AN HISTORY OF ENGLAND, IN A SERIES of LETTERS FROM A NOBLEMAN to his SON.
VOL. I.
LONDON, Printed for J. NEWBERY, at the Bible and Sun, in St. Paul's Church-Yard. MDCCLXIV.
TO THE PUBLISHER.
[]AS I perceive by the tenor of your pub⯑lications, that you chiefly aim at the im⯑provement of youth, if the following Letters are thought any-way conducive to that pur⯑poſe, you have my permiſſion to print them.
The firſt fifty-one letters ending with theſe words ‘—avenged them of their enemies—’were written by a Nobleman to his ſon, at the uni⯑verſity. The reſt are added, as you will eaſily perceive, by a much inferior hand; for they were drawn up by me. This I ſhould not have attempted, but that the deſign would otherwiſe have been defective. With regard to my let⯑rers, therefore, little elſe can be ſaid, but that I have endeavoured, as much as was in my power, to imitate the original. As to his Lordſhip's, I think it may be aſſerted, that they are written with more judgment, ſpirit, and accuracy than any which have yet appeared upon this ſubject. I am conſcious, indeed, that they have been, for ſome time, handed about in manuſcript; but, it is preſumed that this will not make a publication of them leſs acceptable, even to thoſe who are poſſeſſed of a written copy.
I have obſerved in the ſchools about town, that, when maſters ſet their ſcholars to read the hiſtory of England, they ſeem at a loſs in [2] their choice of an hiſtorian. The more volu⯑minous works of this kind are quite unſuited to a juvenile capacity; the ſhorter abridg⯑ments are chiefly a crouded collection of facts, totally dry and unentertaining. Theſe letters may, probably, ſupply the defect; and I de⯑ſire that the volumes may be ſent, at my ex⯑pence, to each of the ſchools mentioned in the incloſed paper.
[]THE HISTORY OF ENGLAND, IN A SERIES of LETTERS.
LETTER I.
THE accounts I receive from Mr. your tutor, at Oxford, of your con⯑duct and capacity, give me equal plea⯑ſure, both as a father and as a man. I own myſelf happy, in thinking that ſociety will one day reap the advantage of your improved abilities; but I confeſs myſelf vain when I reflect on the care I have taken, and the honour I ſhall perhaps obtain from aſſiſting their cultiva⯑tion. [2] Yes, my Charles, ſelf-intereſt thus mixes with almoſt every virtue; my paternal vanity is, perhaps, greater than my regards for ſociety in the preſent inſtance; but you ſhould conſider that the bad pride themſelves in their folly, but good minds alone are vain of their virtues.
I need ſcarcely repeat what I have ſo often ob⯑ſerved, that your aſſiduity for a few years, in the early period of life, will give eaſe and happineſs to the ſucceeding: a life ſpent in regularity and ſtudy, in college, will not only furniſh the mind with proper materials, but fit it, by habit, for future felicity. Mathematics will teach you to think with cloſeneſs and preciſion, and the ancient poets will enlarge the imagination; from theſe two helps, and not from the ſubtleties of logic or metaphyſi⯑cal ſpeculation, the mind is at once ſtrengthened and improved; logic or metaphyſics may give the theory of reaſoning, but it is poetry and mathe⯑matics, though ſeemingly oppoſite, that practically improve us in every rational enquiry.
Theſe were the ſtudies I recommended as princi⯑pally conducive to your improvement, and your letters alone are ſufficient inſtances of your comply⯑ing with my advice. I confeſs I fear giving any future inſtructions on ſuch topics to one who ſeems better converſant with them than his inſtructor, and muſt leave a ſubject, where my ſuperiority at leaſt may be conteſted.
But after all, my child, theſe ſtudies are at beſt but ornaments of the mind, deſigned rather to po⯑liſh or to fit it for higher improvements, than as materials to be employed in guiding our conduct as individuals, or members of ſociety. There is a field that, in ſome meaſure, ſtill lies untrodden before you, and from that alone true wiſdom and [3] real improvement can be expected, I mean hiſto⯑ry: from hiſtory, in a great meaſure, every ad⯑vantage that improves the gentleman, or confirms the patriot, can be hoped for; it is that which muſt qualify you for becoming a proper member of the community, for filling that ſtation, in which you may hereafter be placed, with honour; and for giving, as well as deriving, new luſtre from that illuſtrious aſſembly, to which, upon my de⯑ceaſe, you have a right to be called.
Yet, ſtill, nothing can be more uſeleſs than hiſtory, in the manner in which it is generally ſtudied, where the memory is loaded with little more than dates, names, and events. Simply to repeat the tranſaction is thought ſufficient for every purpoſe, and the youth, who is applauded for his readineſs in this way, fancies himſelf a per⯑fect hiſtorian. But the true uſe of hiſtory does not conſiſt in being able to ſettle a genealogy, in knowing the events of an obſcure reign, or the true epoch of a conteſted birth; this knowledge of facts hardly deſerves the name of ſcience: true wiſdom conſiſts in tracing effects from their cauſes. To underſtand hiſtory is to underſtand man, who is the ſubject. To ſtudy hiſtory is to weigh the motives, the opinions, the paſſions of mankind, in order to avoid a ſimilitude of error in ourſelves, or profit by the wiſdom of their example.
To ſtudy hiſtory in this manner may be begun at any age. Children can never be too ſoon treat⯑ed as men. Thoſe maſters, who alledge the inca⯑pacity of tender youth, only tacitly reproach their own: theſe who are incapable of teaching young minds to reaſon, pretend that it is impoſſible. The truth is, they are fonder of making their pupils talk well than think well, and much the greater [4] number are better qualified to give praiſe to a ready memory than a ſound judgment. The ge⯑nerality of mankind conſider a multitude of facts as the real food of the mind, not as ſubjects proper to afford it exerciſe. From hence it proceeds, that hiſtory, inſtead of teaching us to know ourſelves, often only ſerves to raiſe our vanity, by the ap⯑plauſe of the ignorant; or, what is more dangerous, by the ſelf-deluſion of untried vanity.
Aſſuming ignorance is, of all ſituations, the moſt ridiculous: for, in the ſame proportion as the real man of wiſdom is preferable to the unlettered ruſtic, ſo much is the ruſtic ſuperior to him, who without learning imagines himſelf learned. Better that ſuch a man had never read, for then he might be conſcious of his weakneſs; but the half-learn⯑ed man, relying upon his ſtrength, ſeldom per⯑ceives his wants till he finds his deception paſt a cure.
Your labours in hiſtory have hitherto been ra⯑ther confined to the words, than the facts, of your hiſtorical guides. You have read Xenophon or Livy, rather with a view of learning the dead lan⯑guages in which they are written, than of profit⯑ing by the inſtructions which they afford; the time is now come to diſcontinue the ſtudy of words for things, for exerciſing your judgment, and giving more room to reaſon than the fancy.
Above all things, I would adviſe you to conſult the original hiſtorians in every relation. Abridgers, compilers, commentators, and critics, are in ge⯑neral only fit to fill the mind with unneceſſary anec⯑dotes, or lead its reſearches aſtray. In the im⯑menſity of various relations, your care muſt be to ſelect ſuch as deſerve to be known, becauſe they ſerve to inſtruct: the end of your labour ſhould [5] not be to know in what year fools or ſavages com⯑mitted their extravagances, but by what methods they emerged from barbarity. The ſame neceſſity there is for knowing the actions of the worthy part of princes, alſo compels us to endeavour to forget thoſe of the ignorant and vulgar herd of kings, who ſeemed only to ſlumber in a ſeat they were accidentally called to fill. In ſhort, not the hiſtory of kings, but of man, ſhould be your prin⯑cipal concern, and ſuch an hiſtory is only to be acquired by conſulting thoſe originals who paint⯑ed the times they lived in. Their ſucceſſors, who pretended to methodize their hiſtories, have almoſt univerſally deprived them of all their ſpirit, and given us rather a dry catalogue of names, than afforded an opportunity for improving reflexion.
Hiſtory, in general, is precious or inſignificant; not from the brilliancy of the events, the ſingu⯑larity of the adventures, or the greatneſs of the perſonages concerned, but from the ſkill, penetra⯑tion, and judgment of the obſerver. Tacitus fre⯑quently complains of his want of materials, of the littleneſs of his incidents, of the weakneſs and villainy of his actors; yet, even from ſuch indif⯑ferent ſubjects, he has wrought out the moſt pleaf⯑ing and the moſt inſtructive hiſtory that ever was written; it will therefore be entirely the work of your own judgment to convert the generality of hiſtorians to your benefit; they are, at preſent, but rude materials, and require a fine diſcernment to ſeparate the uſeful from the unneceſſary, and analyſe their different principles.
Yet, miſtake me not, I would not have hiſtory to conſiſt of dry ſpeculations upon facts, told with phlegm, and purſued without intereſt and paſſion; nor would I have your reaſon fatigued continually [6] in critical reſearch; all I require is, that the hiſ⯑torian would give as much exerciſe to the judge⯑ment as the imagination: it is as much his duty to act the philoſopher, or politician, in his narra⯑tives, as to collect materials for narration. With⯑out a philoſophical ſkill in diſcerning, his very nar⯑rative muſt be frequently falſe, fabulous, and con⯑tradictory: without political ſagacity, his charac⯑ters muſt be ill drawn, and vice and virtue be diſ⯑tributed without diſcernment or candour.
