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    chapter 13 HENRY VIII
            
           ON his election to
          the Empire Charles became a much greater potentate in the eyes of all, and, as
          he was also the Queen of England’s nephew, there were manifest reasons for
          England to desire his friendship. On the other hand, the close alliance of
          France, which Wolsey had twice succeeded in securing, however beneficial to
          England, was exceedingly unpopular. It had scarcely been contracted when
          efforts were made to undermine it; and soon a strong party at Court, headed by
          the Queen herself, endeavored to prevent the French interview, which had been
          arranged for April 1, 1519, from taking effect. The new Emperor, equally
          desirous to counteract, if he could not prevent, the meeting, agreed to visit
          England on his way from Spain to Germany. Matters, however, had to be arranged
          beforehand, and though the anti-French party contrived to put off the visit to
          Francis till June, 1520, it was only in April of that year that the imperial
          ambassador in England succeeded in concluding a specific treaty. It was settled
          that the Emperor should, if possible, land at Sandwich in May just before the
          King went to France, or, if he failed to do so, should have a meeting with
          Henry at Gravelines after the French interview. He
          actually landed on May 26, at Dover, barely in time for a very hurried visit.
          Next day, which happened to be Whitsunday, the King conducted him to
          Canterbury, where he was introduced to the Queen, his aunt, and attended
          service in the Cathedral. On the 31st he had to embark again for Flanders, in
          order that Henry might fulfill his engagement with Francis. But a further
          meeting at Gravelines after the French interview was
          promised.
           Wolsey meanwhile
          had taken care that this French interview should not be a failure. A great deal
          of negotiation, indeed, had been found necessary; but Francis, to facilitate
          matters, at last put all the arrangements under Wolsey's control, so that they
          advanced rapidly. The King crossed from Calais to Dover the same day that the
          Emperor embarked from Sandwich. At Guines on June 6
          he signed a treaty of which the counterpart was signed by Francis the same day
          at Ardres, partly bearing on the prospective marriage
          of Mary and the Dauphin, partly framed to secure French intervention in
          disputes with Scotland in a form which should give England satisfaction. The
          interview took place on the 7th, in a spot between the English castle of Guines and the French castle of Ardres.
          The scene, magnificent beyond all precedent, even in that age of glitter, was
          called, from the splendor of the tents and apparel, the Field of Cloth of Gold;
          and the mutual visits and festivities continued till the 24th, when the two
          Kings separated.
           Nothing could have
          appeared more cordial, and the world was for some time under the impression
          that the alliance between England and France was now more firmly knit than
          ever. And yet, immediately afterwards, the King with Queen Catharine proceeded
          by agreement to another meeting with the Emperor at Gravelines,
          which took place on July 10. On the 14th at Calais a secret treaty was signed,
          binding both Henry and the Emperor to make no further arrangements with France
          giving effect either to the marriage of the Dauphin with Mary or to that of
          Charles himself with the French King’s daughter Charlotte, a match to which he
          was bound by the Treaty of Noyon. Indeed, there is no doubt that in their
          secret conferences both at Canterbury and at Calais, the project had been
          discussed of setting aside agreements with France by both parties and marrying
          the Emperor to the Princess Mary. Of these perfidious compacts Francis was, of
          course, not directly informed; but he was not to be persuaded that the two
          meetings with the Emperor, before and after the interview, were mere matters of
          courtesy. He felt, however, that it would be impolitic to display resentment.
          The Emperor was crowned at Aachen on October 23.
           In April, 1521,
          the Duke of Buckingham was summoned from Gloucestershire to the King's
          presence, and on his arrival in London was charged with treason. Information
          had been given against him of various incautious expressions tending to show
          that, being of the blood of Lancaster, he had some expectation of succeeding to
          the Crown, the fulfillment of which events might hasten; also, that, should he
          succeed, Wolsey and Sir Thomas Lovel would be beheaded; and further, that if he
          had been arrested on an occasion when the King had been displeased with him, he
          would have tried, as his father had with Richard III, to get access to the
          King’s presence and would then have stabbed him. That this testimony was
          strongly colored by malice, there is little doubt. But the Duke had a formal
          trial before the Duke of Norfolk as High Steward, and was found guilty by
          seventeen of his peers. He was beheaded on Tower Hill on May 17, to the general
          regret of the people.
           At this time
          Francis I had stirred up war against the Emperor, who was already perplexed
          with a rebellion in Spain, while occupied in Germany with Luther and the Diet
          of Worms. Charles, hard pressed, was willing to accept Henry’s mediation, and
          the French, after some reverses for which their early success had not prepared
          them, were glad to accept it also. But the Imperialists changed their tone with
          the change of fortune, and demanded Henry’s aid by the treaty of London against
          the aggressor. Wolsey was sent to Calais to hear deputies of both sides and
          adjust the differences. On opening the conference, he found the Imperialists
          intractable; they had no power to treat, only to demand aid of England. But
          Wolsey, they said, might visit the Emperor himself, who was then at Bruges, to
          discuss matters. This strange proceeding, as State-papers show, had been
          certainly planned between Wolsey and the Imperialists beforehand; and the
          Cardinal suspended the conference, making plausible excuses to the French,
          while he went to the Emperor at Bruges and concluded with him a secret treaty
          against France on August 25. It would seem, however, that the terms of this
          treaty were the subject of prolonged discussion before it was concluded; and
          Wolsey, instead of being only eight days absent from Calais, as he told the
          Frenchmen he would be, was away for nearly three weeks. He had successfully
          contended, among other things, that if a suspension of hostilities could be
          obtained in the meantime, England should not be bound to declare war against
          France till March, 1523. On his return to Calais he labored hard to bring about
          this suspension, but in vain. The capture of Fuenterrabia by the French in October, and their refusal to restore it, or even to put it
          into the hands of England for a time as security, finally wrecked the
          conference, and Wolsey returned to England in November. His health had given
          way at times during these proceedings, and he was certainly disappointed at the
          result. But he was rewarded by the King with the abbey of St Alban’s in
          addition to his other preferments.
           Pope Leo X died on
          December 2 following. Charles V had promised Wolsey at Bruges that on the first
          vacancy of the papal chair he would do his best to make him Pope, and the King
          sent Pace to Rome to help to procure his election. The Emperor wrote to Wolsey
          that he had not forgotten his promise, but he certainly did not keep it, and in
          January, 1522, Adrian VI was elected. It may be doubted whether Wolsey was much
          disappointed; but he knew now what reliance to place on a promise of Charles V.
          On February 2 he and the papal ambassador presented to the King the deceased
          Pope's Bull bestowing upon him the title of Defender of the Faith, in
          acknowledgment of the service he had done the Church by writing a book against
          Luther.
           Henry had been
          more eager to take part with the Emperor than Wolsey thought prudent. Charles
          now required a loan and claimed from Henry fulfillment of a promise of the pay
          of 3000 men in the Netherlands. He was already in Henry’s debt; but Wolsey was
          disposed to allow him a further advance of 100,000 crowns on condition that the
          King should not be called on to declare openly against Francis till the money
          was refunded. This did not suit Charles at all, and he hastened on another
          visit which he was to pay to Henry on his way back to Spain, and arrived at
          Dover again in 1522 on May 26, the very day of his landing there two years
          before. He was feasted and entertained even more than he cared for at
          Greenwich, London, and Windsor, at which last place on June 19 he bound himself by a new treaty to marry Mary when she had
          completed her twelfth year. But he secured a further loan of 50,000 crowns, and
          had the satisfaction, during his stay, of seeing Henry committed to immediate
          war with France by an open declaration of hostility, which the English herald Clarencieux made to Francis at Lyons on May 29. On July 2 a
          further treaty was concluded for the conduct of the war, and on the 6th the
          Emperor sailed from Southampton. Just before his departure he gave Wolsey a
          patent for a pension of 2500 ducats on vacant bishoprics in Spain, and
          guaranteed him the continuance of another pension which Francis had hitherto
          paid him in recompense for the bishopric of Tournay,
          that city having surrendered to the Imperialists on December 1. But Spanish
          pensions were commonly in arrear, and that charged on the Spanish bishoprics
          was only in lieu of one specifically charged on the see of Badajoz, which the Emperor had already granted to Wolsey in 1520. Nor was
          Charles at all ready at any time, when called upon, to pay his debts to the
          King himself.
           It was no surprise
          to Francis when England declared war against him. As a means of keeping Henry
          in check, he had again let Albany find his way to Scotland while the Calais
          conferences were still going on in 1521. He pretended that he had not connived
          at Albany's escape, and he made a show of urging him to return; but he meant to
          make use of him in Scotland. Albany, on his arrival, desired of Henry a
          prolongation of the truce between the two kingdoms, in which France should be
          included. Evidently France was so impoverished by taxation that she would have
          been glad to stave off war by any means. But Henry would hear nothing about
          prolonging the truce while Albany was in Scotland; and he wrote to the Estates
          of that country in January, 1522, not to allow him to remain there, seeing that
          he had escaped from France surreptitiously and his presence was not even safe
          for their King. This was just what Henry had told them before; but it was a stranger
          plea to urge than formerly; for this time Queen Margaret, James V’s own mother,
          had solicited Albany’s return. She, indeed, had found it hard to live amid a
          factious nobility, especially as she had been neglected by her own husband,
          from whom she was now seeking a divorce. But Henry had small regard for his
          sister’s good name, and insinuated that it was Albany who had tried to separate
          her from her husband, with the intention of marrying her himself. Such a charge
          was scarcely even plausible, for Albany had a wife then living, with whom, as
          he told the English herald, he was perfectly satisfied. The Estates of Scotland
          made a very temperate but firm reply, saying they were prepared to live and die
          with their Governor, while both Margaret and Albany repelled the shameful
          insinuations against them, certainly not with greater vehemence than the case
          deserved. Henry then sent a fleet to the Firth of Forth, and some raids into
          Scotland took place, in which Kelso was partly burned.
           As to France, so
          soon after the declaration of war as the wind would serve and bad victualling
          arrangements permit, a force under the Earl of Surrey as Lord Admiral sailed
          from Southampton, and on July 1 sacked and burned the town of Morlaix in Britanny, setting fire
          to the shipping in the harbour. It then returned with
          a rich booty to the Solent; for the merchants of Morlaix had stores of linen cloths. There was also some desultory fighting about Calais
          and Boulogne; but nothing noteworthy was done till September, when Surrey, now
          the commander of an invading force, in co-operation with an imperial army,
          burned and destroyed with great barbarity a number of places in Picardy. Hesdin also was besieged, and the town much injured; but it
          was found difficult to assault the castle, and the besiegers withdrew. The
          season was wet, the artillery difficult to move, and the understanding between
          the allies not altogether satisfactory. Surrey’s empty victories won him great
          applause in England; but he returned to Calais in October.
           Meantime the Scots
          had created some alarm. In May, for want of French support, Albany had been on
          the point of withdrawing from the country and letting peace be made, when some
          slender succors came; moreover, the English raids called for retribution.
          Albany advanced to the borders at the head of a very numerous army, intending
          to invade England on September 2. Though the design was known even in July,
          when the Earl of Shrewsbury was appointed lieutenant-general of an army to be
          sent against Scotland, the borders were ill prepared to resist, and Carlisle,
          against which Albany’s great host was directed, was defenseless. But Lord Dacre, Warden of the Marches, was equal to the emergency.
          Towards the close of August he sent secret messages to Albany, which led to
          negotiations, though he acknowledged that he had no powers to treat; and he
          appealed to Margaret to use her influence for peace, which would become more
          hopeless than ever between the kingdoms if arrangements were not made at once.
          He effectually concealed the weakness of his own position, and caused the enemy
          to waste time till, at length, on September 11, Albany agreed with him for one
          month’s abstinence from war, and disbanded his army. Wolsey was much relieved,
          and Dacre was thanked for his astuteness. It was in
          vain, now, that Albany in further negotiations pressed for the comprehension of
          France; and he sailed again for that country in October, leaving a Council of
          Regency in Scotland, and promising to return in the following August.
           Much money was
          wanted for the French war. Wolsey had not only levied from the City of London a
          loan of £20,000, but afterwards, on August 20, had sent for the mayor and chief
          citizens to inform them that commissioners were appointed over all the country
          to swear every man to the value of his moveable property, of which it was
          thought that everyone should give a tenth; and though some had already
          contributed to the loan as much as a fifth of their goods, they were told that
          the loan would only be allowed as part of the tenth to be exacted from the
          whole city. Nor was even this enough; for Parliament, which had not met for
          more than seven years, was called in April, 1523, expressly for further
          supplies. A subsidy of £800,000 was demanded, for which the Commons were asked
          to impose a property tax of four shillings in the pound on every man’s goods
          and lands. Sir Thomas More, who was elected Speaker, backed up the demand, but
          it was resisted as impossible. There was not coin, it was said, out of the
          King's hands in all the realm to pay it. Cardinal Wolsey came down to the
          House, and would have discussed the matter; but the Commons pleaded their
          privileges, and he contented himself with setting before them evidences of the
          increased prosperity of the country, and withdrew. After long debate a grant
          was made of two shillings in the pound, payable in two years, on every man’s
          lands or goods who was worth £20, with smaller rates on men of inferior means.
          But Wolsey insisted that this was not enough, and ultimately further grants
          were made of one shilling in the pound on landed property, to be paid in three
          years, and one shilling in the pound on goods, to be paid in the fourth year.
          The amount was unprecedented. The Parliament sat continuously, except for a
          break at Whitsuntide, till August 13, when it was dissolved. The clergy were
          also taxed at the same time through their convocations, that of Canterbury
          meeting at first at St Paul's, and that of York under Wolsey at Westminster; an
          attempt of Wolsey to induce them to resolve themselves into a single national
          synod failed. They were permitted to vote their money in the usual way; and,
          after much opposition, a grant was made of half a year’s revenue from all
          benefices, payable in five years.
           The war, which had
          languished somewhat since Surrey’s invasion of France, was now renewed with
          greater vigour. In August the Duke of Suffolk was
          appointed Captain-general of a new invading army, a larger one, it was said,
          than had sailed from England for a hundred years. France was not only in great
          poverty but was now isolated. Scotland could not help her, and her old ally,
          Venice, had turned against her, not being allowed to remain neutral. Moreover,
          Henry was calculating on the disaffection of the Duke of Bourbon, with whom
          both he and the Emperor had been for some time secretly in communication. In
          September the Duke’s sudden defection took Francis by surprise, and compelled
          him to desist from conducting personally a new expedition into Italy. Meanwhile
          Suffolk, having crossed the Channel, was joined by a considerable force under
          Count van Buren, not, however, well provided with wagons and means of
          transport, while France was harassed elsewhere by the Imperialists. But the
          invading armies were weakened by divided counsels; a plan of besieging Boulogne
          was given up, and the allies only devastated Picardy, took Bray by assault, and
          compelled Ancre and Montdidier to surrender. It was reported in England that Suffolk was on his way to Paris,
          and, that he might have the means to follow up his advantages, commissions were
          issued on November 2 to press all over England for what was called an
          ‘anticipation’, that is to say, for payment by those possessed of £40 in lands
          or goods of the first assessment of the subsidy, before the term when it was
          legally due. The money was gathered in. But before the month of November was
          out, Buren had disbanded his forces, and Suffolk had returned to Calais. A
          severe frost had produced intense suffering, and it was found impossible to
          preserve discipline. The King had determined to send over Lord Mountjoy with
          reinforcements; but, before he could be sent, the English troops had taken
          their own way home through Flanders, and many of them shipped at Antwerp, Sluys, and Nieuport.
           Meantime, though
          later than he promised, eluding English efforts to intercept him, Albany had
          again crossed the sea to Scotland. During all the time of his absence Henry had
          persistently tried to undermine his influence and weaken the Scotch alliance
          with France. For this it was not difficult to make further use of Margaret,
          who, in the hope of seeing her old authority restored, was soon persuaded once
          more to desert Albany. A truce had been arranged with the lords without
          reference to him, and Albany in France took serious alarm at rumors that Henry
          had been negotiating to keep him permanently out of Scotland with the
          suggestion of marrying James to the Princess Mary. But the truce was allowed to
          expire in February, when Surrey was appointed lieutenant-general of the army
          against Scotland, and under his direction the Marquis of Dorset, who was
          appointed Warden of the East Marches, invaded Teviotdale in April, 1523. A series of further invasions was kept up all through the
          summer, and, just when Albany returned in September, Surrey succeeded in laying
          Jedburgh in ashes, till then a great fortified town more populous than Berwick.
          He met, however, with a most obstinate resistance, and was thrown on the
          defensive when Albany, immediately on his arrival, prepared to invade in his
          turn. Knowing the weakness of Berwick and the strength of Albany’s
          reinforcements, Surrey was seriously alarmed. But Wolsey had reason for
          believing his fears to be exaggerated, as the event proved them to be.
          Encumbered by heavy artillery Albany moved slowly, and at last laid siege to Wark Castle on November 1. The fortress seemed in real
          danger, the outer works being actually won; but the garrison made a gallant defence, and next day, as Surrey was coming to the rescue,
          Albany suddenly gave up the siege, and returned to Edinburgh. His mysterious retreat
          was branded by the English as a shameful flight, and satirized in contemptuous
          verse by Skelton, the poet laureate. But the truth seems to be that several of
          the Scotch lords deprecated a policy of invasion as being only in the interest
          of France. Albany's influence was clearly on the wane; for next year he met a
          Parliament in May, and again obtained leave for a brief visit to France on the
          understanding that if he did not return in August his authority was at an end.
          He left immediately and never returned again.
           1524-5] Papal
          election. War in France. Battle of Pavia.
             Meanwhile, on the
          death of Adrian VI in September, 1523, Charles V again promised with the same
          insincerity as before to advance Wolsey’s candidature for the papacy as
          advantageous alike to England and himself. But on November 19 Giuliano de'
          Medici, a great friend of both princes, was elected as Clement VII. He soon
          after confirmed for life Wolsey’s legatine authority, which at first had been
          only temporary but had been prolonged from time to time.
           In 1524 the war
          made little progress after February, when the Emperor recovered Fuenterrabia; all parties were exhausted. But little came
          of the mission of a Nuncio (Nicholas von Schomberg,
          Archbishop of Capua), whom the Pope sent to France, Spain, and England
          successively to mediate a peace. Negotiations went on with Bourbon on the part
          both of the Emperor and Henry for a joint attack on France. But the King and
          Wolsey had long suspected the Emperor’s sincerity, and were determined that
          there should be either peace or war in earnest. Bourbon invaded Provence, and
          laid siege to Marseilles; whereupon orders were issued in England, September
          10, to prepare for a royal invasion in aid of the Duke. The siege of
          Marseilles, in itself, was entirely in the Emperor’s interest; no English army
          crossed the Channel, and Bourbon was forced to abandon the enterprise.
