182</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in conjunction with mayor and corporation opposes Cade, <a href="#Page_186">186</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Seldon, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Shaftesbury, Lord, <a href="#Page_323">323</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sharpe, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sheffield, Lord, <a href="#Page_234">234</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sibley, Alderman, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Somerset, Protector, <a href="#Page_221">221</a>, <a href="#Page_236">236</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stafford, Archbishop of Canterbury, Chancellor to Henry VI., <a href="#Page_181">181</a>, <a href="#Page_187">187</a>, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stafford, Sir Humfrey, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Stafford, Sir William, <a href="#Page_180">180</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Standish, Ralph, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Steward, Augustine, <a href="#Page_234">234</a>, <a href="#Page_235">235</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strafford, Earl of, <a href="#Page_252">252</a>, <a href="#Page_256">256</a>, <a href="#Page_262">262</a>, <a href="#Page_263">263</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Straw, Jack, priest in Essex, follower of John Ball, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">acts as lieutenant to Wat Tyler, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">hanged without trial, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Strode, <a href="#Page_265">265</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sudbury, Simon, Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_144">144</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his palace at Canterbury ransacked by Tyler, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">Lambeth palace stormed by Tyler and records destroyed, but building uninjured, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beheaded by Tyler, on Tower Hill, <a href="#Page_161">161</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suffolk, Duke of, chief minister to Henry VI., <a href="#Page_173">173</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">impeached as a traitor, <a href="#Page_174">174</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">beheaded, <a href="#Page_174">174</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Suffolk, Earl of, President of Richard II.’s council, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Sutherton, Leonard, <a href="#Page_232">232</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Tonge, Alderman, <a href="#Page_156">156</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Theobald, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_33">33</a>, <a href="#Page_34">34</a>, <a href="#Page_36">36</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thompson, Corporal William, <a href="#Page_285">285</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Thompson, Cornet, <a href="#Page_286">286</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tressilian, Sir Robert, <a href="#Page_167">167</a>, <a href="#Page_170">170</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tyler, John, <a href="#Page_148">148</a>, <a href="#Page_149">149</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Tyler, Wat, chosen captain of peasants at Maidstone, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his recorded history can be followed for eight days only, <a href="#Page_150">150</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1"><span class="pagenum" id="Page_346">346</span>his followers at first moderate, <a href="#Page_151">151</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Canterbury, <a href="#Page_152">152</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">bursts open gaol at Maidstone and releases Ball and other prisoners, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sets out for London at head of <a href="#Page_30">30</a>,000 men, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">encamps at Blackheath, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">sends Sir John Newton with message to Richard II., <a href="#Page_154">154</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">interview refused, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">he marches on London Bridge, and destroys adjacent property, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">keeps his followers under strict discipline, <a href="#Page_156">156</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">demands interview with the king, <a href="#Page_158">158</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">conference at Mile End, <a href="#Page_159">159</a>, <a href="#Page_160">160</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">invites king to meet him again, at Smithfield, <a href="#Page_162">162</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his demands agreed to, <a href="#Page_164">164</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">in sudden scuffle draws dagger, strikes Walworth, and is mortally wounded in return, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his head exposed on London Bridge, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Urban, Pope, <a href="#Page_18">18</a>, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Vernon, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Vincent, <a href="#Page_321">321</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Von Hutten, Ulrich, <a href="#Page_193">193</a></li>
-
-<li class="ifrst">Warwick, Earl of, High Chamberlain to Henry VIII., <a href="#Page_236">236–240</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walter, Hubert, Bishop of Salisbury, afterwards Archbishop of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_69">69</a>, <a href="#Page_70">70</a>, <a href="#Page_73">73</a>, <a href="#Page_76">76</a>, <a href="#Page_77">77</a>, <a href="#Page_81">81</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walter of Coventry (quoted), <a href="#Page_85">85</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walworth, William, Mayor of London, owns London houses of ill-fame, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">the same destroyed by Tyler, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">attempts to fortify London Bridge, <a href="#Page_155">155</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">urges king and council to action, <a href="#Page_157">157</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Smithfield, <a href="#Page_163">163</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">wounds Tyler mortally, <a href="#Page_165">165</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">knighted by Richard, <a href="#Page_166">166</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Walwyn, <a href="#Page_283">283</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Warham, Archbishop, <a href="#Page_197">197</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Watson, a Norwich preacher, <a href="#Page_229">229</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Waynfleet, William, Bishop of Winchester, <a href="#Page_188">188</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wellington, Duke of, <a href="#Page_326">326</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wentworth (see Strafford, Earl of).</li>
-
-<li class="indx">Weston, Chancellor of the Exchequer, <a href="#Page_252">252</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wilberforce, William, <a href="#Page_313">313</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">William I., his character, <a href="#Page_3">3</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">condition of country under, <a href="#Page_3">3–5</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">death, <a href="#Page_5">5</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">William II., his character, <a href="#Page_5">5</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">condition of England under, <a href="#Page_6">6</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appoints Anselm to Archbishopric of Canterbury, <a href="#Page_10">10</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his quarrel with Anselm, <a href="#Page_11">11–13</a>, <i xml:lang="la" lang="la">et seq.</i>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">his death, <a href="#Page_19">19</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Williams, <a href="#Page_328">328</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Windebank, <a href="#Page_262">262</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Winstanley, Gerrard, <a href="#Page_286">286</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">leader of the “Digger” movement, <a href="#Page_293">293</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">born in Lancashire, but settled in London as a trader, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">fails, and retires to the country, <a href="#Page_294">294</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">publishes pamphlets, social and religious, <a href="#Page_295">295</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">first action of the “Diggers,” <a href="#Page_297">297–8</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">appeals to General Fairfax against interference, <a href="#Page_299">299</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">receives little notice, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">makes further active efforts, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">movement suppressed, <a href="#Page_300">300</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">little known of him later, <a href="#Page_301">301</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wollstonecraft, Mary, <a href="#Page_336">336</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wolsey, Cardinal, <a href="#Page_197">197</a>, <a href="#Page_201">201</a>, <a href="#Page_202">202</a>, <a href="#Page_203">203</a>, <a href="#Page_208">208</a>, <a href="#Page_217">217</a>, <a href="#Page_222">222</a></li>
-
-<li class="indx">Wraw, John, supporter of Ball in Suffolk, <a href="#Page_143">143</a>, <a href="#Page_146">146</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">follows Wat Tyler, <a href="#Page_149">149</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">at Blackheath, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">returns to Suffolk to announce rising, <a href="#Page_153">153</a>;</li>
-<li class="isub1">is hanged as rebel, <a href="#Page_167">167</a></li>
-</ul>
-</div></div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p class="p2 center"><i>The Westminster Press (Gerrards Ltd.), Harrow Road, London, W.</i></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote">
-<h2 class="nobreak center p1" id="Transcribers_Notes">Transcriber’s Note</h2>
-
-<p>Punctuation, hyphenation, and spelling were made
-consistent when a predominant preference was found
-in the original book; otherwise they were not changed.</p>
-
-<p>Simple typographical errors were corrected; unpaired
-quotation marks were remedied when the change was
-obvious, and otherwise left unpaired.</p>
-
-<p>Illustrations in this eBook have been positioned
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