What hiſtorian can render virtue ſo amiable as Xenophon? Who can intereſt the reader ſo much as Livy? Saluſt is an inſtance of the moſt delicate exactneſs, and Tacitus of the moſt ſolid reflexion: from a perfect acquaintance with theſe, the youth⯑ful ſtudent can acquire more knowlege of man⯑kind, a more perfect acquaintance with antiquity, and a more juſt manner of thinking and expreſſion, than, perhaps; from any others of any age or country. Other ancient hiſtorians may be read to advance your ſtudy in ancient learning, but theſe ſhould be the ground-work of all your reſearches. Without a previous acquaintance with theſe, you enter upon other writers improperly prepared; un⯑til theſe have placed you in a proper train of mo⯑ralizing the incidents, other hiſtorians may, per⯑haps, injure, but will not improve you. Let me therefore, at preſent, my dear Charles, intreat you to beſtow the proper care upon thoſe treaſures of antiquity, and by your letters, every poſt, com⯑municate to your father, your friend, the reſult of your reflexions upon them. I am at a loſs, whe⯑ther I ſhall find more ſatisfaction in hearing your remarks, or communicating my own? However, in which ſoever of them I ſhall be employed, it will make my higheſt amuſement; amuſement is [7] all that I can now expect in this life, for ambition has long forſaken me; and, perhaps, my child, after all, that what your noble anceſtor obſerved is moſt true: ‘When all is done, human life is, at the great⯑eſt and the beſt, but like a froward child, that muſt be played with and humoured a little to keep it quiet till it falls aſleep, and then the care is over. I am, my dear boy, your moſt tender friend and affectionate father,’
LETTER II.
IENTIRELY acquieſce in your ſentiments, that univerſal hiſtory is a ſubject too extenſive for human comprehenſion, and that he who would really reap its advantages muſt be contented to bound his views. Satisfied with being ſuperficial⯑ly acquainted with the tranſactions of many coun⯑tries, he ſhould place his attention only on a few. Your remarks on the Greek and Roman republics far ſurpaſs my expectations; you have juſtly cha⯑racterized them as the fineſt inſtances of political ſociety, that could be founded on the baſis of a falſe religion. Where religion is imperfect, poli⯑tical ſociety, and all laws enacted for its improve⯑ment, muſt be imperfect alſo; religion is but phi⯑loſophy refined, and no man could ever boaſt an excellence in politics, whoſe mind had not been previouſly opened and enlarged by the inſtitutions of theology, an error in religion ever producing defects in legiſlation.
Forgive me, dear Charles, if I once more con⯑gratulate myſelf upon the pleaſure I expect from [8] your future eminence; you are now tinctured with univerſal hiſtory, and are thoroughly converſant with that of Greece and Rome; but there is another department of hiſtory ſtill remaining, and that much more important than any I have yet men⯑tioned, I mean the HISTORY OF ENGLAND. The hiſtory of this country is the proper ſtudy of an Engliſhman: however, it peculiarly concerns thoſe who may, like you, probably one day have ſuch an important character to ſupport in its adminiſtra⯑tion; and whoſe name, perhaps, may find a place in the hiſtoric page. All who are inamoured of the liberty and the happineſs which they, peculiar⯑ly enjoy, in this happy region, muſt ſurely be de⯑ſirous of knowing the methods by which ſuch ad⯑vantages were acquired; the progreſſive ſteps from barbarity to ſocial refinement, from ſociety to the higheſt pitch of well conſtituted freedom. All Europe ſtands in aſtoniſnment at the wiſdom of our conſtitution, and it would argue the higheſt degree of inſenſibility in a native of this country, and one too who from his birth enjoys peculiar privileges, to be ignorant of what others ſo much admire.
I ſhall not inſiſt upon a principal uſe, to which ſome apply the Engliſh hiſtory, I mean that of making it the topic of common converſation; yet, even from ſuch a motive, though in itſelf trifling, no well-bred man can plead ignorance: its great⯑eſt advantage, however, is, that a knowledge of the paſt enables the attentive mind to underſtand the preſent: our laws, cuſtoms, liberties; abuſe of liberty can ſcarcely be underſtood without tra⯑cing them to their ſource, and hiſtory is the only channel by which we can arrive at what we ſo eagerly purſue.
[9] But were I to compare the hiſtory of our own country, in point of amuſement, with that of others, I know of none, either ancient or mo⯑dern, that can vie with it in this reſpect; in other hiſtories, remote and extenſive connexions interrupt the reader's intereſt, and deſtroy the ſimplicity of the plan: the hiſtory of Greece may be eaſily di⯑vided into ſeven different hiſtories, and into ſo ma⯑ny it has actually been: the hiſtory of Rome, from the time it begins to be authentic, is little elſe than an account of the then known world; but, in England, ſeparated, by its ſituation, from the continent, the reader may conſider the whole nar⯑rative, with all its viciffitudes, in one point of view; it unites the philoſopher'sHutcheſon. definition of beauty, by being variouſly uniform.
The materials for an hiſtory of our own coun⯑try are therefore excellent, but I can direct to few who have improved them with a proper degree of aſſiduity or ſkill. The hiſtorians, who have treated of this ſubject, have in general written for a party, many with an open avowal of virulence and abuſe. Some, who have had talents for this undertaking, were unable to afford themſelves ſufficient leiſure to poliſh their work into the degree of requiſite perfection; while others, who have laboured with ſufficient aſſiduity, have been woefully deficient in point of ſagacity, or proper ſkill in the choice of thoſe facts they thought proper to relate. What⯑ever has been known, and not what was worth knowing, has been faithfully tranſcribed, ſo that the preſent accounts of the country reſemble the ancient face of the ſoil; here an uncultivated fo⯑reſt, there a deſolate wild, and, in a very few [10] places, a ſpot of earth adorned by art, and ſmiling with all the luxuriance of nature. To make hi⯑ſtory like the ſoil truly uſeful, the obſtacles to im⯑provement muſt be torn away, new aſſiſtances muſt be acquired from art, nor can the work be deemed properly finiſhed, till the whole puts on ſimplicity, uniformity, and elegance: as the caſe is at pre⯑ſent, we muſt read a library, to acquire a know⯑ledge of Engliſh hiſtory; and, after all, be con⯑tent to forget more than we remember.
The hiſtory of England may be divided, proper⯑ly enough, into three periods; with regard to their duration, indeed, very different, but almoſt of equal importance. The firſt is from the commencement of our knowledge of the country to its conqueſt by the Norman; the ſecond, from the time of William the Conqueror to the alteration of the conſtitution, by the beheading King Charles I; the laſt contains the remaining period of Engliſh hiſ⯑tory. It will at once appear, that ſuch a divi⯑ſion is extremely unequal: the firſt department may be ſaid to extend to a period of more than a thouſand years; the ſecond contains not leſs than ſeven hundred, while the remaining does not take up two. Chronologiſts, indeed, would divide it in a very different manner; however, I am rather inclined to this diviſion, more by the peculiar uſe which may be made of each period, than the mere regularity of time. To conſider the firſt part, with accuracy, belongs properly to the philoſopher; the ſecond is the buſineſs of him who would un⯑derſtand our conſtitution, and is the proper ſtudy of a legiſlator; and the laſt of ſuch as would be acquainted with the connexions and relations in which we ſtand with regard to our neighbours of [11] the continent, and our foreign and domeſtic trade, namely to the merchant and politician.
There is ſcarce any other paſſion, but that of curioſity, excited by a knowledge of the early part of our hiſtory. We may go through the account of that diſtant aera, with the ſame impartiality with which we conſider the original inhabitants of any other country, as the cuſtoms of our Bri⯑tiſh anceſtors have no connexion with our own. But then, to ſome minds, it muſt be a pleaſing diſquiſition to obſerve the human animal, by de⯑grees, diveſting himſelf of his native ferocity, and acquiring the arts of happineſs and peace; to trace the ſteps, by which he leaves his precarious meal, acquired by the chace, for a more certain, but a more laborious, repaſt, acquired by cultiva⯑tion.
After the conqueſt, the rude outlines of our preſent conſtitution began to be formed. Before the Norman invaſion, there might be ſome cuſ⯑toms reſembling thoſe at preſent in practice; but the only reaſon of their continuance was, becauſe they had before been practiſed in common among the invaders. At this period, therefore, an Eng⯑liſhman becomes intereſted in the narrative; he perceives the riſe and the reaſons for ſeveral laws, which now ſerve to reſtrain his own conduct, or preſerve his property. The rights of our monarchs, the claims of foreign potentates, the ineffectual ſtruggles for liberty, and the gradual incroach⯑ments of ambition, ſhould highly intereſt him, as he in ſome meaſure owes to theſe tranſactions the happineſs he enjoys.