           Henry, in the
          meantime, had been feeling his way to a separate peace with France, in case the
          Emperor showed himself remiss in fulfilling his engagements. In June a Genoese
          merchant, Giovanni Joachino Passano,
          came over to London, as if on ordinary business. He was soon known to be an
          agent of Louise of Savoy, the French King’s mother, who had been left Regent in
          her son’s absence. His stay in England was unpopular with the English, but his
          secret negotiations with Wolsey were disavowed, and in January, 1525, another
          French agent, Brinon, President of Rouen, joined him
          in London.
           Francis, seeing
          how matters lay, made a sudden descent into Italy and recovered Milan, which he
          had lost in the spring. But the protracted siege of Pavia ended with the defeat
          and capture of the French King, which seemed to throw everything into the
          Emperor’s hands, and it was not likely that he would share with his allies the
          fruits of his victory. Wolsey, however, had been ordering matters so as to
          secure his master's interests, whether the French should succeed or fail in
          Italy; and just before the news of the battle reached England he had taken a
          most extraordinary step to cover his communications with the French agent. A
          watchman arrested one night a messenger of de Praet,
          the Imperial ambassador, as a suspicious character. His letters were taken and
          brought to Wolsey, who first opened and read them, then sent for the ambassador
          and upbraided him for the terms (very uncomplimentary, certainly, to himself)
          in which he had dared to write to his own sovereign. The King himself followed
          this up by a letter to the Emperor, desiring him to punish de Praet as a mischief-maker trying to disturb the cordiality
          between them; and Charles, afraid to alienate Henry, made only a mild
          remonstrance against the insult.
           Just after this
          occurrence, and before news had yet arrived of the great event at Pavia, an
          important embassy came over from Flanders, from the Emperor’s aunt, Margaret of
          Savoy. The situation in Italy was then so doubtful, and the Imperial forces
          there so distressed for want of means, that England was to be urged to send a
          large army over sea to create a diversion by a new joint attack on the North of
          France. Another request was, that the Princess Mary and her dowry might be
          given up to them at once, or sent over as early as possible in anticipation of
          the time appointed by the treaty. The first point Wolsey was willing to
          concede, if assured of sufficient co-operation from Flanders; but the conditions
          he required were declared by the Flemings to be quite impossible in the
          exhausted condition of the country. The second demand looked strange enough,
          and Wolsey asked what adequate hostages they could give for a young Princess
          who was the treasure of the kingdom. Would they meanwhile put some of their
          fortified towns into the King's hands? This, too, the ambassadors said, could
          not be thought of; and the embassy had made little progress when, on March 9,
          the news from Pavia reached London. The King professed delight at the Emperor’s
          victory; bonfires were lighted, wine flowed freely for everyone in the streets,
          and on Sunday the 12th a solemn mass was celebrated by Wolsey at St Paul's.
           The Cardinal then,
          at the request of the Flemings, dismissed Brinon and Passano, and strongly urged that now was the time for both
          allies to put forth all their strength. They might completely conquer France
          between them, and Henry, meeting the Emperor in Paris, would accompany him to
          Rome for his coronation. The scheme, of course, was preposterous; but the
          proposal of it to the Emperor by the English ambassadors in Spain wrung from
          him the confession that he had no money to carry on the war, with other
          admissions besides, which proved clearly that he was really seeking to break
          off his engagement to the Princess Mary, and was bent on a more advantageous
          match with Isabella of Portugal. Thus England was to obtain nothing in return
          for all her loans to the Emperor; but the Emperor, as it soon appeared, meant
          to make his own terms with his prisoner, and keep to himself entirely the
          profits of a joint war; in which, indeed, English aid had profited him little.
           Meanwhile the
          victory at Pavia was declared in England to be a great opportunity for the King
          to recover his rights in France by conducting a new invasion; in aid of which
          commissions were issued to levy further contributions, called an ‘Amicable
          Grant’, though some installments of the parliamentary subsidy had still to be
          received. As commissioner for the City of London, Wolsey called the Lord Mayor
          and Aldermen before him, telling them that he and the Archbishop of Canterbury
          had each given a third part of their revenues, and urging that persons of over
          £50 income might well contribute a sixth of their goods according to their own
          valuation made in 1522. At this there was very natural discontent, the more so
          as many had incurred serious losses since that date; but the matter was pressed
          both in London and in the country. The demand was generally resisted. At
          Reading the people would only give a twelfth. In Suffolk the Duke of Suffolk
          persuaded them to give a sixth; but the clothiers said it would compel them to
          discharge their men, and a serious rising took place. At last, instead of a
          forced demand, Wolsey persuaded the King to be content with a voluntary
          ‘benevolence’. But a new objection was raised that benevolences were illegal by
          an Act of Richard III; and ultimately the King had to give up the demand
          altogether, and to pardon the insurgents.
           Wolsey told the
          citizens that the demand was abandoned because the French King’s capture had
          disposed him to make suit to England for an honorable peace; for if the King
          had not crossed the sea (he alleged) the money would have been returned, and
          now it would probably not be required. But until peace was actually concluded,
          they must still hold themselves prepared to make further sacrifices. Thus did
          Wolsey smooth the way for a policy of peace with France, which he was now
          actively pursuing. Passano, who had not ceased to
          hold indirect communication with him, again appeared in London in June, no
          longer as a secret agent, but as an accredited ambassador from Louise of Savoy,
          now ennobled with the title of the Seigneur de Vaulx.
          He concluded with Wolsey a forty days’ truce; but the Flemings immediately
          concluded one for five months with France, and the truce concluded by de Vaulx was prolonged to December 1 by Brinon,
          who soon followed him again to England with a commission to both for a more
          lasting treaty. The terms required by Wolsey were hard; but demands made at
          first for a cession of Ardres or Boulogne were given
          up, and the old payments exacted from France were increased to a capital sum of
          2,000,000 crowns payable at the rate of 100,000 crowns a year. After long
          discussions with Wolsey, a set of five treaties was signed at his palace of the
          Moor in Hertfordshire on August 30, the most important being a league for
          mutual defence, in which Henry bound himself to use
          his influence with the Emperor to induce him to set Francis at liberty on
          reasonable conditions. At the request of the Frenchmen peace was proclaimed a
          week later (September 6).
           Treaty of Madrid.
          [1525-6
             The Pope, the
          Venetians, and other Italian Powers who dreaded the overwhelming ascendancy of
          the Emperor, were glad of this arrangement between France and England. But it
          had little effect on the Emperor’s conduct towards his prisoner, who by this
          time had been conveyed to Madrid. His sister Margaret, Duchess of Alençon, came
          to Spain to treat for his liberation; but the conditions demanded by the
          Emperor were such as she had no power to grant. The chief difficulty concerned
          the cession of Burgundy. But Francis fell dangerously ill, and on his recovery
          he agreed to concede even this for the sake of liberty. On January 14, 1526, he
          signed the Treaty of Madrid, with all its onerous terms, including, among other
          things, the promise to refund the sum of 500,000 crowns due from the Emperor to
          Henry.
           England had been
          unable to do anything to mitigate the severity of the conditions. Henry,
          indeed, had sent a new ambassador, Dr Edward Lee, to Spain with that object;
          but it was easy to prevent either him or his colleagues from effectually
          interfering with the negotiations. After the treaty was signed, however,
          Francis told them that he was grateful to Henry above all princes living for
          not having invaded France, and that Henry should know his secret mind upon some
          things as soon as he had returned to his realm. What he meant by this we may
          imagine from the sequel.
           The preponderance
          in Europe which seemed to be secured to Charles by the Treaty of Madrid alarmed
          not only the King of England. It was generally believed, however, that Francis
          on regaining his liberty, neither would nor could allow himself to be bound by
          provisions to which he had no right to assent without consulting the Estates of
          his realm and the duchy of Burgundy. The Italian Powers accordingly looked
          anxiously to Francis, and, on account of Francis, not less anxiously to Henry.
           England was strong,
          and even stronger than she had been. The only active pretender to Henry’s
          throne, Richard de la Pole, self-styled Duke of Suffolk, ‘White Rose’ as his
          followers called him, had been slain at the battle of Pavia fighting for
          Francis. Moreover the Duke of Albany had left Scotland for the last time (he
          accompanied Francis to Italy and, but for the event of Pavia, would have gone
          on to Naples); so that the French party in Scotland was overpowered, and though
          there were changes enough in that country none of them were injurious to
          English interests. Henry was powerful, and no prince was held in higher esteem.
          Special gifts had been conferred upon him by three successive Popes, a golden
          rose by Julius II, a sword and cap by Leo X (besides the title of Defender of
          the Faith), and another golden rose by Clement VII. He was also still highly
          popular at home; for his subjects did not impute their heavy taxation to him.
          One thing indeed he did at this time, which was disagreeable to his own Queen.
          He had a bastard son six years old, whom in June, 1525, he created Duke of
          Richmond, assigning him at the same time a special household and lands as if
          for a legitimate Prince. But this, apparently, did not greatly abate his
          popularity; and it seems to have been partly to conciliate public opinion that
          Wolsey, in that year, handed over to the King the magnificent palace he had
          built at Hampton Court as too grand to belong to a subject.
           It was on March
          17, 1526, that Francis was released and reached Bayonne. That same day he took
          the English Ambassador Tayler in his arms, expressing warm gratitude to Henry,
          and soon after he dispatched de Vaulx once more to
          England with his ratifications of the Treaties of the Moor. On May 22, after
          Francis had reached Cognac, ambassadors of the Pope, the Venetians, and the
          Duke of Milan made an alliance with the French King against the Emperor.
           Henry, who had
          confirmed his own treaty with Francis at Greenwich on April 29, was not a party
          to this League of Cognac; but he was strongly solicited to join it by the
          Italian Powers. Indeed, a special place was reserved for him in the treaty
          itself as Protector and Conservator of the alliance if he chose to join it,
          with a principality in Naples as an additional attraction. But he and Wolsey
          only dallied with the confederates, insisting on various modifications of the
          treaty, while the others were already committed to hostilities in Italy.
          Meanwhile the confederacy moved on to its ruin, which was completed at the Sack
          of Rome.
           Francis naturally
          desired to obtain from the Emperor the best terms he could for redeeming his
          sons. Wolsey, however, had from the first endeavoured to keep him from any kind of agreement, assuring him that he was in no wise
          bound by the Treaty of Madrid, and hinting that a match with the Princess Mary
          would be more suitable for him than one with the Emperor’s sister Eleanor, whom
          by that treaty he had engaged to marry. And though the bait did not take
          immediately - for Francis, as his own ministers said, was ready to marry the Emperor’s
          mule to recover his sons- the Emperor still insisted on such intolerable
          conditions that Francis at last desired an offensive alliance with England by
          which he might either dictate terms or redeem his sons by war. An embassy with
          this view headed by de Grammont, Bishop of Tarbes,
          came to England in February, 1527. The ambassadors were long in negotiation
          with Wolsey, who insisted first on a new treaty of perpetual peace, with a
          heavy tribute from France, and after all his demands were conceded coolly told
          them that, if the Emperor would not release the Princes without Francis
          marrying Eleanor, the King recommended him to do so. Three treaties were at
          last signed on April 80, and, after the Bishop of Tarbes had gone back to
          France and returned again, another was concluded on May 29, for maintaining a
          joint army in Italy. But there were still matters to be settled, for which
          Henry desired a personal interview with Francis. This the French did not favor,
          but said that Wolsey would be welcome in France as his master’s representative;
          and Francis himself wrote that he would go to Picardy to meet him.
           The King is said
          to have alleged later, though there is no sufficient proof of the truth of the
          story, that, during this embassy the Bishop of Tarbes had expressed a doubt
          concerning the Princess Mary’s legitimacy, as her mother Catharine had been the
          wife of Prince Arthur, her father’s brother. It was the King himself who was
          now contemplating a divorce on this plea, although no one yet knew it. As a
          first step, in May he allowed himself to be cited in private before Wolsey as
          Legate and called upon to justify his marriage. Nothing came of this
          proceeding, except that on June 22 Henry shocked his wife by telling her that
          they must part company, as he found by the opinion of divines and lawyers that
          they had been living in sin. He desired her, however, to keep the matter secret
          for the present; and Wolsey, on his way to France, persuaded both Archbishop Warham and Bishop Fisher that the King was only trying to
          answer objections raised by the Bishop of Tarbes.
           Wolsey himself,
          however, did not know all the King’s mind upon the subject when, after landing
          at Calais in July, he proceeded through France with a more magnificent train
          than ever, not as ambassador but as his King’s lieutenant, to a meeting with
          Francis at Amiens. On this matter he believed he was commissioned, not only to
          hint that Catharine would be divorced, but also to put forward a project for
          marrying the King to Renée, daughter of Louis XII. This would, of course, have
          knit firmer the bond between Henry and Francis against the Emperor, who was
          Catharine’s nephew. But in France he was instructed to keep back “the King’s
          secret matter”, or only to intimate it very vaguely; and during the whole of
          his stay there, which extended to two months and a half, he did not venture to
          say anything definite upon the subject.
           1527-8] Anne
          Boleyn. War against the Emperor.
             Another matter,
          however, helped to strengthen the case for a union against the Emperor. A month
          before Wolsey crossed the Channel, news had reached England that Rome had been
          sacked, and the Pope shut up in the Castle of St Angelo. At Canterbury Wolsey
          ordered a litany to be sung for the imprisoned Pope, but considered how he
          could best utilize the incident for the King’s advantage. At Amiens on August
          18, three new treaties were made, which Henry and Francis ratified forthwith;
          and among other things it was settled that Mary should be married to the Duke
          of Orleans instead of to Francis, and that no brief or Bull should be received
          during the Pope’s imprisonment, but that whatever should be determined by the
          clergy of England and France in the meantime should be valid. It was also
          agreed what terms should be demanded of the Emperor by the two Kings; and
          meanwhile an English detachment under Sir Robert Jerningham was sent to join
          the French commander Lautrec in an Italian expedition for the Pope's delivery.
           Before Wolsey
          returned from France he had made the discovery that the King’s real object in
          seeking a divorce had not been imparted to him, and that Henry was pursuing it
          independently. It was not a French princess whom Henry designed to place in
          Catharine’s room, but one Anne Boleyn, daughter of Sir Thomas Boleyn, a simple
          knight, who had only been created a viscount (by the title of Rochford) in
          1525. The elder sister of this lady had already been seduced by the King, but
          she herself had resisted till she was assured of the Crown, and Henry persuaded
          himself that all that was required for his marriage with Anne Boleyn was a
          dispensation for a case of near affinity created by illicit intercourse with
          her sister. For he did not, in this first phase of the question, maintain, as
          he afterwards did, that cases like that of Catharine could not be dispensed for
          at all. He maintained that the dispensation procured for his marriage with
          Catharine was technically insufficient, and that the marriage was
          consequently ipso facto invalid.
           He accordingly,
          while Wolsey was still in France, dispatched Dr Knight, his secretary, to Italy
          on pretences that did not satisfy the Cardinal; and
          Knight performed his mission with great dexterity according to his
          instructions. He arrived at Rome while the Pope was still in confinement, and
          though it was hopeless to procure an interview, found means to convey to him
          the draft dispensation desired by the King, and obtained a promise that it
          should be passed when he was at liberty. Not long after the Pope escaped to
          Orvieto, where Knight obtained from him, in effect, a document such as he was
          instructed to ask for. But unfortunately it was absolutely useless for the
          King's purpose until he should be declared free of his first marriage; and
          Knight’s mission had no effect except to open the eyes of the Pope and
          Cardinals to Henry’s real object.
           Meanwhile, France
          and England having become the closest possible allies, the two sovereigns
          elected each other into their respective Orders of St Michael and the Garter;
          and their heralds Guienne and Clarencieux jointly declared war upon the Emperor at Burgos on January 22, 1528. On this
          the English merchants in Spain were arrested, and it was rumoured that the heralds were arrested also; in return for which Wolsey actually
          imprisoned for a time the Imperial Ambassador Mendoza. This war was extremely
          unpopular in England. A French alliance, indeed, was generally hateful,
          especially against the Emperor, who was regarded as a natural ally. The mart
          for English wools was removed from Antwerp to Calais; trade was interrupted
          both with the Low Countries and Spain; and this, added to the effect of bad
          harvests at home, produced severe distress. Cloth lay on the merchants' hands
          unsaleable, and the clothiers of the Eastern Counties were obliged to discharge
          their spinners, carders, and tuckers. The state of matters became, in fact,
          intolerable, and a commercial truce was arranged with Flanders from the
          beginning of May to the end of February following.
           The expedition of
          Lautrec and Jerningham in Italy, very successful in the spring, proved
          completely disastrous in the following summer. Plague carried off the two
          commanders, and the defection of Andrea Doria completed the ruin of the allied forces.
           After Knight’s
          failure Wolsey addressed himself to the real difficulty in attaining the King’s
          object, and dispatched his secretary Stephen Gardiner with Edward Foxe to
          persuade the Pope to send a Legate commissioned jointly with Wolsey to try in
          England the question whether the dispensation to marry Catharine was
          sufficient. The commission desired was a decretal one, setting forth the law by
          which judgment should proceed, and leaving the judges to ascertain the facts
          and pass judgment without appeal. This was resisted as unusual, and the
          ambassadors were obliged to be satisfied with a general commission, which Foxe
          took home to England, believing it to be equally efficacious. His report seems
          to have convinced the King and Anne Boleyn that their object was as good as
          gained. But Wolsey saw that the commission was insufficient, and he instructed
          Gardiner to press again by every possible means for a decretal commission, even
          though it should be secret and not to be employed in the process; otherwise his
          power over Henry was gone and utter ruin hung over him as having deceived the
          King about the Pope’s willingness to oblige him. Urged in this way, the Pope
          with very great reluctance gave for Wolsey's sake precisely what was asked for
          a secret decretal commission, not to be used in the process, but only to be
          shown to the King and Wolsey, and then to be destroyed. He also gave a secret
          promise in writing not to revoke the commission which was not to be used. This
          secret commission was entrusted to Campeggio, the legate sent to England as
          Wolsey's colleague to try the cause, with strict injunctions not to let it go
          out of his hands.