But the laſt period is what is chiefly incumbent upon almoſt every man to be particularly conver⯑ſant [12] in. Every perſon, reſiding here, has a ſhare in the liberties of this kingdom; and the genera⯑lity of the people are ultimately inveſted with the legiſlation. It is therefore each man's duty to know that conſtitution, which, by his birth-right, he is called to govern; a freeholder, in a free kingdom, ſhould certainly be inſtructed in the original of that agreement, by which he holds ſo precious a tenure.
Theſe are motives that equally influence almoſt every rank of people, but how much more forci⯑bly ſhould they operate upon you, whoſe honours, whoſe truſts, and poſſeſſions, are likely to be ſo conſiderable. Others may have their liberties to ſupport; you muſt ſuſtain your liberty, your pro⯑perty, and the dignity of your ſtation. I ſhall therefore, without farther preface, in ſome future correſpondence, communicate the reſult of my en⯑quiries on this ſubject; a ſubject which, I own, has employed all the leiſure I had to ſpare from, I will not ſay more-important, but more neceſſary duties. I ſhall endeavour, at once, to ſupply the facts, and the neceſſary conſequences that may be deduced from them. I ſhall ſeparate all that can contribute nothing, either for amuſement or uſe, and. leave ſuch to dull compilers, or ſyſtematic writers of hiſtory, whoſe only boaſt it is to leave nothing out. A more thorough knowledge of the ſubject can not be communicated, without pain, nor acquired without ſtudy; perhaps too minute a ſkill in this, or any one ſubject, might diſqualify the mind for other branches of ſcience, equally demanding your care. Of whatever uſe it may be, I hope you will conſider it as an inſtance of my regard, and, though it ſhould fail to improve, [13] yet I hope it may remain a ſufficient teſtimony, how much I am,
Dear Charles, &c.
LETTER III.
THERE ſeems to be a natural tendency, in every nation, to run its antiquity as far back as poſſible, and when once they have arrived at the regions of fiction, no bounds are ſet to the wonders of every narration. Were we to take our character of the ancient inhabitants of this iſland, from the legends, monuments, or traditions, which have been left by thoſe inhabitants themſelves, we might be apt to imagine that arts, even in that early pe⯑riod, were cultivated, and ſciences known to ſome degree of perfection. The Druids, if we believe ſome fragments of their own, underſtood aſtrono⯑my and medicine, and gave leſſions in morality and metaphyſics. But what credit can be given to the accounts of a barbarous people, told by themſelves? The knowledge and learning, indeed, of their prieſts, might be great, if compared with the almoſt brutal ſimplicity and ignorance of the reſt of the people; but it could not deſerve the name of ſcience, if put in competition with what was known and practiſed by their polite cotempo⯑raries of Greece and Rome.
From the accounts of thoſe ſenſible writers, and not from the fictitious abſurdities of the Druids themſelves, we are to eſtimate this ancient people of Britain. All that we find related by credible witneſſes and ſufficient authority, before the Ro⯑mans [14] entered this iſland, is, that the country was filled with incredible numbers of people, and their fields ſtored with great plenty of animals, ſavage and domeſtic. Their houſes were meanly built, and ſcattered, as if accidentally, over the country, without obſervance, diſtance, or order. The only motives of their choice were the peculiar fertility of ſome happy ſpot, or the convenience of wood and water. They lived upon milk, and fleſh pro⯑cured by the chace, for corn was ſcarcely known among them. What cloaths they wore were ſkins of beaſts, but a great part of their bodies was left always expoſed to the injuries of the weather; all that was naked being painted with blue. This cuſtom of painting was univerſal among them, either in order to ſtrike terror into their enemies, or to defend the pores of the naked ſkin from the viciſſitudes of the ſeaſon.
Their towns, if a collection of huts could de⯑ſerve that name, were moſtly built upon the coaſts, in ſuch places as ſtrangers generally reſorted to for the ſake of commerce. The commodities, ex⯑ported, were chiefly hides and tin, and, probably, other ſpontaneous productions of the ſoil, which required no art in the preparation.
Their government, like that of the ancient Gauls, conſiſted of ſeveral petty principalities, which ſeem to be the original governments of mankind, and deduced from the natural right of paternal do⯑minion: but whether theſe little principalities de⯑ſcended by ſucceſſion, or were elected by the con⯑ſent of the people, is not recorded. Upon great or uncommon dangers, indeed, the chief com⯑mander of all their forces was choſen by common conſent, in a general aſſembly, as Caeſar relates of Caſſibelaunus, upon his invaſion. The ſame was [15] done upon their revolts againſt the Roman colo⯑nies, under Caractacus and their Queen Boadicea; for, among them, women were admitted to their principalities, and general commands, by the right of ſucceſſion, merit, or nobility.
Such were the cuſtoms of the ancient Britons, and the ſame may ſerve for a deſcription of every other barbarous nation, of which we have any knowledge. Savage man, is an animal in almoſt every country the ſame; and all the difference between nations reſults from cuſtoms introduced by luxury, or cultivated by refinement. What the inhabitant of Britain was at that time, the inha⯑bitant of South America, or Cafraria, may be at this day. But there was one cuſtom, among the ancient inhabitants of this iſland, which ſeems pe⯑culiar to themſelves, and is not to be found in the accounts of any other ancient or modern nation. The cuſtom I mean, was a community of wives, among certain numbers, and by common conſent. Every man married indeed but one woman, who was always after, and alone, eſteemed his wife: but, it was uſual for five or ſix, ten, twelve, or more, either brothers or friends, as they could agree, to have all their wives in common. But this, though calculated for their mutual happineſs, in fact proved their greateſt diſturbance; and we have ſome inſtances, in which this community of wives produced diſſenſions, jealouſies, and death. Every woman's children, however, were the pro⯑perty of him who had married her; but all claim⯑ed a ſhare in the care and defence of the whole ſo⯑ciety, ſince no man knew which were his own.
To eſtimate the wiſdom of the people, we muſt examine the manners of their teachers. If the laity were ſo very barbarous, the Druids, their [16] inſtructors, muſt have but few pretences to ſupe⯑rior refinement. Yet, I know not how, we have different and almoſt contradictory accounts of this extraordinary fraternity. They have been repre⯑ſented, by ſome, as perſons of learning, which had been derived to them by long tradition. Their ſkill conſiſted in the obſervation of the heavens, and, upon the influence of its appearance, they gave their countrymen omens of failure or ſucceſs. They taught a morality, which principally con⯑ſiſted in juſtice and fortitude. Their lives were ſimple and innocent, in woods, caverns, and hol⯑low trees; their food acorns or berries, and their drink water. They were reſpected and admired, not only for knowing more than other men, but for deſpiſing what all others valued and purſued; by their virtue and temperance, they reproved and corrected thoſe vices in others, from which they were themſelves happily free; and made uſe of no other arms, than the reverence due to integrity, to enforce obedience to their own commands. From ſuch a conduct as this, they derived ſo much authority, that they were not only prieſts, but judges alſo, throughout the nation. No laws were inſtituted without their approbation; no per⯑ſon puniſhed with bonds, or death, but by their condemnation.
But, on the other hand, we learn, that all their knowledge was impoſture, and their ſimplicity on⯑ly a ſavage paſſion for ſolitude. Their language was barbarous, and their manners ſtill more rude. Theſe were ſuch as called aloud for ſome more enlightened inſtructors, to conquer and to direct them. The Druids, ſeemingly formed for the people among whom they governed, ſacrificed human victims, which they burned in large wicker [17] idols, which were made ſo capacious, as to con⯑tain a multitude of perſons, who were, in this manner, at once conſumed in the flames. The female Druids plunged their knives in the breaſts of the priſoners taken in war, and propheſied from the manner in which the blood happened to ſtream from the wound. Several of their altars, conſiſt⯑ed of four broad ſtones, three of which were ſet edgewiſe, and the fourth horizontally on the top, and are ſtill to be ſeen.
In accounts, ſo ſeemingly contradictory, we are entirely to give aſſent to neither. That they pretended to aſtrology is certain; this, and not their piety, probably gave them ſuch influence a⯑mong their countrymen. To judge of what the Britons then were, as I have already hinted, we muſt look at what ſavage nations are at preſent: We perceive, what authority a pretence to aſtrolo⯑gy, in barbarous countries, confers; the aſtrologer being generally conſidered, in almoſt all the Eaſtern kingdoms, as the ſecond, if not the firſt man of the ſtate. That the Druids deceived the people with a falſe religion cannot be denied, but, yet, I can never think that they were impoſtors: they firſt deceived themſelves into a belief and veneration of what they taught, and then made uſe of every motive to perſuade the people. The ignorant and erroneous, in the commerce of this life, are many; the villains and impoſtors are found more rarely. As for human ſacrifices, few probably were de⯑ſtroyed upon this horrid occaſion, but priſoners taken in war, and ſuch have ever been ſacrificed, by ſavage nations, rather from a principle of re⯑venge, than religion. It is not peculiar to the religion of the Druids alone, but was primarily the [18] barbarous practice of thoſe very nations who then exclaimed againſt it moſt loudly.