           Campeggio suffered
          severely from gout, and his progress to England was slow and tedious. He
          reached London on October 7, prostrated by illness; but he had the full command
          of the business, and Wolsey found, to his dismay, that he had no means of taking
          it out of his hands. Moreover, Campeggio had promised the Pope before leaving
          not to give sentence without reference to him. He tried first to dissuade the
          King from the trial; then to induce the Queen to accept an honorable release by
          entering a convent. Both attempts he found hopeless. The Queen was as
          determined as the King, and was supported by general sympathy out of doors, the
          women, particularly, cheering her wherever she went.
           On November 8 the
          King declared to the Lord Mayor and Aldermen at Bridewell the reasons for his
          conduct, imputing, as before, to the French ambassadors the first doubts of his
          marriage. But before matters had come to a trial Catharine showed Campeggio a
          document which seemed to make the validity of the marriage unimpeachable. It
          was a copy of a brief preserved in Spain, by which Julius II had given, at the
          earnest request of Queen Isabella, a full dispensation for the marriage,
          assuming that the previous marriage with Arthur had really been consummated.
          The King and Wolsey were seriously perplexed. They put forth reasons for
          believing the brief to be a forgery, and urged the Queen herself, as if in her
          own interest, to write to the Emperor to send it to England. The object,
          however, was too plain; and though, under positive compulsion, she did write as
          requested, her messenger, as soon as he reached Spain, took care to inform the
          Emperor that she had written against her will.
           The King was now
          living under one roof with Anne Boleyn, having given her a fine suite of
          apartments next to his own at Greenwich, and was quite infatuated in his
          passion, only awaiting an authoritative pronouncement that should allow him to
          marry. Early in February, 1529, his prospects seemed to be changed by a false
          report of the death of Clement VII; but the Pope, after being really very ill,
          recovered slowly in the spring, and was no sooner again fit for business than
          he was pestered by English agents with demands to declare the brief in Spain a
          forgery. The attempt to discredit the brief, however, was at last abandoned;
          and the King and Wolsey determined to commence the trial and push it on as fast
          as possible, for fear of some arrest of the proceedings. Good reasons had
          already been given at Rome by the Imperial ambassador for revocation of the cause;
          but the Pope declined to interfere with the hearing before the Legates.
           The Court was
          formally opened accordingly at Blackfriars on May 31,
          when citations were issued to the King and Queen to appear on June 18. On that
          day the Queen appeared in person before the Legates, and objected to their
          jurisdiction. This objection being considered, on the 21st the Legates
          pronounced themselves to be competent judges; whereupon the Queen intimated an
          appeal to the Pope and withdrew, after some touching words addressed to the
          King in Court. Being called again and refusing to return, she was pronounced
          contumacious, and the trial went on. But an incident at the fifth sitting,
          which was on the 28th, astonished everyone. John Fisher, Bishop of Rochester, a
          lover of books, who commonly avoided public life, said that the King at a
          former sitting had professed justice to be his only aim, and had invited
          everyone who could throw light upon the subject to relieve his scruples. He
          therefore felt bound in duty to show the conclusion which he had reached after
          two years' careful study; which was that the marriage was indissoluble by any
          authority, divine or human, and he presented a book which he had composed on
          the subject. He was followed by Standish, Bishop of St Asaph, and Dr Ligham, Dean of the Arches, who maintained the same view.
           Fall of Wolsey.
          [1529
             The Legates
          remonstrated, rather mildly, that Fisher was pronouncing in a cause which was
          not committed to him; and the King composed, but probably did not deliver, a
          very angry speech in reply addressed to the judges. The Court went on, taking
          evidence chiefly about the circumstances of Prince Arthur’s marriage, till July
          23, when Campeggio prorogued it to October 1. Shortly afterwards arrived an
          intimation that the cause was ‘advoked’ to Rome and all further proceedings
          must be prosecuted there. This the Imperialists had procured on the Queen’s
          demand for justice, which the Pope could not resist, and Henry saw that it was
          a death-blow to his expectations.
           The fall of Wolsey
          was now inevitable. From the first the business of the divorce had been a
          source of intense anxiety to him, knowing as he did that, if he failed to give
          the King satisfaction, his ruin would be easily achieved by the leading lords
          who had been so long excluded from the King’s counsels. And now that the
          failure was complete he was visibly out of favor. But the King was too well
          aware of his value not to desire his advice about many things, even now; and
          there was one matter in particular in which his guiding hand had scarcely
          completed his work. The King, indeed, had intended to send him to Cambray to assist in a European settlement if the trial
          could have been got over soon enough; but Bishop Tunstall and Sir Thomas More
          were sent in his place. By the Treaty of Cambray,
          signed on August 5, the state of war between Francis and the Emperor was ended,
          the conditions of the Treaty of Madrid were at length modified, and Francis was
          permitted to redeem his sons without parting with Burgundy. It was undoubtedly
          the Emperor's fear of England that secured these favorable conditions for
          France, and France had in return to take upon herself all the Emperor's
          liabilities to Henry. The English also made their own separate treaties at Cambray both with the Emperor and with Francis.
           But through the
          influence of Anne Boleyn Wolsey was presently excluded from the King’s
          presence, and ultimately he found himself cut off from all communication with
          his sovereign. On October 9, the first day of Michaelmas term, he took his seat as Chancellor for the last time in Westminster Hall.
          That day an indictment was preferred against him in the King’s Bench, and the
          30th of the same month was appointed for his trial. But meanwhile he was made
          to surrender the Great Seal and to execute a curious deed, in which he
          confessed the praemunire of which he was afterwards found guilty,
          and desired the King to take all his land and property in part compensation for
          his offences. This he did, not because the praemunire was
          just, but only in the hope of avoiding a parliamentary impeachment; which
          nevertheless was brought forward in the House of Lords, but was thrown out in
          the Commons by the exertions of his dependent, Thomas Cromwell.
           For a new
          Parliament had been called, after an interval of six years, and the session had
          been opened by Sir Thomas More, who had just been appointed Lord Chancellor in
          Wolsey’s place. The elections had been unduly influenced, and the Commons were
          so subservient that one of their Acts was expressly to release the King from
          repayment of the forced loan, for which, as may be imagined, they incurred
          general ill-will. They also sent up a host of bills to the Lords, attacking
          abuses connected with probates, mortuaries, and other matters of spiritual
          jurisdiction, and also against clerical pluralities, and non-residence. Bishop
          Fisher thought it right to protest in the House of Lords against the spirit and
          tendency of such legislation; and because he had pointed to the example of
          Bohemia as a kingdom ruined by lack of faith, the Speaker and thirty of the
          Commons were deputed to complain to the King that Fisher seemed to regard them
          as no better than Turks and infidels. It may be suspected that they were
          prompted; for Henry was certainly glad of the opportunity of calling on the
          Bishop to explain himself.
           On the breaking up
          of the Legatine Court the King had been just about to give up further pursuit
          of a divorce as hopeless; and in that belief he had sought to get the cause
          superseded at Rome that he might not be summoned out of his own realm. But in
          August, when he visited Waltham Abbey in a progress, he was told of a
          suggestion made by one Thomas Cranmer, a private tutor who had been there just
          before (having been driven from Cambridge by an epidemic), that he might still
          get warrant enough for treating his marriage as invalid by procuring a number
          of opinions to that effect from English and foreign universities. He at once
          caught at the idea, and relied on the friendship of Francis to procure what he
          wanted on the other side of the Channel.
           In the beginning
          of the year 1530, when the Emperor had gone to Bologna to be crowned by the
          Pope, Anne Boleyn’s father, who had recently been created Earl of Wiltshire,
          and Dr Stokesley, Bishop elect of London, were sent thither with a commission
          to treat for a universal peace and a general alliance against the Turk. That
          was the pretext; and no doubt aid against the Turks would then have been
          particularly valuable to the Emperor, seeing that they had got fast hold of
          Hungary, and had quite recently besieged Vienna. But the main object was to
          explain to Charles with great show of cordiality, now that the two sovereigns
          were friends again, the manifold arguments against the validity of Henry’s
          marriage with his aunt. And with this purpose in view, Stokesley on his way
          through France strove to quicken the process of getting opinions from French
          universities. The decisions even of the English universities were only obtained
          in March and April, under what pressure it is needless to say. The mere purpose
          of the proceedings raised the indignation of the women of Oxford, who pelted
          with stones Bishop Longland, the Chancellor, and his
          companion, when they came to obtain the seal of the University. No wonder,
          therefore, that when Wiltshire arrived at Bologna in March no French university
          had been induced to pronounce a judgment. His mission, in truth was anything
          but a success, and it is hard to see that much could have been expected of it.
          For the Pope, just before his coming, had issued a Bull, dated March 7,
          committing the King's cause to Capisucchi, Auditor of
          the Rota; which after his arrival was followed by another on the 21st,
          forbidding all ecclesiastical judges or lawyers from speaking or writing
          against the validity of the marriage. Worse still, Wiltshire's presence gave
          opportunity to serve him, as Henry's representative, with a summons for his
          master to appear in person or by deputy before the tribunal at Rome. The Pope,
          however, offered to suspend the cause till September, if Henry would take no
          further step till then; and the King accepted the offer.
           Wolsey, meanwhile,
          had been living at Esher, in a house belonging to him
          as Bishop of Winchester, whither on his disgrace he was ordered to withdraw.
          But his enemies, fearing lest the King should again employ his services, were
          anxious that he should be sent to his other and more remote northern diocese;
          and an arrangement was made in February, 1530, by which he received a general
          pardon, resigning to the King for a sum of ready money the bishopric of
          Winchester and the Abbey of St Alban’s, while the possessions of his
          archbishopric of York were restored to him. He began his journey north early in
          Lent, paused at Peterborough over Easter, and spent the summer at Southwell, a seat of the Archbishops of York, where he was
          intensely mortified to learn that the King had determined to dissolve two
          Colleges, the one at Ipswich and the other at Oxford, of which he had brought
          about the establishment with great labor and cost. For this object, as early as
          1524, he had procured Bulls to dissolve certain small monasteries and apply
          their revenues to his new foundations; and the obloquy he had incurred from
          other causes was certainly increased by the dissolution of those Houses. Indeed
          in 1525 a riot took place at Bayham in Sussex, where a company in disguise
          restored, though only for a few days, the extruded Canons. The Ipswich College
          was suppressed by the King. At Oxford, however, the buildings had advanced too
          far to be stopped and the work was completed on a less magnificent design.
          After Wolsey's death the King called it “King Henry VIII’s College”. It is now
          known as Christ Church.
           In the autumn
          Wolsey moved further north, and, reaching Cawood by
          the beginning of November, at length hoped to be installed in his own Cathedral
          of York on the 7th. But on the 4th he was visited by the Earl of Northumberland,
          who suddenly notified to him his arrest on a charge of treason. His Italian
          physician Agostini had been bribed by the Duke of Norfolk to betray secret
          communications which he had held with the French Ambassador de Vaulx, and the charge was added that he had urged the Pope
          to excommunicate the King and so cause an insurrection. Unconscious of this, he
          was conducted to Sheffield, where, at the Earl of Shrewsbury's house, he was
          alarmed to learn that Sir William Kingston had been dispatched to bring him up
          to London. As Sir William was Constable of the Tower, Wolsey now perceived that
          his execution was intended; and sheer terror brought on an illness, of which he
          died on the way at Leicester.
           So passed away the
          great Cardinal, the animating spirit of whose whole career is expressed in the
          sad words he uttered at the last, that if he had served God as diligently as he
          had served the King. He would not have given him over in his grey hairs.
          Conspicuous beyond all other victims of royal ingratitude, he had strained
          every nerve to make his sovereign great, wealthy, and powerful. His devotion to
          the King had undoubtedly interfered with his spiritual duties as a Churchman;
          it was not until his fall that he was able to give any care to his episcopal
          function. The new career, so soon terminated, showed another and a more amiable
          side in his character. That he might have been happy if unmolested, even when
          stripped of power, there is little reason to doubt. Yet his was a soul that
          loved grandeur and display, magnificent in building and in schemes for
          education; he was ambitious, no doubt, and it might be high-handed, as the
          agent of a despotic master, but with nothing mean or sordid in his character.
          And something of ambition might surely be condoned in one whose favor the
          greatest princes of Europe were eager to secure. For with a penetrating glance
          he saw through all their different aims and devices. The glamour of external
          greatness never imposed upon him; and, whatever bribes or tributes might be
          offered to himself, his splendid political abilities were devoted with
          single-minded aim to the service of his King and country. He raised England
          from the rank of a second-rate Power among the nations. His faults, indeed, are
          not to be denied. Impure as a priest and unscrupulous in many ways as a
          statesman, he was only a conspicuous example in these things of a prevailing
          moral corruption. But his great public services, fruitful in their consequences
          even under the perverse influences which succeeded him, would have produced yet
          nobler results for his country, if his policy had been left without
          interference.
           Royal Supremacy.
          [1530-1
             Meanwhile, the
          King had fallen on a new device to force the Pope's hand. A meeting of notable
          persons was called on June 12, to draw up a joint address to his Holiness,
          urging him to decide the cause in Henry’s favor, lest they should be driven to
          take the matter into their own hands. To obtain subscriptions to this the
          nobles were separately dealt with, and the document was sent down into the
          country to obtain the signatures and seals of peers and prelates, among others
          of Wolsey at Southwell. It was finally dispatched on
          July 13; and Clement, though he might well have felt indignant at this attempt
          to influence his judicial decision by threats, made on September 27 a
          remarkably temperate reply. He had, moreover, a few months before, sent to
          England a Nuncio named Nicholas del Burgo to smooth matters; and the prospect
          of justice to Catharine was not improved by this perpetual dallying. Bishop
          Fisher, however, was most assiduous in writing books to support her cause, so
          much so that Archbishop Warham, awed by the King's
          authority, called him to his house one day, and earnestly, but in vain,
          besought him to retract.
           Nevertheless
          inhibitions came from Rome which, it was believed, made the King at one time
          really think of putting away Anne Boleyn. This was at the beginning of the year
          1531. But he recovered heart when repeated briefs seemed only to grow weaker;
          and, conscious of his power at home, he sought to attain his object by breaking
          down the independence of the clergy, from the whole body of whom he contrived
          to extort, not only a heavy fine for a praemunire which they
          were held to have incurred by submitting to the legatine jurisdiction of
          Wolsey, but also an acknowledgment of his being “Supreme Head” of the Church of
          England. This title was only conceded to him by the Convocation of Canterbury
          after a three days’ debate, when it was carried at last by an artifice, and
          with the modifying words “so far as the law of Christ allows”. Nor was it
          without protest that the northern clergy were brought to the same
          acknowledgment. This encroachment on their liberties made the clergy of the
          south regret their pecuniary grant; but they were altogether helpless, though
          in the end of August their assessment led to a riotous attack on the Bishop of
          London’s palace at St Paul’s.
           Parliament had met
          on January 15, and was kept sitting into March without doing anything material.
          All the members were anxious to go home, and the Queen’s friends easily got
          leave. On March 30 it was prorogued for Easter, when Sir Thomas More as
          Chancellor, though utterly sick of an office which he had unwillingly accepted
          even with the assurance that his own convictions would be respected, found
          himself obliged to declare to the Commons, in order that they might check ill
          reports in the country, the conscientious motives by which the King said he had
          been induced to seek a divorce, and the opinions obtained in his favor from the
          greatest universities in Christendom. What effect this had in allaying popular
          indignation at the King's proceedings is very doubtful. A strange occurrence in
          February in Bishop Fisher's household had produced a most unpleasant
          impression. A number of the servants fell ill, and two of them died. It was
          found that the cook had put poison in some pottage, of which happily the Bishop
          himself had not tasted; but it was generally believed his life had been aimed
          at by Anne Boleyn’s friends. The King, however, was very angry; and, to avert
          suspicion, caused the Parliament to pass an ex post facto law,
          which was at once put in force, visiting the crime of poisoning with the
          hideous penalty of being boiled alive.
           At Rome the cause
          hardly made any progress. Henry in fact, though he would not appear there,
          either personally or by proxy, employed agents to delay it, especially a lawyer
          named Sir Edward Carne, called his excusator,
          who, without showing any commission from him, argued that he should not be
          summoned out of his realm. In his protest to that effect Henry had the support
          of Francis I, who urged that the cause might at least be tried at Cambray, and procured a decision for the King from the
          University of Orleans that he could not be compelled to appear at Rome. And
          though the process actually began in June, it was soon suspended for the Roman
          holidays from July to October, when the excusator at
          length produced a commission, and the question about giving him a hearing next
          occupied the Court. In November this was refused until he should produce a
          power from the King to stand to the trial; but he managed afterwards to get the
          question further discussed, and, in point of fact, the whole of the following
          year was wasted before the principal cause was reached.
           Meanwhile,
          Catharine suffered more and more from the delay of justice. On May 31 she had
          to endure a conference with about thirty of the leading peers, accompanied by
          Bishops Stokesley and Longland and other clergymen,
          who were sent by the King to remonstrate with her on the scandal she had caused
          by his being cited to Rome. In July she was ordered to remain at Windsor while
          the King went about hunting with Anne Boleyn; and, when the Queen sent a
          message after him regretting that he had not bid her farewell, he sent her word
          in reply that he was offended with her on account of the citation. After that
          they never met again. She was ordered to withdraw to the Moor in Hertfordshire,
          and afterwards to Easthampstead. But even then she
          was not free from deputations; for another came to her at the Moor in October,
          to urge her once more to allow her cause to be decided in England. But it was
          in vain they plied her with arguments, which she answered with equal gentleness
          and firmness. As she came to understand the King’s mind, she was more resolved
          than ever to have her cause decided at Rome.
           And Rome was at
          last really moved in her behalf. Slow as he was to take action, Clement was
          compelled, on January 25, 1532, to send the King a brief of reproof for his
          desertion of Catharine and cohabitation with Anne Boleyn. But Henry induced the
          Parliament, now assembled for a new session, to pass a bill, which he told the
          Nuncio was passed against his will by the Commons out of their great hatred to
          the Pope, for abolishing the payment of First-fruits to Rome. This Act,
          however, it was left in the King’s power to suspend till the Pope met his
          wishes; and how little the Commons acted spontaneously in such matters may be
          seen by what speedily followed. On March 18 the Speaker and a deputation of
          that body waited on the King to complain of a number of grievances to which the
          laity were subjected by ‘the Prelates and Ordinaries’, and which they desired
          the King would remedy. But with this petition they at the same time begged for
          a dissolution of Parliament, considering the excessive cost they had sustained
          by long attendance. The King replied that their second request was inconsistent
          with their first. They must wait for the answer of the Ordinaries to their
          complaints, and meanwhile he desired their assent to a very unpopular bill
          about wardships, which he had persuaded the Lords to pass. But he could not get
          the Commons to agree to it.
           Parliament was
          prorogued for ten days at Easter. On Easter Day (March 31), William Peto, Provincial of the Grey Friars, preached before the
          King at Greenwich a sermon in which he pointed out how Kings were encouraged in
          evil by false counselors. After the sermon, being called to a private
          interview, Peto further warned the King that he was
          endangering his Crown, as both small and great disapproved of his designs. The
          King dissembled his ill-will and licensed Peto to
          leave the kingdom on his duties; after which he caused Dr Richard Curwen, a
          chaplain of his own, to preach in the same place a sermon of an opposite tenor.
          In this Curwen not only contradicted what Peto had
          said in the pulpit, but added that he wished Peto were there to answer him; on which the Warden of the convent, Henry Elstowe, at once answered him in Peto’s place. Peto was then recalled by the King, who asked
          him to deprive the Warden; but he refused, and both he and Elstowe were committed to prison.
           When Parliament
          met again in April the Commons were solicited for aid in the fortification of
          the Scotch frontier. They objected to the expense; and two members said boldly
          that the Borders were secure enough, if the King would only take back his Queen
          and live in peace with the Emperor; for without foreign aid the Scots could do
          no harm. On the 30th the King sent for the Speaker and others of the Commons,
          and delivered to them the answer of the Ordinaries to their complaints, which
          he said he did not think would satisfy them, but he would leave them to
          consider it, and would himself be an indifferent judge between them. In such
          strange fashion did he declare his impartiality. On May 11 he sent for them
          again, and said that he had discovered that the clergy were but half his
          subjects, since the Bishops at their consecration took an oath at variance with
          the one they took to him. After some references to and fro the final result was the famous ‘Submission of the Clergy’ agreed to on May 15,
          and presented to the King at Westminster on the following day. Hereby they
          agreed to enact no new ordinances without royal licence and to submit to a Committee of sixteen persons, one half laymen and one half
          clerics, the question as to what ordinances should be annulled as inconsistent
          with God's laws and those of the realm.
           On that same day
          Sir Thomas More, who had done his best to prevent these innovations,
          surrendered his office of Chancellor, from which he had long sought in vain to
          be released. To fill his place in some respects, Thomas Audeley,
          the Speaker, was at first appointed Keeper of the Great Seal, but in the
          following January received the full title and office of Lord Chancellor.
           Henry’s way was
          now tolerably clear, and on June 23, 1532, he made a secret alliance with
          Francis I for mutual aid against the Emperor when it should be required.
          Francis for his part delighted in the belief that to gratify an insane passion
          Henry had put himself completely in his hands. Henry, however, was really using
          him to ward off excommunication; which, if pronounced, Francis informed the
          Pope he would resent as deeply as Henry himself. And, to give greater effect to
          the threat, Henry persuaded him to an interview, the only professed object of
          which : the concerting of measures against the Turk, was not only seen to be a pretence, but was meant to be seen through. It took place
          in October between Calais and Boulogne, with much less pomp than the Field of
          Cloth of Gold twelve years before. But the various meetings lasted over a week,
          and made an effective demonstration; and to counteract this the Emperor
          arranged a meeting with the Pope, which took place at Bologna in December. Anne
          Boleyn, of course, crossed with Henry to the meetings with Francis, who was
          found ready to dance with her. She had been created Marchioness of Pembroke on
          September 1, and Imperialists were relieved to find that Henry had not yet
          married her. Clement was compelled to warn the King by another brief on
          November 15 to put her away on pain of excommunication.
           Towards the close
          of the year the Earl of Northumberland invaded the Scotch border, and a state
          of war continued between the two countries for some months, but led to no great
          results.
           Another event
          favored Henry’s aims. Archbishop Warham, who had
          striven hard to maintain the old privileges of the clergy, died in August.
          Henry at once proposed to name as his successor Thomas Cranmer, who had been so
          useful in suggesting the appeal to the universities. He had lately sent him as
          ambassador to the Emperor with secret messages to the German Princes to gain
          their alliance against their sovereign. This intrigue was ineffectual, but he
          accompanied the Emperor to Vienna, and then to Mantua, where in November he
          received his recall with a view to his approaching elevation. In February,
          1533, bulls for his promotion were demanded of the Pope, who was then still at
          Bologna in frequent conference with the Emperor, and were obtained free of
          payment of First-fruits by the suggestion that the King, if favourably dealt with, had it in his power to cancel the Act against First-fruits
          generally.
           But before this,
          on January 25, Henry had secretly married Anne Boleyn, and, knowing her to be
          with child, was preparing to have her openly proclaimed as Queen. To guard
          against consequences, however, he first obtained from Convocation opinions
          against the Pope’s dispensing power in cases similar to that of Catharine, and
          then from Parliament an Act making appeals to Rome high treason. On Easter Eve,
          April 12, Anne went to mass in great state and was publicly named Queen. No
          sentence had yet been given by any Court to release the King from his marriage
          with Catharine; but on Good Friday the new Archbishop wrote to him (of course
          by desire) a very humble request that he would allow him to determine that
          weighty cause which had remained so long undecided. The King willingly gave him
          a commission to try it; and the Archbishop cited him and Catharine to appear
          before him at Dunstable, a place carefully selected as being conveniently out
          of the way. There, on May 23, sentence was given of the nullity of the King’s
          first marriage; and five days later at Lambeth a very secret enquiry was held before
          Thomas Cromwell and others as to the validity of the King’s marriage with Anne
          Boleyn. Of course it was pronounced valid, though the very date of the event
          was uncertain, and all the details were kept a profound secret. Anne was
          crowned at Westminster on Whitsunday, June 1, with all due state, but with no
          appearance of popular enthusiasm. Then another deputation was sent to
          Catharine, now at Ampthill, to inform her that she was no longer Queen and must
          henceforth bear the name of Princess Dowager; but she refused to submit to such
          a degradation.
           Henry VIII
          excommunicated. [1533-4
             Sentence of
          excommunication was pronounced against Henry at Rome on July 11; but even now
          he was allowed until the end of September to set himself right, before the
          sentence should be declared openly, by taking back his wife and putting away
          Anne Boleyn. This troubled his ally Francis more than himself; for the Pope was
          coming to France for an interview at which he hoped to make Henry’s peace. This
          interview, indeed, had been planned with Henry’s own approval, the policy then
          being to make the Pope feel that he must look to France and England to save him
          from the necessity of holding a General Council at the Emperor’s bidding. But
          Henry now completely changed his tone and endeavored to dissuade Francis from
          meeting the Pope at all; which, however, Francis was bent on doing, in order to
          arrange the marriage, which afterwards took place, of his son Henry, Duke of
          Orleans, with the Pope’s niece, Catharine de' Medici. He met the Pope at
          Marseilles in October; but, while they were both there still in November, Dr
          Edmund Bonner, a skilful agent of the King, who had
          followed Clement from Rome, intimated to his Holiness an appeal on Henry’s
          behalf to the next General Council against the sentence of excommunication.
          Next month the Kings Council at home came to a resolution that the Pope should
          henceforth be designated merely "Bishop of Rome"; and during the
          following year written acknowledgments were extorted from Bishops, abbeys,
          priories, and parochial clergy all over the kingdom that the Roman pontiff had
          no more authority than any foreign Bishop.
           The policy which
          the King had now been pursuing for four successive years had been inspired by
          Thomas Cromwell, who, as we have seen, had been in Wolsey’s service. He was a
          man of humble origin, who, after a roving youth spent in Italy and elsewhere,
          had risen by the use of his wits, and since his master's fall had now been for
          three years a Privy Councillor. In 1534 he was made
          the King’s chief secretary, and a few months later Master of the Rolls. But
          even in August, 1533, he had directed Crammer as Archbishop to examine one
          Elizabeth Barton, commonly called the Nun of Canterbury, or the Holy Maid of
          Kent, who had long professed to have visions and trances. Afterwards he
          examined her himself, and committed her and a number of her friends to prison.
          She had uttered fearful warnings to the King in the case of his marrying Anne
          Boleyn; and efforts were made to prove that she had been encouraged by
          Catharine’s friends. It was even sought to implicate Catharine herself, but no
          case could be made out against her. The charge was more plausible against
          Bishop Fisher, who had certainly communicated with her in previous years, but
          only in order to test her pretensions, which found wide credit, even with
          people of high standing. His name, and at first that of Sir Thomas More
          likewise, were included in a bill of attainder against the Nun’s adherents; but
          Sir Thomas entirely cleared himself, and the charge against the Bishop amounted
          only to misprision. Ultimately the Nun and six others were attainted of treason
          and afterwards executed at Tyburn, while the Bishop
          and five more were found guilty of misprision of treason, and were sentenced to
          forfeiture of goods.
           On March 23, 1534,
          the Pope pronounced Henry’s marriage with Catharine valid, while Parliament in
          England was passing an Act of Succession in favor of Anne Boleyn’s issue. Her
          daughter, Elizabeth, had been born in September, 1533. Orders were circulated
          throughout the kingdom to arrest preachers who maintained the Pope’s authority,
          and to put the country in a state of defence in case
          the Emperor should attempt invasion. The King’s subjects generally were
          required to swear to the Act of Succession; and those who refused were sent to
          the Tower, Sir Thomas More and Bishop Fisher among the first. Then, to prevent
          inconvenient preaching, the different Orders of Friars were placed under two
          Provincials appointed by the King. But the Grey Friars Observants declined the
          articles proposed to them by these Visitors as contrary to their obedience to
          the Pope; whereupon some were sent to the Tower, and soon afterwards the whole
          Order was suppressed. It was fortunate for Henry that on May 11, this year, he
          was able to make a peace with his nephew, James V, which relieved him from the
          danger of a papal interdict being executed by means of an invasion from
          Scotland. Just about the same time William, Lord Dacres, who for nine years
          past had ruled the West Marches as his father had done before him, was
          committed to the Tower on a charge of treason, arising, apparently, out of
          border feuds. He was tried in July, and, strange to say, acquitted, for such a
          result of an indictment was then quite unheard of. And the joy of the people at
          the event was all the greater because it was known that Anne Boleyn had been
          using her influence against him as one who sympathized with Catharine.
           Irish Rebellion.
          Act of Supremacy. [1534-5
             But a more serious
          danger now appeared in Ireland. Gerald, Earl of Kildare, the Lord Deputy, who
          had used the King’s artillery for his own castles, had been summoned to England
          in 1533, but delays ensued, and he only arrived in London in the spring of 1534,
          suffering from a wound that he had received in an encounter, and not likely to
          live long. He was not at first imprisoned, and efforts were made to lure his
          son, Lord Thomas Fitzgerald, over to England. But the young man (deceived, it
          is said, by a false report of his father's execution) rebelled, declaring that
          he upheld the Pope’s cause and that the King’s adherents were accursed. He
          murdered Archbishop Alien of Dublin, the Chancellor of Ireland (July 28), as he
          was endeavoring to sail for England, and became for a short time virtual ruler
          of the country, which he ordered all the English to quit on pain of death.
          Piers Butler, Earl of Ossory, however, made a stand
          for the King at Waterford, and Lord Thomas was compelled to raise the siege
          laid by him to Dublin, when Sir William Skeffington, appointed a second time as
          Lord Deputy, arrived from Wales in October; after which matters began to mend.
           In England, to
          complete the work of the year, Parliament met in November, and passed, among
          other legislation, Acts for confirming the King’s title as Supreme Head of the
          Church, for granting him the first-fruits and tenths before paid to the Pope,
          and for attainting More and Fisher of misprision and the Earl of Kildare of
          treason. But Parliament passed measures at dictation, and several of the chief
          lords of England were in secret communication with the imperial ambassador Chapuys to urge the Emperor to invade England.
           Cromwell was now
          appointed the King’s Vicar-General in spiritual things, and in the spring of
          1535 the Act of Supremacy began to be put into execution. An oath to the
          succession of Anne Boleyn’s issue had already been extorted in the previous
          year from the monks of the Charter House, which some of them seem not to have
          taken until after a significant visit from one of the London Sheriffs. But now
          they were required to swear to the supremacy in derogation of the Pope’s
          authority. Prior Houghton, with two other Priors of the Order who had lately
          come up to London, approached Cromwell at the Rolls in the hope of obtaining
          some mitigation of the terms required; but unconditional acknowledgment of the
          King’s supremacy was insisted on. All three refused, and repeated their refusal
          a few days later in the Tower. They were tried in April, together with Dr Reynolds
          of the Brigettine Monastery of Sion, who, having been
          also committed to the Tower, had joined in their refusal; and all received
          sentence together. With them also were condemned, for a private conversation
          about the King's tyranny and licentiousness, John Hale, vicar of Isleworth, and a young priest named Robert Feron; but the latter had his pardon after sentence, having
          turned King’s evidence. All the others were hanged at Tyburn on May 4, with even more than the usual barbarities.
           1535] Fisher and
          More executed.
             Next came the turn
          of Bishop Fisher and Sir Thomas More, who with three fellow-prisoners, Dr
          Wilson, Abell, and Fetherstone, priests lately most
          intimate in the Royal household, were warned that they must swear to the
          Statutes both of Succession and Supremacy. All declined to do so. Six weeks
          were given them to consider the matter; and visits were paid by Cromwell and
          other councilors to More and Fisher in the Tower to shake their constancy; but
          all in vain. Fisher denied that the King was Supreme Head of the Church of
          England; More said he would not meddle with such questions. Fisher was
          condemned on June 17, and was beheaded on Tower Hill on the 22nd. The King was
          all the more resolved on his death because the Pope had made him a Cardinal on May
          20. On July 1 More was brought up for trial on a complex indictment, one
          article of which showed that he did not, like Fisher, expressly repudiate the
          King’s ecclesiastical supremacy, but only kept silence when questioned about
          it. He made, as might be expected, an admirable defence,
          but in vain; and after his condemnation he declared frankly as to the statute
          that it was against his conscience, as he could never find, in all his studies,
          that a temporal lord ought to be head of the spirituality. He was sentenced to
          undergo a traitor’s death at Tybum; but it was
          commuted by the King to simple decapitation on Tower Hill, where he suffered on
          July 6.
           These executions
          filled the world with horror, both at home and abroad. The Emperor Charles V is
          said to have declared that he would rather have lost the best city in his
          dominions than such a councilor as Sir Thomas More. In Italy More was
          vehemently lamented, and men related with admiration the touching devotion of
          his daughter, Margaret Roper, who broke through the guards to embrace him on
          his way to the Tower. He was indeed a man to inspire affection far beyond his
          own family circle. Full of domestic feeling, yet no less full of incomparable
          wit and humor, dragged into the service of the Court against his will on
          account of his high legal abilities and intellectual gifts, he had refused to
          yield one inch to solicitations against the cause of right and conscience. A
          true saint without a touch of austerity, save that which he practised on himself in secret, he lived in the world as one who understood it perfectly,
          with a breadth of view and an innate cheerfulness of temper which no external
          terrors could depress. Of a mind altogether healthy, he was not beguiled by
          superstition or corrupted by gifts, but held his course straight on. Brought up
          in the household of Cardinal Morton, he had early devoted himself to learning,
          and became the special friend of Erasmus. His learning was entirely without
          pedantry, even as his humor was without gall. He loved men, he loved animals,
          he loved mechanism, and every influence that tended to humanize or advance
          society. He had served his King in diplomatic missions with an ability that was
          fully appreciated, and as Lord Chancellor with an integrity that was noted as
          altogether exceptional. But his very probity had made him at last an obstacle
          in the King’s path, and he was sacrificed.
           The three priests
          who had refused to acknowledge the Supremacy were retained in confinement. Two
          years later Dr Wilson received a pardon. The other two remained steadfast
          during five years’ imprisonment, and were executed in 1540.
           1536] Anne Boleyn
          beheaded.
             Pope Paul III, who
          had conferred the hat upon Fisher (he had succeeded Clement VII in the previous
          year), would have issued a Bull to deprive Henry of his kingdom; but, owing to
          the mutual jealousies of the Emperor and Francis I, there was no sovereign who
          dared to execute the sentence. Henry, moreover, had been scheming for years
          with the citizens of Lübeck to fill the throne of Denmark with one who would
          unite with him and the Northern Powers of Europe against both Pope and Emperor;
          and, though his plan was a failure, the Danes elected a Lutheran King
          (Christian III), ill-pleasing to Charles V. Further, the English King was
          seeking to conclude a league with the German Protestants, and his intrigues
          gave the Emperor some anxiety.
           During the latter
          half of 1535 the Bishops in England were inhibited from visiting their dioceses
          pending a royal visitation of the whole kingdom, while Cromwell sent out
          special Visitors for the monasteries, who with remarkable celerity traversed
          the greater part of the country in a very few months and sent private reports
          of gross immoralities, alleged to have been discovered in a number of the
          Houses they visited. It is impossible, for many reasons, to attach much credit
          to these reports, or to think highly of the character of the Visitors. The
          object was seen when Parliament met again in February, 1536, and passed, as the
          principal measure of the session, an Act for the dissolution of such
          monasteries as had not revenues of £200 a year. It was passed, as tradition in
          the next generation reported, under very strong pressure, and certainly, as the
          preamble shows, on the King’s own statement of the results of the visitation.
          These, it was said, proved that the smaller monasteries were given to vicious
          living, while the larger were better regulated; though in truth the Visitors
          had reported abominations quite as flagrant in the latter as in the former.
           Meanwhile, in
          January, Catharine of Aragon had died at Kimbolton. On hearing of the event
          Henry could not help exclaiming, “God be praised! We are now free from fear of
          war”. If Catharine had lived, the Bull of privation might even yet have been
          launched when the Emperor arrived at Rome in the spring; but the King
          calculated truly. The Court and Anne Boleyn wore mourning for Catharine. But
          Anne’s own fate was near at hand; for Henry had long since grown tired of her,
          and could not make men respect her. He now said that he had been induced to
          marry her by witchcraft. In the course of the month she miscarried. On May Day
          there was a tournament at Greenwich, during which the King suddenly left her
          and went to Westminster. Next day she was apprehended and taken to the Tower.