In ſhort, my dear Charles, the religion of the Druids was no more than that of every barbarous nation, with whoſe ceremonies we have any ac⯑quaintance. This was the religion, not only practiſed in Britain, but which prevailed, origi⯑nally, over the greateſt part of the world. The original inhabitants of Europe, as a learned an⯑tiquary* has finely proved, were the ſame: all ſpeaking one language, obeying the ſame deities, and governed by ſimilar laws. Succeſſive inva⯑ſions, from different parts of Aſra, brought new changes; and, as the colonies went weſtward, the Greek, the Roman, and Teutonic languages and cuſtoms were ſuper-induced over the ancient Celtic. All thoſe countries, moſt acceſſible to ſtrangers, or moſt ſubject to invaſions, were firſt changed; thoſe which lay ſurrounded by mountains, or were in ſome meaſure retired by their ſituation, ſuch as Wales, the Highlands of Scotland, Ireland, Biſcay, Crim Tartary, &c. all preſerved their primitive manners. It is even found, that theſe countries ſtill adhere to many of the ancient Druidical cuſ⯑toms, as far as the alteration of religion will ad⯑mit. We have, as yet, an opportunity of view⯑ing many of their ancient, and, in ſome meaſure, venerable ſuperſtitions, ſtill in Ireland: theſe are, however, wearing out by degrees, and another century will entirely efface every veſtige of barba⯑rous antiquity. I am,
Dear Charles, &c.
LETTER IV.
[19]IT is, in ſome meaſure, happy for a barbarous people to be conquered by a country more po⯑lite than themſelves. Whatever evils the ambition of heroes generally produces, it is attended with one advantage, that of diſſeminating arts, and making humanity more extenſive. The Britons, ſavage and rude as they were, in ſome meaſure, called for more polite inſtructors, and the Romans, of all the conquerors hiſtory can produce, were at once the moſt polite, the moſt generous, and humane.
A country, divided like Britain into a variety of ſmall principalities, muſt neceſſarily have been ſe⯑parated into various, and often oppoſite, intereſts. Its princes muſt have been frequently at war, merely for the ſake of plunder, to keep their troops in exerciſe, or to gratify vanity and ambition. We may eaſily, therefore, form an idea of the miſeries of a rude people, who had nothing but fear to keep them from war with each other, and who could build no longer on a laſting peace, than while they avoided giving an opportunity of plun⯑der to their enemies.
To complete the picture of the calamities of this people, all the trading and maritime towns, next the continent, were in poſſeſſion of foreign invaders long before the Romans entered the iſland. Theſe were a people who had been received from motives of hoſpitality, and who, under the character of exiles in diſtreſs, having got footing and ſhelter amongſt the natives, afterwards made war upon them, as enemies. This, added to their frequent tumults and maſſacres among each other, [20] rendered them, not only internally unhappy, but an eaſy prey to every invader. Beſides, they were ill ſupplied with arms, and thoſe they had were only ſuch as were no longer in uſe among the refined na⯑tions of the continent. They fought in chariots armed with ſcythes, applied to the wheels. Theſe were terrible without execution, and made rather to aſtoniſh the rude and ignorant, than to break ſuch ranks, as were not to be daunted by the mere ap⯑pearance of danger. Their defenſive armour only conſiſted of a wicker ſhield; and they approached an enemy ſhouting, claſhing their arms, and ſound⯑ing their trumpets, as if they had a deſign rather to terrify than deſtroy. Their chariots generally attacked the enemy's cavalry, and from theſe they would frequently leap, and fight on foot, till, being fatigued or overpowered, they would reſume their ſeats and make the beſt retreat poſſible. Unpo⯑liſhed nations, though they have more fierceneſs in the onſet, never act with that cool preſevering reſolution, which almoſt ever enſures victory. This can be acquired, only where diſcipline and ſubordination have long prevailed; and a nation, however brave, levied in haſte, will probably ne⯑ver make a figure againſt veteran troops, harden⯑ed by contention, or elated by long ſucceſs. This was the nature of the inhabitants, but the face of the country rendered them ſtill more open to every invader. It was plain and open, without towns, fortreſſes, or any place of retreat to ſecure them from an enemy, except what their foreſts might happen to afford; in a word, they were deſtitute of all means of defence, but what their native courage was able to ſupply, or a love of liberty might inſpire.
[21] Such were the people and cuſtoms of Britain, when the Romans firſt invaded their iſland, under the enſigns of Julius Caeſar, the greateſt com⯑mander that ever led an army. When I conſider this great man, who had already been the con⯑queror of Gaul; when I reflect on his courage, his conduct, and perſeverance; when I take into my view the troops he headed, inured to diſcipline, and fighting in a manner with which barbarous nations were entirely unacquainted; when I con⯑ſider theſe circumſtances, and compare them with thoſe of the Britons in the ſame period, I feel a more than uſual ſhare of ſurprize at the bravery and conduct with which theſe poor barbarians op⯑poſed him.
It was an eſtabliſhed maxim, in the politics of Rome, to deem all auxiliaries as principals, and to allow none to aſſiſt the enemies of the ſtate with impunity. This was the pretence Caeſar laid hold of to juſtify his invaſion of England, which was not only looked upon as an ally, but likewiſe as an aſylum to the Gauliſh nations, which were at that time enemies of Rome. This might, pro⯑bably, be the ground of his invaſion, but the pleaſure of conqueſt was his real motive. To ex⯑tend the Roman empire, though already it was become too extenſive to be governed, was at that time thought the moſt glorious atchievment of humanity. The reſt of Europe was, in ſome meaſure, ſubdued, and nothing left but countries deſolate by foreſts and marſhes, and neither tempting, from their appearance, nor affording any hopes of plunder, from their poverty. He⯑roiſm was, at that time, the boaſt of ambition, nor have men, till very lately, been taught to con⯑ſider conquerors with an eye of contempt or deteſ⯑taticn. [22] Caeſar was reſolved on being a hero, and was more fond of triumph than juſtice.
His forces were compoſed of Germans, Bata⯑vians, and Gauls, and the flower of his veteran Roman legions. He ſet ſail from Gaul about midnight, and arrived on the Britiſh coaſt about [...]en in the afternoon, fifty-five years before the Chriſtian aera. The Britons, with their naked troops, made a brave oppoſition againſt this veteran army: the encounters between them were fierce, and many, the loſſes were mutual, and the ſucceſs various. Caſſibelaunus was choſen general in chief of the Britiſh forces, but even a foreign in⯑vader was not ſufficient to keep the petty princes, which compoſed the barbarous army, united. Diſſenſion ſoon entered amongſt them, and ſome, jealous of the ſincerity of their general, or envy⯑ing his greatneſs, fled over to Caeſar, ſubmitted to the Romans, and claimed their protection. Others followed this baſe example, till Caſſibelaunus, weakened by ſo many deſertions, reſolved upon making what terms he was able, while he had yet an opportunity. He ſends to Caeſar, acknowledges the Romanpower, agrees upon a certain tribute, and delivers hoſtages. Britain, from the beginning, has been remarkable for internal diſſenſion, and diſſenſion ever ſtrengthens or invites the invader.
The Romans were pleaſed with the name of a new conqueſt, and glad of ending an adventure with honour, which at firſt promiſed only difficul⯑ties and danger. But the extended foreſt, and the trackleſs wild, was not a quarry for men intent on ſpoil, and raiſed to greater expectations. Having, therefore, rather diſcovered than ſubdued the ſouthern parts of the iſland, they returned into Gaul with their whole forces, and once more left [23] the Britons to their cuſtoms, religion, and laws. By two expeditions which Caeſar made into this iſland, he rather increaſed the glory than the do⯑minions of Rome, and gave Britain the honour of being the laſt triumph of that mighty republic, which had before reduced the moſt powerful king⯑doms of the habitable globe.
Whatever the tribute was, which they had contracted annually to pay, we have many reaſons, from hiſtory, to believe, they paid it but very neg⯑ligently. I mention this, as an inſtance of the little faith which can be expected from an extort⯑ed ſubmiſſion, while there is no longer a power to enforce obedience. During the reign of Auguſtus, that Emperor had formed a deſign of viſiting Bri⯑tain, but was diverted from it by an unexpected revolt of the Pannonians. Some years after, he again reſumed his deſign, but, being met in his way by the Britiſh ambaſſadors, promiſing the ac⯑cuſtomed tribute, and making the uſual ſubmiſ⯑ſions, he a ſecond time deſiſted. The year fol⯑lowing, finding them unfaithful to their promiſe, he prepared, a third time, for the invaſion of this iſland, but was prevented from putting his deſign into execution, by their ambaſſadors, who averted his fury by their adulations and humility. The moſt ſavage countries underſtand flattery almoſt as well as the moſt polite, ſince, to be ſufficiently ſervile is, perhaps, the whole of the art, and the trueſt method of pleaſing.
Tiberius followed the maxims of Auguſtus, and, wiſely judging the Roman empire already too extenſive, made no attempt upon this iſland. Some Roman ſoldiers being wrecked on the Eng⯑liſh coaſt, the inhabitants not only aſſiſted them with the greateſt humanity, but ſent them, in [24] ſafety, back to their general. In conſequence of ſuch friendly diſpoſitions, there was a conſtant in⯑tercourſe between the two nations; the principal Engliſh nobility reſorted to Rome, and ſome re⯑ceived their education there.