          One Mark Smeton, Groom of the Chamber, had been
          arrested and examined beforehand, and afterwards her brother George, Lord
          Rochford, and three other courtiers were likewise placed in the Tower. Anne was
          charged with acts of adultery with them all. She protested her innocence,
          though she acknowledged some familiarities. On the 15th she and her brother
          were condemned, and the latter suffered two days later with the four other
          supposed paramours. On the 17th a secret enquiry was conducted by persons
          learned in the canon law, after which Cranmer pronounced her marriage with the
          King invalid. On the 19th she was beheaded on Tower Green.
           For some time
          before her arrest the King had been secretly talking of matrimony with Jane,
          daughter of Sir John Seymour, of Wolfhall, Wiltshire.
          On the very day of Anne's execution Cranmer gave the King a dispensation for
          this new match, and on the next day the couple were secretly betrothed. On
          Ascension Day, however (May 25), the King wore white as a widower in mourning;
          and it was not till Whitsunday, June 4, that Jane was openly produced as Queen,
          having been married the week before.
           Parliament had
          been dissolved not long before Anne Boleyn’s arrest. It was the same Parliament
          which had been summoned at Wolsey’s fall, and it had lasted for six years and a
          half. A new Parliament was called, and met on June 8, to pass, among other
          things, a new Act of Succession in favor of Jane Seymour’s issue, disinheriting
          that of both the two former Queens. The Princess Mary, though her chief enemy was
          now dead, was not restored to favor until, to make life bearable, she had
          signed without reading an abject submission, acknowledging the King’s laws by
          which she herself was a bastard. Shortly afterwards died the Duke of Richmond,
          the King’s natural son, who was believed to have been destined by Henry to
          succeed him on the throne in case of failure of issue by Jane Seymour; for he
          had procured a clause in the Succession Act enabling him in that contingency to
          dispose of the Crown by will. Another Act passed was for the attainder of Lord
          Thomas Howard, brother of the Duke of Norfolk, who had presumed to contract
          marriage with the King’s niece, Lady Margaret Douglas. He died in the Tower
          next year. At this time also the office of Lord Privy Seal was taken from Anne
          Boleyn’s father, the Earl of Wiltshire, and given to Cromwell.
           In July there was
          a meeting of Convocation, over which Dr Petre presided as deputy to Cromwell, the King’s Vicar-General. Since Cranmer had
          been raised to the Primacy several other Bishops favorable to the new principle
          of Royal Supremacy had been appointed, including Latimer of Worcester; and, as
          the King was hoping to strengthen his position by an alliance with the German
          Protestants, it was important to set forth by authority a formulary of the
          faith as acknowledged by the Church of England. This was done in Ten Articles
          not greatly at variance with the beliefs hitherto received, though dissuading
          the use of the term Purgatory, and omitting all notice of four out of the Seven
          Sacraments. This omission of course attracted some observation. But as to their
          positive contents Cardinal Pole himself found little fault with these Articles,
          his main objection being to the authority by which they were set forth. They
          were printed as “Articles devised by the King’s Highness to establish Christian
          quietness and unity among us”.
           Askes
          rebellion.[1536
             The legislation of
          past years had created much popular discontent, which was now increased by the
          dissolution of the monasteries. In the north rumors were spread that the King
          would appropriate all the Church plate; and when the Commissioners for levying
          a subsidy came to Caistor, in Lincolnshire, just after two small neighboring
          monasteries had been suppressed, the people banded together to resist them. The
          Commissioners made a hasty retreat, but some of them were captured and
          compelled by the rebels to swear to be true to the King and to take their side.
          The insurgents likewise sent up two messengers to Windsor to lay their
          grievances before their sovereign. The answer returned by Henry was rough in
          the extreme, and he sent a force under the Duke of Suffolk to quell the rising,
          preparing himself to follow with another, which was to muster at Ampthill. The
          muster, however, was countermanded on news that the rebels were ready to
          submit; but Lincolnshire was scarcely quiet when a more formidable rising began
          in Yorkshire, called the Pilgrimage of Grace. A lawyer named Robert Aske caused
          a muster on Skipwith Moor, at which the men swore to
          be faithful to the King and preserve the Church from spoil; for here, as in
          Lincolnshire, men desired to combine loyalty with religion, which they believed
          to be in danger from the rule of Cromwell and such Bishops as Cranmer and
          Latimer. Aske and his friends got possession of York. They took an oath of
          adhesion from the Mayor and commons at Doncaster. They replaced the expelled
          monks in their monasteries. Pomfret Castle was delivered up to them by Lord
          Darcy as too weak to hold out, though the Archbishop of York had taken refuge
          with him there; and a herald named Lancaster, sent thither by the Earl of
          Shrewsbury, was forbidden by Aske to read the King’s proclamation, though he
          fell on his knees and begged leave to execute his commission.
           The Duke of
          Norfolk, sent by the King to put down the rising, joined the Earl of Shrewsbury
          and others in the Midlands, and sent an address to the rebels, offering them
          the choice of battle or submission. But on reaching Doncaster he found that the
          movement had assumed such dimensions that a conflict would have been
          disastrous; and accordingly he made an agreement there with the rebels (October
          27) and arranged for a general truce in the north, while Sir Ralph Ellerker and Robert Bowes were sent up to the King to ask
          for an answer to the demands of the insurgents. Henry wrote a temporizing
          reply, but detained the messengers for some time on the excuse of various
          sinister rumors. Conferences were arranged in December at Pomfret and
          Doncaster, and a general pardon was proclaimed at the latter place. Hereupon
          the King, putting a smooth face on matters, wrote to Aske to come up and confer
          with him frankly; and, though not without misgivings in spite of his safe
          conduct, Aske came and seems to have been won over by royal affability. Early
          in January (1537) he returned to Yorkshire and did his best to allay disquiet,
          declaring that the King was every way gracious and had approved the general
          pardon, that he was sending Norfolk once more into the north, and that
          grievances would be discussed at a free Parliament at York, where also the
          Queen would be crowned.
           But the pardon had
          been already ill received at Kendal, in Westmorland, where the people said they
          had done no wrong; and grave suspicions were aroused in Yorkshire that the King
          was fortifying Hull and Scarborough. One John Hallom was taken in an attempt to surprise Hull, and Sir Francis Bigod made an equally futile effort to march on Scarborough. Bigod fled and was afterwards captured near Carlisle, where he had joined himself to
          a new rising provoked by the King’s use of border thieves to keep the country
          down. The Duke of Norfolk, when he came back, went first to Carlisle, where he
          proceeded by martial law against seventy-four of the insurgents and terrified
          the country with savage executions. He then went on to Durham and York, where
          he endeavored to learn who were chiefly responsible for the demands made and
          conceded at Doncaster. He got Aske into his hands and sent him up to the King;
          while the Earls of Sussex and Derby reduced Lancashire to submission by hanging
          the Abbots of Whalley and Sawley and one or two
          monks, and securing the surrender of the Abbey of Furness.
           The King’s
          principal danger was past; but meanwhile his anxieties abroad had increased.
          One thing was in his favor, that during the whole of 1536 the Emperor and
          Francis I were at war, and neither of them wished to interfere with him. But
          the Pope was trying to make peace between them; and having created Reginald
          Pole a Cardinal in December, he gave him on February 7 a commission as Legate
          to bring about Henry’s return to his obedience to Rome. Pole was a grandson of
          the Duke of Clarence, brother of Edward IV; and his mother, the Countess of
          Salisbury, was a sister of that Earl of Warwick who was put to death by Henry
          VII. At the beginning of his reign Henry VIII wished to atone for his father's
          wrong and Reginald Pole, showing a great love of letters, was educated at the
          King's expense at Oxford and Padua. For this Pole was certainly most grateful;
          but he did not approve Henry's later policy and obtained leave to go abroad
          again. Pressed by the King for a statement of his views as to the Royal
          Supremacy, he had written a treatise intended for the King’s own eye, severely
          censuring his policy and the cruelty with which he had enforced it. The King
          was exasperated at this, and still more at Pole's being made a Cardinal. But it
          was now his duty to go to England, or as near it as he could, and publish the
          papal censures against Henry; for which an opportunity was offered by the
          presence of James V at Paris, where, on January 1, 1537, he married the French
          King's daughter Madeleine. There were many indications, indeed, that the
          English would welcome a Scotch invasion if Henry did not mend his ways. But
          Francis did not dare to receive at his Court a papal Legate denounced by Henry
          as a traitor, whose surrender he claimed by treaty ; and Maria of Hungary, the
          Regent of the Netherlands, also warned Pole not to come near her, but to seek
          refuge with the Cardinal of Liege. Pole’s mission was consequently a complete
          failure.
           And now Henry,
          having reduced the whole of the north country to subjection, left unfulfilled
          his promise of a free Parliament at York. On Norfolk’s return he instituted a
          Council to govern the north, at first under Bishop Tunstall of Durham,
          afterwards under Holgate, Bishop of Llandaff. Meanwhile a Council of divines
          met in London to supply some omissions in the King’s book of Articles issued in
          the previous year; and the result was the publication of a treatise
          entitled The Institution of a Christian Man, which the King allowed
          to go forth as a manual of doctrine agreed upon by the Bishops, without giving
          it the express sanction of a work which had been examined by himself. It was
          accordingly called “the Bishops’ Book”. Five years later, a considerably
          revised edition of it, which had really been examined by the King, was issued
          under the title of A Necessary Doctrine for any Christian Man, and
          was commonly called “the King’s Book”. In both these treatises the old number
          of seven Sacraments was acknowledged, and the doctrine concerning each of them
          was defined.
           On October 12 the
          Queen gave birth to a son (the future Edward VI) at Hampton Court. She died
          twelve days after. Three months previously James V also had lost his
          newly-wedded Queen Madeleine.
           In the following
          year (1538) the suppression of the monasteries was carried further. Several of
          the abbots and priors were induced to make formal surrenders, which were often,
          no doubt, voluntary in one sense, since pensions were more acceptable than
          visitations. The King’s agents were likewise zealous in putting down images,
          pilgrimages, and superstitions. A wonder-working crucifix at Boxley in Kent was destroyed; and a solemn enquiry was held
          into the nature of a venerated relic, the “Blood of Hailes”,
          reputed to be the blood of our Lord.
           1536-9] Execution
          of Lords Exeter and Montague.
             Meanwhile the
          dissolution of the monasteries was quickened by information for treason against
          the heads of Houses who rejected the Royal Supremacy. The Prior of Lenton in Nottinghamshire, and the Abbot of Wobum were both executed. All friars were compelled to put
          aside their habits, and their Houses were confiscated. These proceedings were
          not relaxed in view of danger from abroad, when the King heard of the ten
          years' truce made in June between the Emperor and Francis. In September the
          magnificent shrine of St Thomas at Canterbury was robbed of all its treasures,
          and the relics which had been the object of so many pilgrimages were burned.
          Henry’s wrath was stimulated against the Saint who had brought a King of
          England low. The news of this outrage excited peculiar horror at Rome; but all
          the Pope could do was to reissue (December 17) the Bull of Excommunication
          already published in 1535, with additions setting forth the King's new
          enormities, and to attempt to procure its proclamation at least at Dieppe and
          Boulogne, or in Scotland or Ireland.
           But Henry
          anticipated the danger which threatened him. At the end of August Cardinal
          Pole’s brother Sir Geoffrey was arrested; and, questions having been put to him
          concerning his communications over sea, the fear of torture wrung from him
          information which was thought to implicate his other brother Lord Montague and
          the Marquis of Exeter. These two noblemen were accordingly lodged in the Tower
          on November 4. Exeter would be next in succession if the King died without
          lawful issue, and Montague was the lineal heir of Clarence. The Marchioness of
          Exeter and the Countess of Salisbury, Montague's mother, were also closely
          examined. The two noblemen were tried for treason and beheaded on December 9,
          others who were found guilty along with them being hanged and quartered at Tyburn. Sir Geoffrey received a pardon on January 4, in
          consideration of his unwilling disclosures. On the other hand, Sir Nicholas
          Carew, who was arrested on December 31, was found guilty of treason in
          February, 1539, mainly for conversations with the Marquis of Exeter, and was
          beheaded on Tower Hill on March 3.
           The Pope, however,
          was now encouraged by the better understanding between the Emperor and Francis
          to send Cardinal Pole on a new mission to those two sovereigns to induce them
          to forbid commercial intercourse with England; and David Beton was at the same time made a Cardinal with a view to his publishing in Scotland
          the Bull of Excommunication against Henry. Pole travelled by land to Spain, and
          on February 15 was received by the Emperor at Toledo in spite of the
          remonstrances of the English ambassador, Sir Thomas Wyatt. Yet his arrival did
          not seem agreeable to the Emperor, who declined to do as the Pope desired; and
          Pole returned to Carpentras, where he stayed with his
          friend Sadoleto till he received an answer to a
          message that he sent to Francis. But the French King was only willing to
          prohibit intercourse with England on condition that the Emperor would do the
          same ; and Pole's second legation bore no more practical fruit than the first
          had done.
           Act of the Six
          Articles. Anne of Cleves. Cromwell’s execution.  [1539-40
             Henry was
          nevertheless seriously alarmed. Orders were given for the construction and
          repair of fortifications on the coasts, and general musters were held. The
          people, believing in the national danger, were zealous for the defence of the country. Parliament was called together in
          April, and occupied itself mainly in passing what was called the Act of the Six
          Articles for enforcing religious unity. This was an answer to the taunts that
          the English were heretics, and that the Pope’s excommunication was well
          deserved. By this severe enactment denial of transubstantiation involved death
          by fire and confiscation of goods, no abjuration being allowed in bar of
          execution; and it was further declared felony to maintain, either that
          Communion in both kinds was necessary, or that priests or any man or woman who
          had vowed chastity or widowhood might marry, or that private masses were not
          laudable, or that auricular confession was not expedient. But for all these
          offences except the denial of transubstantiation, a first conviction was
          visited merely with imprisonment and confiscation; a second was punished
          capitally. There was also passed a great Act of Attainder against not only Exeter
          and Montague, but the Countess of Salisbury and a large number of other
          persons, some of whom were alive, for the most part refugees abroad, and some
          had been condemned and executed in recent years for treason. But the danger
          seemed even to increase in the latter part of the year, when the Emperor, on
          the invitation of Francis, passed through France on his way to the Low
          Countries, and was hospitably entertained in Paris.
           In this crisis
          Henry sought security by arranging a new marriage for himself with Anne, sister
          of William, Duke of Cleves, who by his pretensions to Gelders was a thorn in the side of the Emperor, and had, besides, family and other ties
          with the Protestant Princes of Germany. With these, moreover, Henry had for
          some time been cultivating a good understanding and had given them great hopes
          in the previous years of a religious union against both Pope and Emperor. And
          though the Germans were sadly disappointed by the passing of the Act of the Six
          Articles, against which they strongly remonstrated, the political support of
          England was too valuable to be hastily rejected.
           In November
          proceedings for treason were taken against the two great Abbots of Reading and
          Colchester; and against the Abbot of Glastonbury for felony; all three were
          executed. These trials were certainly irregular, and the treasons seem to have
          consisted merely of private conversations disapproving of Royal Supremacy and
          of the King's proceedings. But the unwillingness of these Abbots to surrender
          was perhaps their chief crime, and a rush of surrenders followed, so that very
          soon not a single monastery was left.
           In the last days
          of December Anne of Cleves crossed from Calais to Deal, from which she went
          that day to Dover and on by stages through Canterbury to Rochester, where she
          remained all New Year's Day, 1540. Here she received a surprise visit from the
          King, who came incognito and made himself known to her; as he afterwards
          stated, he was disappointed as to her beauty, though he had secured beforehand
          her portrait painted by Holbein. He returned to Greenwich and received his
          bride publicly in Greenwich Park on January 3. The wedding took place on the
          6th.
           Just six months
          later this marriage was declared null, but for the present no one doubted its
          validity. Believing that it would bring favor to the new German theology, Dr
          Barnes and two other preachers of what was called the New Learning, were
          indiscreetly bold at Paul’s Cross; but what school of opinion would prevail was
          for some time uncertain. Parliament met on April 12, and under the management
          of Cromwell, who on the 17th was created Earl of Essex, did its best still
          further to enrich the Crown. The great Military Order of St John of Jerusalem
          was suppressed and its endowments were confiscated; a heavy subsidy was also voted,
          payable by installments in four years. But, these things being secured, a great
          change took place. On June 10 Cromwell was arrested at the Council table and
          committed to the Tower, where he was questioned about the circumstances of the
          King's marriage, and forced to make written statements to serve as evidence for
          its dissolution. But nothing was yet known on the subject when the two Houses
          of Parliament, acting on a hint, prayed that the validity of his marriage might
          be inquired into by Convocation. This was done, and after various depositions
          had been read to show that the King had never given his ‘inward consent’ to his
          own public act, a sentence of nullity was pronounced.
           This removed at
          once any fear of a misunderstanding with the Emperor, while it disappointed
          Francis and the Duke of Cleves. Anne herself, however, consented to the
          separation and was provided for in England, admitting that she remained a maid.
          A month later it was announced that the King had married Catharine Howard,
          niece of the Duke of Norfolk, who was prayed for as Queen on August 15.
          Meanwhile, July 9, a Bill of Attainder was passed against Cromwell in
          Parliament on account of various acts, some of which were regarded as
          treasonable and some heretical, among the latter being his support of Dr
          Barnes. He was beheaded on Tower Hill on July 28. Two days later Dr Barnes, and
          with him Jerome and Garrard, the two other clergymen who had preached at Paul's
          Cross in the spring, were burned as heretics at Smithfield; while three of the
          Old Learning who had been attainted in Parliament were hanged at the same place
          as traitors.
           It would be a
          mistake to say that Cromwell entirely directed the policy of England during the
          years of his ascendancy; for, as he told Cardinal Pole, he himself considered
          it the very height of statesmanship to endeavor to discern what was in the
          King’s own mind and set himself zealously to follow it out. And this, indeed,
          is the explanation of his whole policy. He labored to satisfy the King; yet at
          times he mistook the King’s intention, and had the mortification occasionally
          to see the King himself deliberately upset all that he had been endeavoring to
          establish, or even to incur the King’s heavy displeasure. He maintained his
          position by pure obsequiousness, and there was no kind of cruelty or tyranny of
          which he declined to be the agent. Seldom have vast and multifarious interests
          been so completely under the control of a statesman so unscrupulous. He was
          continually open to bribes and was guilty of many acts of simony. No doubt
          there was something engaging in his personality to men who like himself could
          take the world as it came. His early wanderings had given him a knowledge of
          men which, combined with a first-rate capacity for business, had paved his way
          to fortune. They had also given him cultivated tastes and an acquaintance with
          Italian literature which few Englishmen possessed in his day. It was from a
          study of the great work of Machiavelli, at a time when it was still in
          manuscript, that he derived those political principles which guided him through
          his whole career.