By theſe means the Britons began ſenſibly to improve. The firſt art, which a ſavage people is generally taught by their politer neighbours, is that of war. Tho' not wholly addicted to the Roman manner of fighting, the Britons, however, adopted ſeveral of their improvements, both in their arms, and their arrangement in the field. Their feroci⯑ty to ſtrangers was now alſo leſſened, and they firſt began to coin money, the oldeſt Britiſh coin being that of Comius, who learned a part of the Roman politeneſs by a reſidence in Caeſar's camp. They ſtill, however, continued to live as herdſmen and hunters, and adhered to their uſual ſuperſtitions, a manifeſt inſtance of the country being, as yet, but thinly inhabited. When we read, in Caeſar, of the numbers of this people, and the vaſt armies they brought into the field, I am apt to doubt his veracity. Such armies could ſcarcely be levied, even now; and yet, nothing is more certain, than that Britain is at leaſt ten times more populous now than it was at that time. A nation of herdſmen and hunters can never be very populous; their ſub⯑ſiſtence takes up a large tract of country, while the huſbandman converts every part of nature to human uſe, and produces the greateſt quantity of ſubſiſtence from circumſcribed poſſeſſion. The Roman hiſtorian has increaſed their numbers, only to increaſe the luſtre of his glory in ſubduing them. I am, &c.
LETTER V.
[25]THE ſecond expedition into Britain was made by Claudius, under the conduct of Plautius, and purſued by Oſtorius, and other Roman com⯑manders, with the uſual ſucceſs. It is true, there were many Britons who preferred their hardy ſim⯑plicity to imported elegance, and, rather than offer their necks to the Roman yoke, preſented their breaſts to the ſword. But, by degrees, their fierce⯑neſs was ſubdued, or wholly deſtroyed; the ſouthern coaſt, with all the adjacent inland country, was ſecured by the conquerors, who took poſſeſſion by fortifying camps, building fortreſſes, and planting colonies. The reſt of the country ſeemed to look on, patiently waiting till it became their turn to be expelled from their precarious habitations, or to receive their imperious maſters.
Proſperity, in general, breeds inſolence; the corruption of the Praetors and officers, that were appointed to govern this harraſſed people, once more rouſed them into reſentment. Caractacus, General and King of the northern Britons, with inferior numbers, not only made a brave defence, but often ſeemed to claim a doubtful victory. A drawn battle might be conſidered as a triumph, to a people only uſed to a defeat. He continued nine years to hold out, and threatened fatal dangers to the Roman colonies. At length, however, in a deciſive battle, the Britons were totally defeated, and Caractacus taken priſoner. His exclamation, when led in triumph through Rome, is too remark⯑able to be paſſed over in ſilence. Obſerving the opulence, ſplendor, and luxury of that great city, [26] ‘Alas! cried he, how is it poſſible, that people, poſſeſſed of ſuch finery at home, could envy me an humble cottage in Britain?’
Yet, one expiring effort more was made by the Britons, to recover their liberty in the times of Nero. Paulinus, the general of the Romans, going with the greateſt part of his forces, to ſubdue the iſle of Angleſey, where the ſuperſti⯑tions of the Druids were ſtill practiſed with all their horrid circumſtances; the Britons, preſum⯑ing upon his abſence, made a general inſurrection under Boadicea, Queen of the Iceni, whom the Romans had treated with ſhocking indignities, con⯑demning her, for ſome ſlight offence, to be whipped, and her daughters to be raviſhed by the ſoldiery: in revenge, therefore, at the head of a numerous army, ſhe fell upon the Romans wherever they were defenceleſs, took their caſtles, deſtroyed the chief ſeats of their power at London and Veru⯑lam, and, ſuch was the ſlaughter, that ſeventy thouſand fell by this revolt. Paulinus, however, ſoon returned with his army, encountered the Britiſh forces headed by their Queen, overthrew their powers, and purſued his victory with a ſlaughter of eighty thouſand men, while the con⯑quered Queen poiſoned herſelf in deſpair. Here ended the liberties of Britain. All that now re⯑mained were ſatisfied to exchange freedom for life: this was their laſt ſtruggle; they now loſt, not only the hopes, but even the deſire of vindicating the privileges of nature
From this time the Romans ſeemed more deſi⯑rous of ſecuring what they poſſeſſed, than of making new conqueſts; they ſeparated the Roman province, by a wall, from the Picts, their barbarous and reſtleſs neighbours; and attempted to humanize the [27] fierceneſs of thoſe who acknowledged their power. The Roman laws and cuſtoms, habits and arms, language and manners, baths and feaſts, ſtudies and learning, were introduced and became gene⯑ral. A conduct ſo prudent, which had been firſt begun by Agricola, was purſued by his ſucceſſors with ſo much ſucceſs, that the Romans had little trouble afterwards in Britain, except in the defence of their northern frontier.
Had Rome continued peaceable miſtreſs of the world, the Britons, now almoſt perfectly civilized, might have found means of being happy. But, upon the diviſions in the Roman empire, which was ruled by faction, and governed by an inſo⯑lent ſoldiery, torn by ſedition at home, and ſub⯑ject to invaſion abroad, the Britiſh legions were, at ſeveral times, called over into Gaul, and, with them, great numbers of the braveſt of the Britiſh youth. Thus, we ſee every method purſued, to weaken and render this once hardy people effe⯑minate. The arts of luxury were introduced to ſoften their minds; they were denied the uſe of arms, which might ſtill uphold their native brave⯑ry; the flower of their youth were, at intervals, drained away, and thoſe that remained were bred up in ſervitude and ſubjection. All thoſe who had a paſſion for liberty, were long ſince deſtroy⯑ed, and none were ſuffered to live, but ſuch as had betrayed their country in the beginning, or had been too cowardly to reſiſt any unjuſt in⯑vaſion. It is no wonder, therefore, that, as the Roman forces decreaſed in Britain, the Picts be⯑came more bold in their incurſions. Theſe, pro⯑bably were the deſcendants of ſuch Britons as once bravely exchanged their country for freedom, and croſſing the narrow ſea, which the Romans [28] could not guard, in little boats of wicker covered with leather, they filled the country, wherever they came, with ſpoil, ſlaughter, and deſolation: when repulſed, by ſuperior numbers, they uſually retired, loaded with ſpoils, and watched for the next opportunity of invaſion, when the Romans were drawn away into the remoter parts of the iſland.
Theſe enterprizes were often repeated, and as often repreſſed, till, in the reign of Valentinian the younger, the empire of Rome began to trem⯑ble for its capital. Myriads of barbarous nations, under the names of Goths and Vandals, invaded the dominion of this miſtreſs of the world, with terror, perſeverance, and rapidity. All the Ro⯑man legions were now, therefore, drawn from Britain, and all the Britons, who were fit for mi⯑litary ſervice, were brought away to relieve the Emperor, who was purſued by the Goths into Piedmont, and there beſieged in Aquilea, a town he attempted to defend.
The Romans, now taking their laſt leave of this province, left the Britons to their own go⯑vernment, and the choice of their own Kings. For the exerciſe of their arms, and for repairing their ramparts, they gave them the beſt inſtruc⯑tions that ſuch terrible times would permit. No⯑thing can be more affecting than the picture of Britain at that period; though the Roman ſol⯑diery were drawn away, their families and de⯑ſcendants were ſtill ſpread over the whole coun⯑try, and left without a ſingle perſon, of conduct or courage, to defend them. The Britons, who were left, began to enter into freſh diſſentions for ſuperiority: the enemy continued to pour in greater numbers than ever, from their native foreſts and [29] mountains: famine, with all its horrid attendants, of diſeaſe, robbery, and ſedition, increaſed the miſery of the times: their vices, as Gildas, a co⯑temporary writer, obſerves, kept pace with their calamities, the whole forming one deteſtable groupe of cowardice, cruelty, and diſtreſs.
In this terrible ſituation it was, that they im⯑plored the aſſiſtance of the Romans for relief; their letter upon this occaſion ſtill remains upon record: ‘To Aetius, thrice Conſul. The groans of the Britons. Driven by our barbarous enemy to the ſea, and from thence back upon the barbarians, we have only left us the choice of a grave: either to be killed by the one, or to be drowned by the other.’ The Romans, however, were unable to help themſelves, much leſs capable of giving ſuccour to ſo remote, and, at preſent, ſuch unſerviceable allies.
Yet, amidſt ſuch calamities, this people ſeemed to have ſtill a peculiar happineſs in ſtore, for they had, in general, embraced Chriſtianity. At what time the Goſpel was firſt preached in this iſland is not known, nor is it material to know: it is certain, that England converted its Pagan con⯑querors to the lights of revelation; and, though this people received laws from others, they adorn⯑ed them with the religion of truth.
Arts, arms, and elegance, muſt take their riſe, by ſlow degrees, in every country, and can never be, at once, introduced into it with ſucceſs. All the pains, beſtowed in Britiſh education, only ſerved to render this people more miſerable; dreſſed them up as victims for every invader, and plunged them in all the miſery of knowing happi⯑neſs without being able to enjoy refinement. The people of a country, juſt reclaimed from barbarity, in ſome meaſure reſemble the ſoil. The cultivation [30] of a few years may be ſufficient to clear away the obſtacles to agriculture, but it requires ſeveral ages, before the land acquires a proper degree of fertility. Thus, all the blood and treaſure, which the Romans loſt in the conqueſt of Britain, in the [...] only ſerved to depopulate the country, and prepare it for a repletion from new invaders. The Roman poli [...]s ſucceeded in quelling Britiſh cou⯑rage, but the inhabitants, deprived of that, ſeemed deſtitute of every virtue.