           1541-2] Catharine
          Howard beheaded. Scotland.
             For more than a
          year the King was highly satisfied with his fifth wife. In other matters he was
          not yet at ease. He had now no such convenient tool as Cromwell, and,
          distrusting most of his remaining ministers, stood in fear of a new
          insurrection. In April, 1541, a conspiracy was detected in Yorkshire to kill
          Holgate, Bishop of Llandaff, whom he had appointed President of the North, and
          take possession of Pomfret Castle. Though called a rebellion by chroniclers,
          the design was suppressed before it came to a head, and the conspirators were
          executed, some in London and some at York. It was clear that the north of
          England was in a dangerous state, and Henry thought it advisable to go thither
          in person with a force of 4000 or 5000 horse. First, however, he determined to
          clear the Tower of inconvenient prisoners. The aged Countess of Salisbury, who
          had been attainted in Parliament without a trial two years before, was beheaded
          in the Tower on May 28. Lord Leonard Grey was tried on June 25, and executed on
          the 28th for conduct considered treasonable when he was Lieutenant of Ireland.
           The King left
          London for the north on June 30; but his progress was impeded by storms and
          floods, so that he only reached Lincoln on August 9. On entering Yorkshire he
          was met by the country gentlemen; and those of them who had taken part in the
          rebellion of 1536-7, including Edward Lee, Archbishop of York, made their
          submission to him kneeling, with large gifts of money and thanks for his
          pardon. The like submission and gifts had been made to him in Lincolnshire. He
          delayed his arrival at York till the middle of September, expecting (as he
          afterwards gave out) a visit there from James V. But as the Scottish King made
          no sign of coming, he left on the 27th on his return southward. By the
          beginning of November he was again at Hampton Court, when secret information
          was revealed to him through Cranmer. The Queen, it was found, had before her
          marriage to him been too intimate with more than one person; and it was alleged
          that even during the royal progress in Lincolnshire she had secret meetings
          with a paramour. The supposed accomplices of her guilt were executed; and,
          Parliament having met in January, 1542, an Act of Attainder was passed against
          the Queen, who on February 13 was beheaded within the Tower. She steadfastly
          denied any misconduct since her marriage; and her fate has been thought to have
          been the result of political intrigue.
           For about a year
          and a half the King remained a widower. Meanwhile it should be noted that,
          having obtained from Parliament in 1539 powers for the creation of new
          bishoprics, during the next three years he applied a portion of the confiscated
          property of the monasteries to the endowment of six new sees; one of which,
          Westminster, was dissolved in the following reign, but the other five, after
          some vicissitudes, are in existence at the present day. Here also may be
          mentioned the publication of an Authorised English
          Bible, which was first issued and ordered to be read in churches as early as
          1536.
           In March, 1542,
          Henry began pressing his richer subjects for a loan; which, though little hope
          was entertained of repayment, was generally granted, in the expectation that
          the money would be used in a war against France. But, though Francis and the
          Emperor were on the verge of war, and the former really invaded the latter’s
          dominions in July, England remained neutral for nearly a whole year after.
          Henry’s design was first to get Scotland completely into his power.
           Scotland during
          the youth of James V. [1524-32
             A brief account
          seems desirable at this point of the course of events in Scotland. At the time
          of Albany’s final withdrawal from the kingdom in the early summer of 1524,
          James V was only twelve years old, and should have remained still for some time
          under tutelage. But the circumstances were peculiar. Albany had not
          relinquished his claims upon the government, but had left behind him a garrison
          at Dunbar, and his cause was still upheld by James Beton,
          Archbishop of St Andrews, and Gawin Dunbar, Bishop of
          Aberdeen. His party, however, had really collapsed, and in July Queen Margaret
          caused her son to be declared of age by a Council at Holyrood, at which most of
          the Scotch lords swore fealty. There seemed then to be a very general feeling
          for an agreement with England, especially as the lords were encouraged to
          believe that their King would be allowed to marry the Princess Mary,
          notwithstanding her engagement to the Emperor; from which, as Wolsey secretly
          informed Margaret, Henry intended to induce Charles to release her.
           Unfortunately, the
          plans of the King and Wolsey included the reconciliation of Margaret to her
          husband Angus, who, after being for two years a refugee in France, came to
          England just as Albany returned, and was bent on going back to his own country.
          Margaret would not hear of being reconciled to him, all the less as she had now
          bestowed her affections on young Henry Stewart, second son of Lord Evandale,
          whom she had made Lord Treasurer; and both she and Arran,
          the great rival of Angus, declared that if the latter were allowed to cross the
          border, negotiation with England was at an end. Angus, however, made his way to
          Scotland, and, together with the Earl of Lennox and some other gentlemen,
          scaled the town walls of Edinburgh at four o'clock on a November morning; after
          which they opened the gates to their companies, and, when it was day,
          proclaimed at the Cross that they came as loyal subjects objecting to evil
          councilors about the King. But, as the Castle opened fire upon him, Angus found
          it prudent in the evening to quit the town and retire to Dalkeith; and that
          same night Margaret took her son with her from Holyrood into the Castle for
          security. She then dispatched in his name an embassy to England; which, being
          received at Greenwich just before Christmas, proposed a peace, with the
          marriage of James to Mary, and returned with an encouraging reply. But Angus
          had been meanwhile making friends with Archbishop Beton and others who were displeased with the Queen’s exclusiveness; and, when the
          lords came to Edinburgh for a Parliament in February, 1525, they compelled her
          to bring her son out of the Castle to the Tolbooth,
          where a Council was appointed to carry on the government; and the summonses of
          treason against Angus and his friends were declared untrue.
           Margaret next sent
          a secret message to Albany asking for French support; but the time was unlucky,
          for the date of her messenger’s instructions was just two days before the
          battle of Pavia. Indeed from this time the French were generally very cautious
          about interfering in Scotch affairs without the consent of Henry, who was
          always a possible ally against the Emperor, or might be a very dangerous enemy.
          And Henry not only favored Angus, but remonstrated strongly with his sister on
          her efforts to procure a divorce from him. Angus thus had full control of
          affairs for three years, during which the young King was jealously guarded, and
          all important offices were filled by his relatives. It was a time when none
          could prevail against a Douglas. But Margaret obtained from Rome a divorce from
          Angus and married Henry Stewart, who was afterwards created Lord Methven; and
          her son, after repeated efforts had been made for his liberation, escaped to
          Stirling Castle in June, 1528. In a few months Angus and his brother Sir George
          Douglas were driven to take refuge in England, where, to James’ great grief,
          they were well received by Henry.
           James had no
          desire to quarrel with his uncle, but the intrigues of Angus, together with
          border raids, brought about the hostilities which we have noticed in 1532, when
          the Earl of Northumberland invaded the East Marches as far as the neighborhood
          of Dunbar. By the mediation of Francis peace negotiations were opened next year
          at Newcastle, and in May, 1534, peace was concluded in London. Henry then sent
          to his nephew the Order of the Garter and afterwards endeavored, but without
          success, to draw him into his own policy in religion against the Pope. Henry
          might well desire this; for his own conduct had raised the political importance
          of Scotland among the nations. The Emperor courted James’ friendship, and the
          Pope sent him a consecrated sword and hat, meaning to take away Henry’s title
          of Defender of the Faith and bestow it upon the Scottish King. Scotland,
          moreover, was an asylum for persons who disliked Henry’s measures against the
          Church; and there was a serious possibility of an invasion from Scotland to
          drive Henry from the throne if he would not make his peace with Rome.
           In 1536 James went
          to France under engagement to marry Mary of Bourbon, daughter of the Duke of Vendôme; but the lady did not please him, and he actually
          married Madeleine, eldest daughter of Francis I, at Paris in January, 1537. He
          took her with him to Scotland; but she died in the following July. Next year he
          married Mary, eldest daughter of the Duke of Guise and widow of the Duke of
          Longueville. Thus he was still strongly bound to France; but France remained on
          good terms with England, and James had no desire to disturb the existing
          tranquility. In 1541 died two infant Princes to whom Mary had given birth, and
          also James’ mother Margaret, the Queen Dowager. Another child was expected in
          1542, the year at which we have now arrived, when Henry, as we have said, was
          scheming to get Scotland completely under his power.
           In the spring Sir
          Thomas Wharton, Deputy Warden of the West Marches, submitted to the King and
          his Council a proposal to kidnap James while he was somewhere near Dumfries,
          and to bring him to Henry. The project, however, was disapproved as dangerous
          and sure to be attended with scandal if it failed. In July the outbreak of war
          between Francis and the Emperor cut off Scotland from any hope of aid from
          France against English aggression; and, while James was anxious for a
          conference between commissioners of both realms to put down border raids, Sir
          Robert Bowes was sent down to the border and arranged with Angus an invasion of Teviotdale. It took place on August 24, when the
          English burned several places; but on their return they were caught in an
          ambuscade at Hadden Rig, Sir Robert Bowes and most of the leaders being taken
          prisoners. Angus, however, escaped.
           That very day, in
          total ignorance of this reverse in the north, the Privy Council were making
          preparations for a more considerable invasion under Norfolk. The news of Bowes’
          defeat made Englishmen all the more eager to avenge it. But James had done
          nothing to provoke war. His ambassador was still in the English Court, desiring
          a passport for a larger embassy to treat of peace; and, though he hardly met
          with due civility, a meeting was at length arranged, which took place at York
          in September between commissioners on both sides. But musters were made at the
          same time all over England; and, as Henry would accept no terms, without free
          delivery of the prisoners taken by the Scots and renunciation of their alliance
          with France, the result was war. After it was begun Henry published a manifesto
          in his own justification, in which James was reproached with having shown
          ingratitude for the protection afforded to him in his early years, by declining
          to meet Henry at York. The English King also revived the old claim of
          superiority over Scotland.
           The Duke of
          Norfolk crossed the border in October, and burned Kelso and laid waste the
          neighboring country, but was obliged to return to Berwick in eight days for
          lack of victuals. An army suddenly raised by James was only able to skirmish
          with the invaders and harass their retreat. James would have pursued them
          further to revenge the injury; but the nobles objected, and he returned to
          Edinburgh. He was warned not to risk his life, being childless, in dangerous
          expeditions. But in November he passed secretly to the West Borders as far as Lochmaben, and directed Lord Maxwell, the Warden there,
          with the Earls of Cassillis and Glencairn and other
          lords, to invade England near the Solway They entered the Debateable Land by night, in numbers reckoned at about 17,000, and burned some places on
          the Esk before daybreak on November 24. But Wharton
          at Carlisle, having got notice of the project, sallied out first with a small
          company to reconnoitre; and when others, following,
          brought up his numbers to about 2000, he crossed the Leven in view of the
          enemy. The Scots, believing that the Duke of Norfolk had come upon them, began
          to withdraw, discharging ordnance to cover their retreat, which they could only
          effect by fording the Esk with a moss on their left
          hand. But the retreat soon became a rout. Many were drowned in the Esk; only twenty were slain, and about 1200 prisoners were
          taken, including two Earls and five Barons. Deeply mortified with this
          disgraceful defeat, James withdrew to Edinburgh and then to Falkland, where he
          remained, ill and dejected, while news was brought him that his Queen at
          Linlithgow had borne him a daughter on December 8. He had no comfort in the
          news, and died on the 14th.
           The child was Mary
          Stewart, who thus became Queen when only a week old. On hearing of her father’s
          death, Henry liberated the Solway Moss prisoners from the Tower, and called his
          pensioners, the Earl of Angus and his brother, to a conference with them,
          proposing a treaty between the two kingdoms, with provisions for the future
          marriage of Prince Edward with the new-born babe, who was to be brought up in
          England till she reached marriageable age. Having given pledges to promote this
          design, the Scotch lords were allowed to return to their country, for which
          they set out on New Year’s Day, 1543, honored with great gifts upon their
          departure. Meanwhile Cardinal Beton had claimed the
          government of Scotland under an alleged will of the deceased King; but, this
          being treated as a forgery, the claims of the Earl of Arran,
          as next in the succession, were admitted by the nobles, and Beton was thrown into prison. Hereupon the Cardinal laid the kingdom under interdict.
          Nevertheless Arran called a Parliament, which met at
          Edinburgh on March 12, and in the main favored Henry's policy; for the marriage
          in itself was generally approved, the Douglases were
          restored to their estates, and, the influence of Beton being excluded, an Act was passed to permit the use of English Bibles. But the
          English King’s demand for the control of the young Queen during her childhood
          was absolutely refused, as likewise was another for the surrender of fortresses
          in Scotland; and a little later, Sir George Douglas being sent up with the Earl
          of Glencairn for an adjustment, Henry agreed that the royal child should remain
          in Scotland till she was ten years old, sufficient hostages meanwhile remaining
          for her at the English Court. To this, in effect, the Scotch lords were
          brought, though with difficulty, to consent in the beginning of June; and by
          the efforts of Glencairn and Sir George Douglas two treaties were concluded at
          Greenwich on July 1, for peace and for the marriage.
           This arrangement
          offered a fair show of an international settlement; but there were secret
          articles, apart from the treaty, which Henry was getting his friends in
          Scotland to sign, and by which he hoped to keep the government of the country
          entirely in his power. Meanwhile, however, Cardinal Beton had been released from prison on April 10; Matthew, Earl of Lennox, who had
          just come from France (son of that Earl who had entered Edinburgh with Angus in
          1524), sought to supplant Arran both as Governor and
          in the succession to the Crown; and Argyle and Both well joined the party to
          protect the rights of the Queen Dowager and the independence of the country.
           Meanwhile Henry,
          having obtained another heavy subsidy from Parliament, had concluded, on
          February 11, a secret treaty with the Emperor against France, which was still unavowed when confirmed, first by the Emperor in Spain,
          March 31, and then by Henry at Hampton Court on Trinity Sunday, May 20. But
          joint demands were formulated to be made of Francis by heralds of the Emperor
          and Henry at once. Francis, however, refused passports to the heralds to enter
          his country and the demands were intimated in London to the French ambassador.
          Then on July 7 Sir John Wallop was appointed commander of a detachment which
          joined the Emperor at the siege of Landrecies; where,
          however, the joint efforts of the allies, though prolonged for months, proved a
          total failure.
           Just after
          Wallop’s departure the King, on July 12, married his sixth and last wife,
          Catharine Parr. England won little glory from the campaign abroad, though,
          strengthened by Henry's alliance, the Emperor was able in September to bring
          the Duke of Cleves into subjection.
           Open war with
          France rendered Henry’s designs on Scotland more difficult. To secure the aid
          of Arran he had made him the most splendid
          offers-that he should have the Princess Elizabeth as a bride for his son, and
          that he should himself be King of Scotland beyond the Forth. But Arran could not easily withstand the growing feeling of
          suspicion against England; and, though he ratified the treaty with Henry at
          Holyrood on August 25, in presence of a number of the nobility, he had even
          before that date resigned the charge of the infant Queen and her mother to the
          Cardinal and his friends. He then sought a meeting and reconciliation with the
          Cardinal at Falkirk, where he abjured his Protestant heresies. Immediately
          afterwards, on September 9, they crowned the child at Stirling as Queen.
          Henry’s anger was intense. But the feeling of the Scots against England was
          still more aggravated by the discovery that some Scotch merchantships,
          whose safety ought to have been secured by the treaty, had been arrested at an
          English port on the plea that they were carrying victuals to France. Henry,
          moreover, let the two months expire within which he should have ratified the
          treaty; so that the Scots justly felt they had been deluded. Early in October a
          French fleet arrived at Dumbarton with money to oppose the designs of England.
          With it also came a French ambassador, La Brossé, and
          a papal Legate, Cardinal Grimani. But the Earl of
          Lennox at once intercepted the money, and, to maintain his opposition to Arran, left the party of France and joined that of Henry.
           In September,
          while professing peace with Scotland, Henry had meditated a further outrage by
          an invasion under the Duke of Suffolk; but this was wisely forborne. The
          Scottish people were already deeply incensed; and the English ambassador, Sir
          Ralph Sadler, had to leave Edinburgh for his own safety, and take refuge in
          Angus’ Castle of Tantallon. In December the Scotch
          Parliament met, declared the treaties with England no longer binding, and
          renewed the old league with France. Henry immediately sent a herald to Scotland
          with a threatening and reproachful message to be read to the Estates. It was
          received by the Governor after the Parliament had been dissolved. It apparently
          helped to bring about a formal agreement which Angus and Lennox made with him
          on January 13, 1544, and in which the Earls of Cassillis and Glencairn likewise took part, all promising to unite against the old enemy
          England. But the same lords presently asked England'’s aid to support them in their own country; and a treaty was signed at Carlisle
          on May 17, by Glencairn and by the Bishop of Caithness in behalf of Lennox, binding them to procure Henry’s appointment as Protector
          of Scotland, to put the chief fortresses of the country into his hands, and, if
          possible, to get possession of the young Queen’s person, and convey her to
          England. Lennox was then to have the regency of Scotland and to marry Henry's
          niece, Margaret Douglas. This marriage actually took place in the following
          summer ; and Darnley was born of it next year.
           But already at the
          beginning of the same month of May a fleet of 200 sail under John Dudley,
          Viscount Lisle, had appeared in the Firth of Forth and landed an army under the
          Earl of Hertford. The Earl first captured Leith, then burned Edinburgh and
          Leith also, and re-embarked in less than a fortnight, leaving a detachment to
          return to Berwick by land, which likewise wasted and burned everything on its
          way. Having thus dealt an effective blow at Scotland, which was followed up in
          the summer and autumn by continual ravages of the border, with destruction of
          towns and villages on a scale quite unprecedented, Henry crossed, on July 14,
          to the siege of Boulogne, which was formed before his arrival. It had been
          agreed, after some disputes, that this time the Emperor and the King should
          operate against the common enemy separately and join their forces at Paris. The
          siege of Boulogne, which was very protracted, was not quite in accordance with
          this plan. The Emperor advanced into the heart of France, and captured St Dizier after a six weeks’ siege; but, in default of active
          support from his ally, on September 18 he made a separate peace with Francis at Crépy, and England was left to carry on the war
          alone. Boulogne had capitulated on September 14. Another siege, that of
          Montreuil, was abandoned, in which Count van Buren had been engaged with the
          Duke of Norfolk. The King crossed again to Dover on the 30th. In October, after
          the failure of a French attempt to recover Boulogne by surprise, conferences
          took place at Calais through the mediation of the Emperor; but peace could not
          be established, as the French insisted on the restoration of Boulogne, and the
          English on a promise to render no further assistance to the Scots.