LETTER VI.
I Remember but few inſtances in hiſtory, where the conquerors did not excel the people con⯑quered, in every virtue. Savage barbarity, of ef⯑feminate luxury, have almoſt ever been imputed to thoſe countries which were obliged to admit a foreign invader. There is a period, between natural rudeneſs and exceſſive refinement, which ſeems peculiarly adapted for conqueſt and war, and fits mankind for every virtuous and great atchieve⯑ment. In this ſtate of half-refinement, the Saxons were at the time in which the Britons were thus diſtreſſed. This virtuous and warlike people had conquered wherever they came, and to them the wretched remains of this forlorn people had re⯑courſe for protection.
As the conqueſt of this iſland is generally im⯑puted to the Saxons as a piece of treachery, and an invaſion of thoſe rights they were only called to protect, I ſhall give the invitation they received [31] from the Britons, as it hath been left us by Wit⯑tichindus, a cotemporary hiſtorian of credit; and from hence it may be judged, what little right the Britons had afterwards to complain: ‘"The poor and diſtreſſed Britons, almoſt worn out by hoſtile invaſions, and harraſſed by continual in⯑curſions, are humble ſuppliants to you, moſt valiant Saxons, for ſuccour. We are poſſeſſed of a wide, extended, and a fertile country; this we yield wholly to be at your devotion and command. Beneath the wing of your valour, we ſeek for ſafety, and ſhall willingly undergo whatever ſervices you may hereafter be pleaſed to impoſe."’
The Saxons were one branch of thoſe Gothic nations, which, ſwarming from the northern hive, came to give laws and liberty to the reſt of Europe. A branch of theſe, under the name of Suevi, had, ſome time before Caeſar's invaſion of Gaul, ſub⯑dued and poſſeſſed an extenſive empire in Germany. Theſe, for their ſtrength and valour, were grown formidable to all the German nations. The Sue⯑vi were reckoned, by their neighbours, a people for whom the very immortal Gods were not a match in war. They were after divided into ſeve⯑ral nations, and each became famous for ſubduing the country which it invaded. France, Germa⯑ny, and England, were among the number of their conqueſts.
The Saxons were far more poliſhed than the ancient inhabitants of Britain, tho' their acquire⯑ments were much inferior to the boaſted refinements of Rome. They dreſſed with ſome degree of ele⯑gance, a luxury which was unknown to the Bri⯑tons: the women uſed linen garments, trimmed and ſtriped with purple; their hair was bound in [32] wreaths, or fell in curls upon their ſhoulders; their arms were bare, and their boſoms uncovered. Faſhions which, in ſome meaſure, ſeem peculiar to the ladies of Britain to this day. Their govern⯑ments were entirely elective, and nearly republican; their commanders were choſen by merit, and diſ⯑miſſed from duty when their authority was no longer needful. The cuſtom of trying by twelve men is of Saxon original; ſlavery, and baſe ſubmiſſioin, was unknown among them, and they preferred death to a ſhameful exiſtence: We [...], by Marcellinus, that a body of them being taken priſoners by Sym⯑machus, the Roman, he deſigned to exhibit them, in the amphitheatre, as gladiators, for the enter⯑tainment of the citizens of Rome. The morn⯑ing, however, on which they were expected to perform, they were every one found dead in his priſon, each chuſing rather a voluntary death, than to be the ignominious inſtruments of brutal ſatisfaction to their conquerors. The chaſtity of this people is equally remarkable, and to be without children was to be without praiſe: but, in war, they chiefly excelled; they had, in ſome meaſure, learned diſcipline from the Romans, whom they had often conquered: it was their maxim to eſteem fortune as a doubtful advantage, but courage as a certain good. A nation, how⯑ever, entirely addicted to war, muſt, conſequent⯑ly, be addicted to cruelty; and thoſe terrors, which a man is taught not to fear himſelf, he is ſeldom afraid of inflicting on ſociety. The Saxons are repreſented as a cruel nation, but their enemies alone have drawn the picture.
Vortigern, who had been elected King of the diſtreſſed Britons, eaſily induced theſe conquerors to lend him aſſiſtance. They came over into Bri⯑tain [33] in great numbers, commanded by Hengiſt and Horſa, of the race of Odin. They marched a⯑gainſt the Picts, and, in conjunction with the Britiſh arms, defeated them in ſeveral encounters, obliging them to retreat into the moſt northern parts of the province. The Saxons, thus finding themſelves evidently the moſt powerful people up⯑on the iſland, ſeemed reſolved to reward them⯑ſelves with thoſe parts of it which were moſt to their liking. They firſt obtained conſent from the Britons to ſend over for more forces, under a pre⯑tence of guarding their frontier. Theſe ſeated themſelves in the northern provinces, and repreſſed the incurſions of the Picts and Scots with great bravery and ſucceſs. Thoſe nations were, there⯑fore, obliged to bound their territories with the rough and mountainous countries that lie between the two ſeas, and ſuch have, ever ſince, continued the boundaries of England and Scotland.
The province thus ſecured from the common enemy, diſſenſions began to ariſe between the Bri⯑tons and their new allies. The Saxons valued too highly the aſſiſtance they had given, and the Bri⯑tons, perhaps, under-rated what they had received. In a conteſt of this nature, it is natural to ima⯑gine, that the ſtronger nation alwas impoſes laws on the weaker. The Saxons, allured by the fer⯑tile ſoil and the ſoft climate, continued to invite greater numbers from the continent, and now turned their arms upon the Britons, who vainly at⯑tempted to oppoſe them. This contention was ſtill more inflamed by the difference of their opinion in matters of religion, the Saxons being all Pagans, and the Britons profeſſing Chriſtianity. At ſuch a time as this a Chriſtian hero was wanted to vindicate the rights of Chriſtianity, and proba⯑bly, [34] merely for this reaſon, fiction has ſupplied us with a Chriſtian hero King Arthur, the Britiſh champion, is ſaid to have worſted the Saxons in twelve different engagements; yet, not⯑withſtanding all his victories, and whatever his proweſs might have performed, it did not ſerve to reſcue his country from its new poſſeſſors. The Saxons purſued their deſigns with courage and fierceneſs; new ſwarms of their countrymen came continually over, till, at length, in about a cen⯑tury and an half, they had ſubdued the whole body of the province, and eſtabliſhed in it ſeven different kingdoms, which were, by the writers of thoſe times, ſtyled the Saxon Heptarchy.
The Britons, driven from their ancient poſſeſ⯑ſions, to eſcape the fury of the conquerors, retired to the mountainous parts of Wales and Cornwal, countries barren and deſolate, but, in ſome mea⯑ſure, ſurrounded by the ſea, and, towards the land, difficult of acceſs. Some great colonies of them, wholly abandoning their native country, ſailed over to the neighbouring ſhores of France, where, poſ⯑ſeſſing new ſeats, they gave a new denomination to that peninſula which ſtill preſerves the name and memory of Britain there, a name no longer continued at home.
All the poſſeſſions of the Britons now fell into the power of the conquerors, who began to loſe their natural fierceneſs, and ſoften into the luxu⯑ries of thoſe they had invaded. Though con⯑querors ever bring their own cuſtoms among the people they ſubdue, they, at the ſame time, aſ⯑ſume ſome cuſtoms from thoſe they have conquer⯑ed. The Saxons now loſt all that ſpirit of free⯑dom their nation had been long famous for, and, in imitation of the Britons themſelves, among [35] whom ſlavery was permitted ſince the times of the Romans; they ma 'e the people of Britain ſlaves. Theſe wretches were uſed in tilling the ground, feeding cattle, and other ſervile works; farming out lands at a certain yearly ſtipend, but always held at the will and pleaſure of the landlord. The children of this miſerable people belonged to the ſoil, like the reſt of the ſtock or cattle upon it; and thus began villenage in England, an horrid cuſtom, borrowed from the Romans originally, and derived now to the Saxon, by vicious imitation.
The Saxons, now no longer fearing domeſtic foes, relaxed into luxury and vice, and, finding no other enemies to ſubdue, began to fight with each other. The Princes of the ſeven kingdoms they had erected, began mutually to emulate each other's power, and, for the ſpace of above two hundred years, all the miſery that ambition, treachery, or war, could bring upon a kingdom, was the con⯑ſequence of their animoſity. The diſſenſions of petty Princes are ever more diſtreſsful to a people, than the wars of extenſive empires. The hiſto⯑rians of this period are as barbarous as the tranſ⯑actions they deſcribe; but it is ſufficient to know, that, after many various events and revolutions be⯑tween the ſeveral races of the heptarchy, Ecbert, deſcended from the Weſt-Saxon Kings, partly by conqueſt, and partly by inheritance, became the firſt ſole Monarch of England. This was the name which the country now aſſumed, to diſtin⯑guiſh it from the principality of Wales, poſſeſſed by the ancient Britons, and from that part of the iſland north of the Tweed, poſſeſſed by the Picts and Scots, called Scotland.
No cuſtoms, truly Britiſh or Roman, were now to be ſeen: the language of the country, which had been either Latin or Celtic, was diſcontinued, and [36] the Saxon or Engliſh only was ſpoken. The land, before divided into colonies or governments, was now cantoned into ſhires, with Saxon appellations to diſtinguiſh them. Their habits in peace, and arms in war, their titles of honour, laws, and methods of trial, were all continued as originally practiſed by the Suevi; but their commonwealths were now no more; theſe were changed for de⯑ſpotic and hereditary monarchies: and their exem⯑plary chaſtity, and their abhorrence of ſlavery, were quite forgotten. The conquerors were corrupted by proſperity: they became Chriſtians, indeed, by the preaching of Auſtin the Monk, but this little improved their manners; twelve hundred Britiſh Monks, who would not acknowledge Auſtin for a ſaint, are ſaid to have been ſlaughtered by order of theſe new converted Chriſtians, in a field near Caerleon.
Chriſtianity, when erroneouſly taught, is even more injurious to ſociety than Paganiſm. In all the ſacrifices made to the Britiſh idols, or the Saxon god Woden, I have not read of ſuch a multitude of victims offered together. The devotion of this people, however, was equal to their ignorance. Their Kings frequently abdicated the crown for the cowl; their Queens thought it meritorious, though joined in wedlock, to continue in virgini⯑ty; and ſome, for this erroneous practice, after their death were canonized as ſaints.
At this period, namely, the ſeventh century, the arts and ſciences, which had been before only known in Greece and Rome, were diſſeminated over Europe, where they ſufficed, indeed, to raiſe the people above natural and ſavage barbarity, but then they loſt their own ſplendor by the tranſplan⯑tation. The Engliſh, at the time I am now ſpeak⯑ing [37] of, might be conſidered as polite, if compared to the naked Britons at the invaſion of Caeſar. The houſes, furniture, cloaths, meetings, and all the luxuries of ſenſe, were almoſt as great then as they are at preſent; they were only incapable of ſentimental pleaſure: all the learning of the times was conſigned to the clergy, and little could be expected from their efforts, ſince their principal tenet was to diſcard the lights of reaſon. An eclipſe was, even by their hiſtorians, talked of as a dangerous omen of threatened diſtreſſes: and magic was not only believed poſſible, but, what is more ſtrange, there were ſome who even fancied they underſtood magic. In ſhort, this whole pe⯑riod was tiſſued over with ignorance, cruelty, and ſuperſtition; and the kingdom ſeemed united un⯑der one Monarch, only the more readily to admit a new invader.
LETTER VII.
IT might have reaſonably been expected, that a fortunate prince as Ecbert had always been, at the head of ſo large an united kingdom, after the expulſion of the Picts, Scots, and Britons, ſhould not only have enjoyed the fruits of peace, but even have left tranquility and happineſs to his moſt diſtant poſterity. Yet, ſuch is the inſtability of human affairs, and the weakneſs of man's beſt conjecture, that Ecbert was ſcarcely ſettled in his throne, when the whole kingdom was alarmed by the approach of an unexpected enemy, fierce, barbarous, and brave. About this time a mighty ſwarm of thoſe nations which had poſſeſſed the countries bordering the Baltic, began, under the [38] names of Danes and Normans, to infeſt the weſ⯑tern coaſts of Europe, filling the coaſts wherever they came with ſlaughter and devaſtation. It is remarkable enough, that the people whom they ſpoiled were no other than colonies of their own countrymen, who had emigrated ſome centuries before, and plundered thoſe very countries, where they were now themſelves plundered in turn. The Normans fell upon the northern coaſts of France. The Danes chiefly levelled their fury at England, and, entering the Thames with an incredible num⯑ber of ſhips, carried away all that could neither be defended nor withdrawn from the ſuddenneſs of the invaſion.
The weak oppoſition the Danes met with from the Engliſh, only ſerved to invite them to renew their depredations, and make freſh attempts the ſucceeding ſeaſon. The braveſt blood of the Engliſh had been already exhauſted in civil war, under the diſſenſions of the Saxon heptarchy; and, when thoſe wars were terminated, pilgrimages, penances, cloiſters, and ſuperſtitions, ſerved to enfeeble the remainder. Thus the Saxons were become as unequal to make oppoſition againſt the Danes, as the Britons were to oppoſe the Saxons heretofore. They therefore bought off their in⯑vaders with money, a remarkable inſtance how much they had degenerated from their warlike an⯑ceſtors. The money which was thus extorted, only increaſed the avarice and the ſtrength of the enemy. It was alſo raiſed by the Kings, from exactions on the people: this cauſed new diſ⯑content, and ſerved to haſten the fall of their thrones, which already began to totter.
This century, however, did not paſs without various ſucceſs, and doubtful fortune, between the two contending nations. No leſs than twelve [39] battles are ſaid to have been fought in one year. The Danes divided their forces into ſeveral camps, removed them from one part of the country to another, as they were forced by neceſſity, invited by hopes of ſpoil, or induced by the weakneſs and diviſions of the enemy. They fortified poſts and paſſages, built caſtles for the defence of their borders, and the whole country was, in ſome mea⯑ſure, covered with their redoubts, the veſtiges of which remain to this day. This manner of forti⯑fying the country, and the difference of religion, ſeem to be the only cuſtoms in which the Danes differed from the Saxons they had invaded. They were both originally from the ſame country, and their manners conſequently the ſame.
The ſimilitude of language, laws, and man⯑ners, ſoon produced an intercourſe between both nations, and, though they ſtill were enemies, the Danes gradually began to mingle among the peo⯑ple of England, and ſubmit to the laws and kings of the country they had partly ſubdued. But what concord could be expected between Chriſtians, as the Engliſh then were, and Pagans, for ſuch the Danes ſtill continued? Wherefore, tho' the Engliſh, in ſome meaſure, admitted the Danes, yet, ſtill, they hated them: this produced frequent conteſts, which moſt frequently laid the country in blood.
In this period of cruelty, jealouſy, and deſo⯑lation, a man ſeemed raiſed up to his bleeding country, to defend its rights, improve the age in which he lived, and even to adorn humanity. Alfred the Great was the fourth ſon of Ethelwolfe, King of England, and had received the earlier part of his education under the inſpection of Pope Leo, in Rome, which was at that time the chief ſeat of arts and learning in Europe. Upon the death of his elder brother, Ethelred, he was called [40] to the Engliſh throne, of which he was only no⯑minally put in poſſeſſion, the country being over⯑run by the Danes, who governed with cruelty and pride.
His reign began with wars, and he was forced into the field immediately upon his coronation. His firſt battles were fought with merited ſucceſs, but, at length, being overpowered by a Daniſh combination, the unfortunate Alfred was obliged to ſeek ſafety by flight. In this manner being a⯑bandoned by the world, without ſuccour, and fear⯑ing an enemy in every face, the royal fugitive was reſolved not to forſake his country, as was uſual with his predeceſſors. He retired to the cottage of a cowherd, in a ſolitary part of the county of Somerſet, at the confluence of the rivers Parret and Thone: here he lived ſix months, as a ſer⯑vant, and, as we are told, was ſometimes reproved for his indolence, by his miſtreſs, the cowherd's wife. The Earl of Devonſhire was alone privy to the place of his retreat; and happening to over⯑throw a body of the Danes, acquainted Alfred with the news of his ſucceſs.
Alfred now, therefore, began to conſider how to turn the preſent conſternation of the enemy to his own advantage. He apprized his friends with the place of his retreat, and inſtructed them to be ready, with what troops they could raiſe, upon a minute's warning. But ſtill, none was found who would undertake to give intelligence of the forces, or poſture of the enemy. Not knowing, there⯑fore, who to confide in, he undertook this dange⯑rous taſk himſelf: in the ſimple dreſs of a ſhepherd, with an harp in his hand, he entered the Daniſh camp, had admiſſion to the principal generals, and was allowed to excel upon that inſtrument. He [41] ſoon perceived that they were divided among them⯑ſelves; he ſeizes the favourable moment, flies to the Earl of Devonſhire, heads his troops, forces their camp, and gains a complete victory.