           The league between
          Henry and the Emperor had been hollow from the first; nor had it then been
          easily adjusted, the objects of the allies being entirely different. Henry had
          foreseen, long before he entered on it, that his Scottish policy would involve
          a war with France; the Emperor desired, if he could not drive the Turks out of
          Hungary, at least to break up the shameful alliance between them and the French
          King. The Pope meanwhile was urging both the Emperor and Francis to peace, so
          that a General Council might meet to put down heresy-that of England most of
          all ; and now that peace was made, the Council was appointed to meet at Trent
          in March, 1545.
           England being thus
          isolated, her resources were now put to a severe strain. Henry had already, at
          the beginning of the year 1544, been absolved by Parliament from repayment of
          the forced loan he had levied two years before, and it was not in this year
          that he began to debase the currency. On May 16, however, he issued a
          proclamation “enhancing” gold and silver, that is, raising the rate of the
          coins to prevent their being exported; for the quality of the English coinage,
          at this date, was still high, and it was consequently in much demand in other
          countries. But before another twelvemonth had expired, a debased currency was
          issued, which was afterwards lowered still further. Meanwhile, in June of this
          year a loan was obtained from the City of London by the mortgage of some Crown
          lands, and in January, 1545, a new benevolence was demanded for the wars of
          France and Scotland.
           Ancrum Moor. [1544-5
           For the
          subjugation of the latter country Henry had relied chiefly on the aid of the Douglases and of the Scotch heretics, who hated Cardinal Beton and desired the overthrow of the monasteries and the
          Church. But the Douglases were double-dealers, and,
          since Hertford's burning of Edinburgh, when the Governor released them from
          confinement to serve against the common enemy, they had shown so much loyalty
          to their country that they were absolved from attainder by the Scottish
          Parliament in December. The King on this gave ear to a project of Sir Ralph
          Evers and Brian Layton for subduing the domains of the Douglases,
          together with the whole country south of Forth. In February, 1545, accordingly,
          Evers and Layton raided the Scotch border in the usual fashion as far as
          Melrose, where they wrecked the Abbey and violated the tombs of the Douglases. Angus and Arran,
          however, met them at Ancrum Moor near Jedburgh and
          with greatly inferior numbers routed the English host, taking prisoners the
          leaders and some hundreds of their followers.
           The war between
          France and England still went on, but was attended with little advantage to
          either side. Marshal du Biez formed the siege of
          Boulogne in January; but as England commanded the sea it was ineffectual; and,
          though renewed efforts were made in the summer, they were equally fruitless.
           The French,
          indeed, collected a great fleet under Annebaut and
          entered the Solent, where a squadron drawn up at Portsmouth was unable for some
          time to attack them for lack of wind. In preparing for action, moreover, the
          English lost a fine vessel, the Mary Rose, which heeled over by
          accident and sank before the King’s eyes, almost all her crew being drowned.
          The French, on the other hand, would have attacked the fleet in Portsmouth
          harbor, but could not approach with safety; and though they overran part of the
          Isle of Wight they were soon driven out. They were then carried eastward off
          the Sussex coast, which they attacked with little effect, and after an
          indecisive action in the Channel, ending at nightfall, they retired to their
          own coast. The siege of Boulogne was then abandoned, and in September Lord
          Lisle landed in Normandy and burned Tréport; but
          sickness had broken out in the fleet and it returned.
           That same
          September the Earl of Hertford invaded the Scotch Marches, took Kelso, Home,
          Melrose, and Dryburgh, and even outdid previous works of destruction. Between
          the 8th and the 23rd of the month he demolished seven monasteries, sixteen
          castles, towers, or ‘piles’, five market-towns, 243 villages, thirteen mills
          and three hospitals.
           In November
          Parliament met and, besides granting the King a new and heavy subsidy, put at
          his disposal the property of all hospitals, colleges, and chantries to meet the
          cost of the wars. Oxford and Cambridge took alarm, but received assurances that
          they should be spared; there were limits, evidently, that even Henry would not
          exceed. There was also a heresy bill brought forward in the House of Lords,
          which after much discussion was read no less than five times and then passed
          unanimously; but apparently it was rejected in the Commons, for it did not
          become law. On Christmas Eve the King in person prorogued Parliament and is
          recorded to have delivered a remarkable speech, in which he referred to the
          prevalent disputes about religion and urged more charity and forbearance.
           1545-6] Peace with
          France.
             In the autumn
          there had seemed to be a prospect of peace with France. For peace the French
          were anxious if Henry could be induced to give up Boulogne. The Emperor offered
          his services as mediator; but a conference at Brussels led to no result,
          because, though the whole English Council was in favor of the surrender, Henry
          himself was firmly opposed to it. The Emperor was not greatly distressed by the
          failure, but sought to renew and strengthen his treaty with England, as the
          unexpected death of the Duke of Orleans at this time upset some arrangements in
          the Peace of Crépy, and he was determined on keeping
          Milan to himself. Another set of mediators also offered their services, the
          German Protestants, who, though quite alienated from Henry for years past by
          the Act of the Six Articles and the divorce from Anne of Cleves, were alarmed
          by the near approach of the General Council summoned to meet at Trent, which
          did in fact open its first session in December. Anxious to discredit the
          Council, it was important for them to make peace between England and France,
          and in November they sent deputies to a Conference at Calais, which, though
          continued into the next month, proved as ineffectual as that at Brussels.
           Direct
          negotiations, however, took place between English and French commissioners in
          May, 1546, with the result that peace was finally concluded at Campe, between Ardres and Guines, on June 7, on conditions severe enough for Francis,
          binding him to pay all the old pensions due to England and a further sum of
          2,000,000 crowns for war expenses at the end of eight years. Boulogne was to be
          retained in Henry's hands till all was paid; but some points were left to be
          adjusted later on; and Henry agreed to the comprehension of the Scots, provided
          they would be bound by the treaties of 1543.
           Meanwhile he had
          just achieved one great object in Scotland, which he had been clandestinely
          pursuing for years in order to get a more complete command of the country. This
          was the murder of Cardinal Beton. He was aided by
          factions, political and religious, within the country; for the Cardinal had
          caused one George Wishart to be burned as a heretic in front of his Castle at
          St Andrews on March 2, and Wishart’s friends swore to revenge his death. Early
          in the morning of May 29 a party of them entered the Castle when the drawbridge
          was down to admit workmen, struck down the porter and threw him into the foss, then forced the door of the Cardinal’s chamber,
          killed him and hung out his body over the walls. The event caused Angus,
          Maxwell, and others to renounce the English alliance and strengthen the
          Governor's hands against the insurgents. But the Castle of St Andrews was a
          strong fortress and could not be starved out, as the English, in whose interest
          it was really held, had the command of the sea. Towards the close of the year
          the persons chiefly implicated in the murder escaped to London, and those
          within made a capitulation with the besiegers that they would surrender as soon
          as an absolution came from Rome for the guilty parties. But this was a mere
          policy to draw off the besieging forces, for England had no intention of losing
          its hold on St Andrews.
           Death of Henry
          VIII. [1546-7
             The state of the
          King’s health was now becoming critical, and in the prospect of a minority
          there was some speculation as to who should have the rule of his successor. By
          virtue of his birth Norfolk seemed highly eligible, and it appears that his son
          the Earl of Surrey (the poet) not only spoke of this privately, but had a
          shield painted with an alteration in his coat-of-arms suitable only for an
          heir-apparent to the Crown, which he kept secret from all but his father and
          his sister the Countess of Richmond. The matter, however, became known, and he
          and his father were both arrested on December 12, and committed to the Tower.
          Norfolk signed a confession of guilt on January 12, 1547. Next day Surrey was
          tried at the Guildhall, and he was executed on the 19th. Against Norfolk a Bill
          of Attainder was passed in Parliament, and only awaited the royal assent, for
          which a commission was drawn on the 27th; but the King died that night, and the
          Duke was saved.
           The reign of Henry
          VIII has left deeper marks on succeeding ages than any other reign in English
          history. Nothing is more extraordinary than that within less than a century
          after Fortescue had written in praise of the Constitution and Laws of England,
          a despotism so complete should have been set up in that very country. But it
          was a despotism really built upon the forms of the constitution and due mainly
          to the remarkable ability of the unscrupulous King himself, who was careful to
          disturb nothing that did not really stand in his way. The enigma, in fact,
          becomes quite intelligible, when we consider how much weight the constitution
          itself allowed to the personal views of a very able sovereign. England was but
          a country of limited extent, without colonies or even dependencies except
          Ireland, or any continental possession save Calais. To frame a policy for such
          a nation required little more than one good diplomatic head, and when that head
          was the King’s there was not much chance of controlling him. Henry VIII was
          really a monarch of consummate ability, who, if his course had not been
          misdirected by passion and selfishness, would have left a name behind him as
          the very founder of England's greatness. Not only was his judgment strong and
          clear, but he knew well how to select advisers. To talk of parliamentary
          control is out of the question. The King called Parliament only when he wanted
          money, or when he wished despotic measures passed with a semblance of popular
          sanction. But the forms of Parliamentary legislation and control were kept up;
          and thus, with weaker Kings and a more effective popular sentiment, the ancient
          assembly afterwards proved able to recover all and more than all its former
          authority.
           The old nobility
          were the King’s natural advisers; the Commons could scarcely as yet be called a
          real power in the State. But the old nobility were reduced in numbers, and were
          no match for him in intelligence. They were superseded, moreover, in the end,
          by a new nobility created by himself out of the middle classes. Meanwhile, he
          took counsel both of noblemen and of commoners just as suited himself, and he
          soon found out who served him best. Early in the reign he made large use of
          churchmen, such as Warham, Fox, Wolsey, Pace, and
          Gardiner; for churchmen were generally men of greater penetration than ordinary
          lay agents of the Crown. A perceptible change took place in this matter, when
          with Cromwell’s aid he compelled the Church to acknowledge Royal Supremacy and
          disown the Pope's authority. The churchmen then promoted were only those who
          fell in with the new policy and who, occupied in enforcing it on the clergy,
          were not capable of much service in framing Acts of State or assisting in
          secular government. For in truth this great ecclesiastical revolution was that
          which completed and consolidated the fabric of Henry’s despotism. If among the
          laity he had neither lord nor commoner who durst withstand him, there were
          churchmen like some of the Observant Friars who actually spoke out against the
          public scandal which he was creating by repudiating his lawful wife; and the
          King felt, truly enough, that if he was to have his way, the voice of the
          Church must be either silenced or perverted. So the central authority of
          Christendom was no longer to determine what was right or wrong. In England the
          Church must be under Royal Supremacy.
           To this decisive
          breach with Rome Henry himself was driven with some reluctance; for no King was
          at first more devoted to the Church or more desirous to stand well in the
          opinion of his own subjects. Nor could it be said that the Church’s yoke was a
          painful one to mighty potentates like him. But willfulness and obstinacy were
          very strong features of Henry’s character. Whatever he did he must never appear
          to retract; and he had so frequently threatened the Pope with the withdrawal of
          his allegiance in case he would not grant him his divorce that at last he felt
          bound to make good what he had threatened. For the first time in history Europe
          beheld a great prince deliberately withdraw himself and his subjects from the
          spiritual domain of Rome, and enforce by the severest penalties the repudiation
          of papal authority. For the first time also Europe realized how weak the Papacy
          had become when it was proved unable to punish such aggression. Foreign nations
          were scandalized, but no foreign prince could afford lightly to quarrel with
          England. Henry was considered an enemy of Christianity much as was the Turk,
          but the prospect of a crusade against him, though at times it looked fairly
          probable, always vanished in the end. Foreign princes were too suspicious of
          each other to act together in this, and Henry himself, by his own wary policy,
          contrived to ward off the danger. He was anxious to show that the faith of
          Christendom was maintained as firmly within his kingdom as ever. He made
          Cranmer a sort of insular Pope, and insisted on respect being paid to his
          decrees, especially in reference to his own numerous marriages and divorces.
          But, beyond the suspension of the canon law and the complete subjugation of the
          clergy to the civil power, he was not anxious to make vital changes in
          religion; and both doctrine and ritual remained in his day nearly unaltered.
          The innovations actually made consisted in little more than the authorization
          of an English Bible, the publication of some formularies to which little
          objection could be taken, and - what has not been mentioned above - the first
          use of an English Litany. For though as yet there was no English prayer-book, a
          Litany in the common tongue was ordered in 1544 when the King was about to
          embark for France.
           The Authorized
          English Bible was undoubtedly a new force in the religious history of England. Wiclif’s Bible had preceded it by more than a century, and
          there had been earlier translations still. But Wiclif’s attempt to popularize the Scriptures in an English form had been disapproved of
          by the Church, which considered the clergy as the special custodians and
          interpreters of Holy Writ, without whose guidance it could too easily be
          perverted and misconstrued. This was the feeling which inspired the
          constitution of Archbishop Arundel in 1408, forbidding the use of any translation
          which had not been approved by the diocesan of the place or by some provincial
          council. In days when the sacred writings were only multiplied by copyists,
          translations of particular books of Scripture, or even of the whole, might be episcopally authorized, if good in themselves, as luxuries
          for private use, without apparent prejudice to the faith. But Wiclif’s version was regarded as a deliberate attempt to
          vulgarize a literature of peculiar sanctity which required careful exposition
          by men of learning. The vernacular Bible, however, was prized by many laymen,
          even in the fifteenth century, and certainly influenced not a little the
          religious thought of the period; for, in opposition to the special claims of
          the Church, the Lollards set up a theory that Scripture was the only true
          authority for any religious observances and that no special learning was
          required to interpret it, the true meaning of Holy Writ being always revealed
          to men of real humility of mind. This was also the idea of Tyndale, who, encouraged
          by a London merchant, went abroad and printed for importation into England a
          translation he had made of the New Testament, not from the Latin Vulgate, like Wiclif’s, but from the original Greek text; his aim being,
          as he said himself, to make a ploughboy know the Scriptures even better than a
          divine.
           The invention of
          printing gave Tyndale’s translation an immense advantage over its predecessors.
          It was smuggled into England and found no lack of purchasers, who were obliged
          to keep it in secrecy. But every effort was used by authority to put it down.
          Copies were bought up by the Bishops in the hope that the whole impression
          would be suppressed; and there was more than one burning of the books in St
          Paul’s Churchyard. But the effect was only to encourage Tyndale to print off
          further copies and extend the scope of his labors; for he went on to translate
          some books of the Old Testament from the Hebrew. And in England, though his New
          Testament was denounced as erroneous and heretical (no doubt the language in
          many parts tended to discredit Church authority), yet the obvious thought
          presented itself that the best way to counteract the poison of an erroneous
          version would be the issue of one that was accurate and scholarly. So in June,
          1530, when a royal proclamation was issued for the suppression of Tyndale’s and
          other heretical books, it was intimated that, though translation of the
          Scriptures was not in itself a necessary thing, yet, if corrupt translations
          were meanwhile laid aside and the people forsook mischievous opinions, the King
          intended hereafter to have those writings translated into English ‘by great,
          learned, and Catholic persons’.
           A few years later,
          Cromwell having become Vicegerent in spiritual matters, Miles Coverdale under
          his secret patronage brought out in October, 1535, a complete English Bible,
          not, like Tyndale’s, translated from the Greek and Hebrew, but, as the
          title-page announced, from the ‘Dutch’ (meaning the German) and Latin, in fact,
          an English version of the Vulgate amended by comparison with the German Bible
          of Luther. This work, however, though dedicated to the King, was not issued by
          authority; and though Cromwell’s injunctions of 1536 required every church to
          be supplied within a twelvemonth with a whole Bible ‘in Latin and also in
          English’, the direction could not have been obeyed. In 1537 appeared Matthew’s
          Bible which was really made up of Tyndale’s version of the New Testament and of
          the Old Testament as far as the Second Book of Chronicles, the other Books of
          the Old Testament being supplied from Coverdale with alterations. Its origin
          would not have pleased the Bishops, but the facts were concealed; and, a copy
          being submitted to Cranmer, he wrote to Cromwell that he thought it should be
          licensed till the Bishops could set forth a better, which he did not expect
          they would ever do. The King approved; Grafton and Whitchurch,
          the printers, were allowed to sell it; and its sale was forced upon the clergy
          by new injunctions from Cromwell in 1538. Another and more luxurious edition, however,
          was called for, and Grafton went to Paris to see it printed, with Coverdale's
          aid as corrector, on the best of paper with the best typographic art of the
          day. This work was far advanced when it was stopped by the French Inquisition ;
          but Coverdale and Grafton succeeded in conveying away the presses, type, and a
          company of French compositors, by whose aid the work was finished in London in
          April, 1539.
           That edition was
          known as ‘the Great Bible’. It was issued by the King’s authority and
          Cromwell’s; but the clergy were by no means pleased with the translation, which
          they severely censured in Convocation in 1542, two years after Cromwell’s
          death. They appointed committees of the best Hebrew and Greek scholars to
          revise it; but the King sent a message through Cranmer forbidding them to
          proceed, as he intended to submit the work to the two Universities. This was
          simply a false pretence to stop revision; for a
          patent was immediately granted to Anthony Marlar,
          giving to him instead of Grafton, who was now in disgrace, the sole right of
          printing the Bible for four years. The Great Bible continued to be used in
          churches, and six were set up in St Paul’s Cathedral for general use.
           Anne Askew.
          Dissolution of the monasteries.
             These were the
          principal translations issued in Henry VIII’s time; and authority being given
          for their use, those, who maintained the old Lollard theory that the Bible
          could be safely interpreted without the aid of a priesthood, were encouraged in
          their opposition to the Church. This theory was clearly gaining in strength
          during the latter part of Henry’s reign and its adherents became still more
          numerous in that of his son. Men founded their convictions on an infallible
          book, were confident in their own judgments, and died by hundreds under Mary
          for beliefs that were only exceptionally held in the beginning of her father’s
          reign. The pure delight in the sacred literature itself inspired many with
          enthusiasm; and among other results we find the musician Marbeck,
          who knew no Latin, compiling a Concordance to the English Bible, and the heroic
          Anne Askew, when examined for heresy, full of scriptural texts and references
          in defending herself.
           These cases, and
          especially the last, deserve more than a passing mention. Some account has been
          already given of martyrdoms, both for refusal to acknowledge the Royal
          Supremacy and for doctrines of a novel kind. But the results of the severe Act
          of the Six Articles have not as yet been touched upon. They were not, in truth,
          so appalling as might have been expected. The presentments at first were
          quashed, and new regulations were made about procedure, which, with further
          modifications passed by Statute, considerably abated the terrors of the Act.
          But in 1543, just after the King’s marriage with Catharine Parr, four men of
          Windsor were found guilty of heresy, of whom three were burned at the Castle,
          and one was pardoned. The man pardoned was John Marbeck,
          the celebrated musician just referred to, who possibly owed his escape in part
          to his musical talents; for he was organist of St George’s Chapel. Yet it does
          not seem that he had really transgressed the law in anything; and Bishop Wakeman of Hereford, at his examination, said with
          reference to his Concordance, ‘This man hath been better occupied than a great
          sort of our priests’.
           In 1546 the
          victims of the Six Articles seem to have been more numerous, and the chief
          sufferer was a zealous lady separated from her husband, and known by her maiden
          name of Anne Askew. She and three others were tried at the Guildhall for
          heresy, and confessed opinions about the Sacrament for which they were all
          condemned to the stake. Two of her fellows next day (one of them, Shaxton, had been Bishop of Salisbury) yielded to the
          exhortations of Bishops Bonner and Heath, and were saved on being reconciled to
          the Church; but Anne was resolute, and would not be persuaded even by the
          Council, before whom she disputed for two days when they evidently wished to
          save her, answering continually in language borrowed from Scripture. She was committed
          to Newgate and afterwards to the Tower, where she was
          racked some time before she was burnt at Smithfield. Suspicions seem to have
          been entertained that she was supported in her heresies by some of the ladies
          about Queen Catharine Parr, and she was tortured to reveal her confederates;
          but she denied that she had any. The story of her examination and torture
          written by her own hand and printed abroad for the English market, certainly
          added new force to the coming revolution.
           There was indeed
          another great change bearing on religion and social life, though not much on
          doctrine or ritual, the dissolution of the monasteries. Its immediate effect
          was to produce a vast amount of suffering. It is true that a considerable
          number of the monks and nuns received pensions, but very many were turned out
          of the houses which had been their homes and wandered about in search of means
          to live. Even at the first suppression Chapuys was
          told that, what with monks, nuns, and dependents on monasteries, there must
          have been 20,000 persons cast adrift; and though this was evidently a vague and
          probably exaggerated estimate, it indicates at least very widespread
          wretchedness and discomfort. More permanent results, however, arose out of the
          prodigious transfer of property, affecting, as it is supposed, about a third of
          the land of England. It has been doubted whether the monks had been easy
          landlords; but when the monastic lands were confiscated and sold to a host of
          greedy courtiers the change was severely felt. The lands were all let at higher
          rents, and the newly-erected Court ‘for the Augmentation of the Crown Revenues’
          did its best to justify its title. Moreover, the purchasers, in order to make
          the most of their new acquisitions, began to enclose commons where poor tenants
          had been accustomed to graze their cattle; the tenants sold the beasts which
          they could not feed, and the cost of living in a few years advanced very
          seriously. This was one of the main causes of Ket’s rebellion in the following reign.
           Meanwhile, all
          over the country men beheld with sadness a host of deserted buildings with
          ruined walls, where formerly rich and poor used to receive hospitality on their
          travels; where gentlemen could obtain loans on easy terms or deposit precious
          documents, as in places more secure than their own homes; where the needy
          always found relief and shelter, and where spiritual wants were attended to no
          less than physical. The blank was felt particularly in solitary and mountainous
          districts, where the monks had assisted travelers, often commercial travellers and ‘baggers of corn’, whose services were most
          useful to the country side, with men and horses to pursue their journeys in
          safety. “Also the abbeys”, said Aske, “was one of the beauties of this realm to
          all men and strangers passing through the same; all gentlemen much succored in
          their needs with money, their younger sons there succored, and in nunneries
          their daughters brought up in virtue, and also their evidences (i.e. title-deeds)
          and money left to the uses of infants in abbeys’ hands always sure there. And
          such abbeys as were near the danger of seabanks great
          maintainers of seawalls and dykes, maintainers and builders of bridges and
          highways [and] such other things for the commonwealth”.
           What arts and
          industries disappeared or were driven into other channels on the fall of the
          monasteries is a matter for reflexion. Rural labor,
          of course, still went on where it was necessary for the support of life; but
          some arts, formerly brought to high perfection in monastic seclusion, were
          either paralyzed for a time or migrated into the towns. Sculpture, embroidery,
          clockmaking, bellfounding, were among these; and it
          is needless to speak of what literature owes to the transcribers of manuscripts
          and the composers of monastic chronicles. True, monasticism had long been on
          the decline before it was swept away, and monastic chronicles were already, one
          might say, things of the past; but it was in monasteries also that the first
          printing-presses were set up, and the art which superseded that of the
          transcriber was cherished by the same influence. Finally, the education of the
          people was largely due to the convent schools; and there is no doubt that it
          suffered very severely not only from the suppression of the monasteries, but
          perhaps even more from the confiscation of chantries which began at the end of
          the reign, for the chantry priest was often the local schoolmaster. Nor did the
          boasted educational foundations of Edward VI do much to redress the wrong, for
          in truth his schools were old schools refounded with
          poorer endowments.
           Still more did the
          higher education of the country suffer; for the monasteries had been in the
          habit of sending up scholars to the universities and often maintained some of
          their own junior members there to complete their education. After the
          Suppression, consequently, university studies went gradually to decay, and few
          men studied for degrees. In the six years from 1542 to 1548 only 191 students
          were admitted bachelors of arts at Cambridge and only 173 at Oxford. The foundation
          of Regius Professorships at Oxford and Cambridge was a slight compensation. The
          dispersion of valuable monastic libraries, moreover, was to some extent
          counteracted by the efforts of Leland, the antiquary, in his tour through
          England to preserve some of their choicest treasures for the King.
           Altogether, no
          such sweeping changes had been known for centuries. As regards the land some of
          the results may have been in the end for good. Better husbandry and new modes
          of farming, no doubt, succeeded in developing more fully the resources of the
          soil. A check, too, was doubtless placed on indiscriminate charity. But
          problems were raised which were new in kind. At the beginning of the reign the
          chief evils felt were depopulation, vagrancy, and thieves. Economic laws, of
          course, were not understood; and attempts were made by legislation to prevent
          husbandmen's dwellings being thrown down by landlords, who found it profitable
          to devote arable land to pasture to increase the growth of wool. The frequent
          repetition of these Acts only shows how ineffective they were in practice; and
          in the beginning of the seventeenth century they had become so complicated that
          Coke rejoiced at their repeal. But the evils of vagrancy and poverty assumed
          new forms. The precise effect of the fall of the monasteries upon pauperism is
          not altogether easy to estimate; but the statement of Chapuys removes all doubt that it was the immediate cause of bitter penury. The
          evidence of the Statute-book on this point requires careful interpretation; for
          it was only in a later age that law was invoked to do the duty of charity. Down
          to the middle of Henry VIII’s reign repeated Acts had been passed for the
          punishment of sturdy beggars and vagabonds; but it gradually came to be
          perceived that this problem could not be dealt with apart from relief of the
          deserving poor. In 1536 the same session of Parliament which dissolved the
          smaller monasteries passed an Act for the systematic maintenance of paupers by
          charitable collections; and, in the first year of Edward VI, Parliament for the
          first time attempted to deal with the two problems together, with penalties of
          atrocious severity against vagabonds. But severity was futile; the Act was
          speedily repealed, and under Elizabeth a regular system of Poor Law relief was
          established.
           Oppressive
          taxation. Debasement of the coinage.
             From the beginning
          of his reign Henry had been profuse in his expenditure. His tastes were
          luxurious and he gratified them to a large extent at the cost of others. He
          made Wolsey present him with Hampton Court, after the Cardinal’s fall he took
          York Place and called it Whitehall; he purchased from Eton College the Hospital
          of St James, made it into a palace, and laid out St James’ Park; he built
          Nonsuch and made another large park in the neighborhood. Before he had been
          many years King, the enormous wealth left him by his father must have been
          nearly all dissipated. Yet the subsidies he required from Parliament were very
          moderate till 1523, when, as we have seen, unprecedented taxation was imposed
          for the French war in addition to a forced loan, from repayment of which he was
          absolved by the legislature in the year of Wolsey’s fall. Then in a few years
          followed the pillage of the monasteries, while throughout the reign there were
          numerous attainders involving large confiscations. In addition to this immense
          booty came further subsidies, a further forced loan for a new war with France,
          and a new release by Parliament from the duty of repayment. Finally, to relieve
          an exhausted exchequer, the King was driven to the expedient of debasing the
          currency. In 1542 a gold coinage was issued of 23 carats fine and 1 carat of
          alloy, with a silver coinage of 10 oz. pure silver to 2 oz. of alloy. In 1544
          the gold was still 23 carats fine, but the silver was only 9 oz. to 3 oz. of
          alloy. In 1545 the gold was 22 carats and the silver 6 oz. to 6 oz. of alloy.
          In 1546 the gold was only 20 carats and the silver 4 oz. to 8 oz. of alloy.
          This rapid deterioration of the money, though it brought a profit to the King
          in the last year of £5. 2s. in the coinage of every pound weight of gold, and
          of £4. 4s. on every pound weight of silver, produced, of course, the most
          serious consequences to the public. Apart from this, no doubt, prices must soon
          have been affected by the quantity of silver and gold poured into Europe from
          Mexican and Peruvian mines. But the great issue of base money in this and the
          following reign produced a complete derangement of commerce and untold
          inconvenience, not only by the sudden alteration of values but by the want of
          confidence which it everywhere inspired. Not till the reign of Queen Elizabeth
          could a remedy be effectually applied to so great an evil. s on every pound
          weight of silver, produced, of course, the most serious consequences to the
          public. Apart from this, no doubt, prices must soon have been affected by the
          quantity of silver and gold poured into Europe from Mexican and Peruvian mines.
          But the great issue of base money in this and the following reign produced a
          complete derangement of commerce and untold inconvenience, not only by the
          sudden alteration of values but by the want of confidence which it everywhere
          inspired. Not till the reign of Queen Elizabeth could a remedy be effectually
          applied to so great an evil.
           The King’s
          high-handed proceedings, alike as regards the Church, the monasteries, and the
          coinage, lowered the moral tone of the whole community. Men lost faith in their
          religion. Greedy courtiers sprang up eager for grants of abbey lands. A new
          nobility was raised out of the money-getting middle classes, and a host of
          placemen enriched themselves by continual peculation. Covetousness and fraud
          reigned in the highest places.
           Yet “there is some
          soul of goodness in things evil”, and the same policy that under Henry VIII
          destroyed the autonomy of the Church and suppressed the monasteries made him
          seek not only to unify his kingdom but to bring together the British Islands
          under one single rule. England itself, no doubt, was a united country at his
          accession, but its cohesion was not perfect. Wales and the north country beyond
          Trent each required somewhat special government; and Ireland, of course, was a
          problem by itself. Yet no serious perplexities had grown up when in 1525 the
          King sent his bastard son, the Duke of Richmond, into Yorkshire, with a Council
          to govern the north, and his daughter Mary, with another Council, to hold a
          Court on the borders of Wales for the settlement of disputes in that country
          without reference to the Courts at Westminster. This arrangement was soon set
          aside when Mary's legitimacy was questioned, and the disaffection of Rice ap
          Griffith, whose father and grandfather had governed Wales for Henry VII, was
          undoubtedly connected with the Divorce question. A little later a new Council
          for the Marches was set up under Roland Lee, whom the King appointed Bishop of
          Coventry and Lichfield; and by several successive Acts of Parliament Wales
          itself was divided into shires, and the administration of justice in the
          principality assimilated to that which prevailed in England, only with a Great
          Sessions held twice a year in every county instead of quarterly assizes. The
          admission of twenty-seven members for Welsh constituencies to the English
          Parliament completed the union of the principality with the kingdom.
           Of a similar
          tendency was an Act of the King's 27th year, by which the old prerogatives of
          counties palatine were abolished, and the sole power of appointing justices or
          pardoning offences over the whole kingdom restored to the Crown. Of the
          beneficial results of these changes it is impossible to doubt, especially in
          Wales, where “gentlemen thieves” had been a good deal too influential. The
          north of England was less easily coerced, and after the severe measures taken
          by Norfolk to put down the rebellion a new Council of the North was
          established, first under Bishop Tunstall of Durham, afterwards under Bishop
          Holgate of Llandaff. This Council which, like that of Wales, was abolished by
          the Long Parliament in 1641, was undoubtedly without parliamentary authority;
          it acted merely by the deputed authority of the Crown. Yet its acts could
          scarcely have been felt as extremely tyrannical after the submission of the
          whole country in 1537, renewed to the King himself when he went thither in
          1541.
           In Ireland the
          King’s policy was after many years wonderfully successful. Early in the reign
          he had allowed the Earl of Kildare, as Lord Deputy, to manage everything, to
          treat his own enemies as the King’s and appropriate their confiscated lands.
          This, however, could not last, and in 1520 the Earl of Surrey was sent over as
          Deputy, who with the aid of Sir Piers Butler set about reducing the land to
          subjection. He made a good beginning and handed over the work to Sir Piers; but
          the feud between the Geraldines and the Butlers made
          government impossible. Kildare was restored for a time, but, as we have seen,
          had to be recalled, whereupon his son, becoming the Pope's champion, almost
          wrested for a time the whole government of Ireland from the King. But before
          many years the Geraldines were completely crushed,
          and young Kildare and his five uncles were hanged at Tyburn.
          Lord Leonard Grey's government, however, was complained of; he was recalled and
          sent to the block. It was under his successor, St Leger, that real progress was
          at last made. Without attempting distant expeditions he endeavored first of all
          to make the Pale secure, and by and by induced the Irish chieftains to submit,
          accepting titles from the King and renouncing the Pope's spiritual authority.
          The triumph was completed by the passing of Acts both in the Irish and in the
          English Parliament by which the King's style was altered to "King"
          instead of "lord" of Ireland. The new style was proclaimed in England
          on January 23, 1542. When Irish chieftains sat in a Dublin Parliament as earls
          and barons, with the quondam head of the Irish knights of St John as Viscount
          Clontarf, a great step had evidently been taken towards conciliation. In 1542
          it was announced that Ireland was actually at peace; and, although this state
          of matters did not continue, the end of the reign was comparatively untroubled.
           Thus Henry,
          notwithstanding his defiance of the Pope, was wonderfully successful in making himself
          secure at home. Abroad he had warded off the danger of any attempt at invasion
          to enforce the papal excommunication by continually fomenting the mutual
          jealousies of the two leading princes on the Continent. The time came, however,
          when, neutrality being no longer possible, he prepared to throw in his lot with
          the Emperor against France; and it was in view of a war with France, as we have
          seen, that he attempted, just when Ireland had been pacified, to get Scotland
          completely under his power-a task which proved too much both for him and for
          his successor.
           The navy.
           Naturally, the
          navy and the defence of the coast occupied much of
          this King's attention. From the earliest years of his reign, indeed, Henry took
          much interest in his ships. Trinity House owes its origin to a guild founded by
          royal licence at Deptford Strand before he had been
          four years upon the throne. Earlier still, when the Regent was
          burned in 1512, he immediately set about the building of the Great
            Harry, on board of which he received a grand array of ambassadors and
          Bishops when it was dedicated in June, 1514. She was the largest vessel then
          afloat, and her sailing qualities were no less admirable than her bulk. In 1522
          Admiral Fitzwilliam reported that she outsailed all the ships of the fleet
          except the unfortunate Mary Rose. The Royal Navy consisted commonly
          of about thirty or forty sail, but it could always be augmented from merchantships, or ships which were private property; though
          it was reported by Marillac in 1540 that there were only seven or eight vessels
          besides the King’s which were of more than 400 or 500 tons burden. Henry's
          solicitude about his ships was further shown on the sinking of the Mary
            Rose before his eyes in 1545. Next year, for the first time, a Navy
          Board was established.
           The importance of
          the command of the sea was shown in two instances at the end of the reign, when
          the French besieged the English in Boulogne, and when the Scotch government
          attempted to besiege Henry's friends, the murderers of Cardinal Beton, in St Andrews. The hold which Henry thus had both on
          France and Scotland was important for his own protection; and the foundation of
          England's greatness as a world-power may be traced to a tyrant's strenuous
          efforts to defend his own position. Of less permanent importance in this way
          were the numerous fortifications he raised upon the coast. He built Sandgate
          Castle in Kent, Camber Castle near Rye, and fortifications at Cowes, Calshot, and Hurst upon
          the Soient, and a number of other places besides.
           As to his army,
          for the most part he was not very well served. The policy of his father had
          been to prohibit by law the large retinues formerly maintained by the nobles to
          prevent the renewal of civil war. The result was that, when troops were needed
          for active service abroad, the nobles had no personal following, but, being
          each bound by indenture to bring so many soldiers into the field, hired men for
          the occasion at specific wages. In consequence they were raw and
          ill-disciplined; and their extraordinary revolt under Dorset in Spain in 1512
          was almost paralleled in 1523, when Suffolk, partly by the weather and partly
          by the insubordination of his followers, was compelled to disband his army and
          return to Calais. After that date there was no great fighting for nearly twenty
          years, when the King again became involved both with France and with Scotland.
          In this French war he supplemented his own forces by engaging German
          mercenaries who demanded exorbitant pay and cheated him besides. He also
          detained in England with the Emperor’s leave two Spanish noblemen of great
          distinction, and took a number of their countrymen into his service, who were
          delighted with his liberality. The increase of English influence abroad during
          this reign was in fact due rather to the personal qualities of the King, and to
          the skilful use which he made of European
          complications, than to the number or excellence of the troops at his command.
           
           chapter 14THE REFORMATION UNDER EDWARD VI
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