Alfred knew the arts of negotiation as well as thoſe of war; he had ſufficient addreſs to cauſe himſelf to be acknowledged King by the Danes, as well as his own natural ſubjects. London ſtill remained to be ſubdued: he beſieged it, took and fortified it in a manner which was then thought impregnable. He fitted out a fleet, kept the Danes in his dominions under proper ſubjection, and re⯑preſſed the invaſions of others from abroad. His next care was to poliſh that country, by the arts of peace, which he had ſubdued by the arts of war. He is ſaid to have drawn up a body of laws, but thoſe which remain to this day, under his name, ſeem to be no more than laws already practifed in the country by his Saxon anceſtors, and to which, probably, he gave his ſanction. The trial by juries, mulcts and fines for offences, by ſome aſcribed to him, are of a much more ancient date than his reign. It is ſufficient to obſerve, that the penal laws of our anceſtors were mild and humane. As a nation becomes more polite, the penal laws become more numerous and ſevere, till, at length, growing intolerable to the poor, againſt whom they are principally levelled, they throw off the yoke of legal bondage, either by admitting a deſpotic prince, or by taking the government into their own hands, by military invaſion. I remem⯑ber few great characters, in hiſtory, that had not a regard for the ſciences. Alfred is ſaid to have founded the univerſity of Oxford, and ſupplied it with books from Rome. The ſpirit of ſuperſtition had quite ſuppreſſed all the efforts of philoſophy [42] at that period: he is ſaid to have lamented, that no prieſt, in all his dominions, underſtood Latin: as for him, he knew it, and was alſo well verſed in the geometry of thoſe barbarous ages. He was an excellent hiſtorian, made ſome tranſlations from the Latin which ſtill ſubſiſt and it is even ſaid, that he compoſed ſome excellent poems in the Saxon language. Thoſe hours which he could take from buſineſs he gave to ſtudy. He was a complete oeconomiſt, and this gave him an oppor⯑tunity of being liberal: His care even extended to the manner in which the people built their houſes. Before his time, the generality of the nation made uſe of timber, moſtly, in building: Alfred having raiſed his palaces with brick, the nobility, by degrees, began to imitate his example.
From his time, though the reigns immediately ſucceeding are marked with ignorance, ſuperſti⯑tion, and cruelty, yet, in general, hiſtory puts on a form leſs ſevere: the whole nation ſeems to emerge into a greater degree of politeneſs than it had before enjoyed. The coins of this period are better ſtruck than thoſe of preceding Princes. The marine, in his time, ſeems firſt to have given riſe to our claims to the ocean. In ſhort, from this period, Engliſh hiſtory may properly be ſaid to commence, and our conſtitution to take its riſe. We are connected with the events previous to Alfred's reign, only by motives of curioſity: but, with thoſe that follow him, by the more prevail⯑ing inducements of intereſt.
This great man died in the year 900, in the 52d year of his age, after a reign of more than twenty-eight years; the firſt part ſpent in war and diſtreſs, the latter in peace and proſperity.
LETTER VIII.
[43]HISTORIANS and critics are fond of re⯑preſenting the period which ſucceeded Alfred, as entirely barbarous: yet, there are many traces of both erudition and politeneſs, in thoſe very ages which have been particularly called obſcure. In the reign of his ſucceſſor, Edward, we find gal⯑lantry, which is one of the beſt marks of polite⯑neſs in any country, not entirely unknown: his amours with Egwina, who, though by birth a ſhepherd's daughter, received an education becom⯑ing a princeſs, and, at length, ſubdued the heart of Edward, is a remarkable inſtance of the power the fair ſex then enjoyed. In this reign too, the univerſity of Cambridge was founded. The fa⯑mous Scotus flouriſhed at this time, a man whoſe learning appears amazing, even to an age which prides itſelf upon its erudition.
In the reign of Athelſtan, who ſucceeded Ed⯑ward, the Bible was tranſlated into Saxon, a work which at once evinces a juſt opinion, with regard to religion and the learning of that age. Alliances alſo on the continent were formed by this Monarch; it is ſaid he was equally feared by his neighbours, and loved by the greateſt Princes of Europe. We find little remarkable in the reign of Edmund I, but that the firſt capital puniſhment was inſtituted by him. He had remarked, that fines and pecu⯑niary puniſhments were too gentle methods of treat⯑ing thoſe who were convicted of robberies, who generally were men who had nothing to loſe; he therefore ordered, that, in gangs of robbers, the oldeſt of them ſhould be condemned to the gallows. [44] This was reckoned a very ſevere law at the time it was inſtituted: What would our anceſtors ſay, upon ſeeing the penal laws now uſed by their poſ⯑terity!
The death of this Monarch is too remarkable to be paſſed without notice. His virtues, abili⯑ties, wealth, and temperance, promiſed a long and happy reign: when, on a certain day, as he was ſolemnizing a feſtival in Glouceſterſhire, he ſaw a malefactor, whoſe name was Leolf, (who had been baniſhed the kingdom for his crimes) ſitting at one of the tables in the hall where the King was at dinner. Enraged at ſuch inſolence, he commanded him to be apprehended; but, perceiv⯑ing him drawing his dagger, in order to defend himſelf, the King ſtarted up in a rage, and, catch⯑ing him by the hair, dragged him out of the hall. In the mean time Leolf had now drawn out the dagger, and, lifting his arm, with a furious blow ſtabbed the Monarch to the heart, who fell down on the boſom of his murderer.
The Danes, during theſe three reigns, were kept within proper bounds; they frequently revolted, were ſubdued, and treated with lenity by the con⯑querors. The Monks now began to have the di⯑rection of affairs, and, conſequently, to enfeeble the ſtate.
Edred ſucceeded Edmund, and began his reign with ſome victories over the Scotch and Danes, which the Monks were ſkilful enough to attribute to the miraculous interpoſition of Heaven. Among the number, Dunſtan, Abbot of Glaſtonbury, had peculiar influence over the mind of the credulous Monarch, and, at length, became the director of the affairs of the kingdom. By this means the Monks acquired ſuch power, as ſerved to retard [45] the vigour of every future operation againſt the Danes. However, what they took from the real ſtrength of their country they returned in appel⯑lations of honour and reſpect. Edred was ſtyled, Monarch of Albion, and King of Great Britain, and this at a period when his monarchy was upon the very verge o [...] ruin.
The ſons of Edred were ſet aſide, and Edwy, his elder brother's ſon, was placed on the throne. At this time the crown appears to have been elec⯑tive, and thoſe elections entirely influenced by the clergy. The Secular prieſthood ſeems to have placed the crown upon this Monarch's head, in oppoſition to the Monks, who were then riſing into eſteem among the people. Thus were the Engliſh divided by religious diſputes, and involved in all the fury of civil war, while the Danes were every hour growing in ſtrength, and ſending over freſh forces. The Seculars were poſſeſſed of the riches of the country, but the Monks, who op⯑poſed them, were in poſſeſſion of the power of working miracles. Crucifixes, altars, and even horſes, were heard to harangue in defence of the Monks, and inveigh againſt the Secular clergy: but particularly Dunſtan the Monk had no ſmall power over the hoſts of heaven; his illuminations were frequent, his temptations ſtrong, but he always re⯑ſiſted with bravery. The Devil, ſay the Monks, and that ſeriouſly too, once tempted him in the ſhape of a fine woman; but he ſoon ſent him off, by catching him by the noſe, and leading him a⯑bout for public deriſion. Such ſtories were then propagated, and, what is ſtill more extraordinary, were believed. I am the more ſurpriſed at the credulity of the times, as the people certainly were not deſtitute of claſſical learning, and ſome ſkill [46] in the polite arts. We have a Latin ſpeech or two ſtill preſerved, which were ſpoken by their Monarchs at that period, replete with elegance, perſpicuity, and good ſenſe.
However that may be, the Monks, by the aſ⯑ſiſtance of miracles, prevailed: Edwy was de⯑throned, and his brother Edgar placed in his room. Hiſtorians repreſent England, under this reign, as completely happy; and, it is certain, the king⯑dom ſtill ſeemed to enjoy the fruits of Alfred's wiſdom: for, of all the obſcure ages, from the entire decadence of taſte, till its revival in the fif⯑teenth century, this might be termed the Auguſ⯑tan. The Engliſh fleets are deſcribed as amount⯑ing to above four thouſand ſhips; Kings came to Edgar's court, and returned without moleſtation or fear. Muſic, painting, and poetry, were then held as neceſſary accompliſhments to a refined edu⯑cation, as they are now. But his gallantries are peculiarly the ſubject of the hiſtorians of that time, and are ſtill the theme of romance. He is ſaid, firſt, to have debauched a nun, then to have attempted the chaſtity of a nobleman's daughter; but the amour, which is famous to this day, is his adventure with the beautiful Elfrida.
Edgar had long heard of the beauty of a young lady, whoſe name was Elfrida, daughter to the Earl of Devonſhire: however, not willing to cre⯑dit fame in this particular he ſent Ethelwolfe, his favourite, to ſee if Elfrida was indeed that in⯑comparable woman report had ſpoken her. Ethel⯑wolfe had no ſooner arrived at the Earl of Devon⯑ſhire's, and caſt his eyes upon that nobleman's beautiful daughter, but he became deſperately enamoured of her himſelf: ſuch was the violence of his paſſion, that, forgetting his maſter, he de⯑manded [47] the beautiful Elfrida for his own wife. His requeſt was granted; the favourite of a King was not likely to find a refuſal, and they were mar⯑ried in private. Returning ſoon after to court, he aſſured the King, that Elfrida was much inferior to the repreſentations that had been made of her, and he was amazed how the world could talk ſo much of her charms. The King was ſatisfied, and no longer felt any curioſity. Ethelwolfe, there⯑fore, after ſome time, perceiving the King perfect⯑ly indifferent with regard to the lady, repreſented to his Majeſty, one day, that, though the fortune of the Earl of Devonſhire's daughter would be a trifle to a Monarch, yet it would be an immenſe ſum to a needy ſubject, and, therefore, he hum⯑bly prayed leave to pay his addreſſes to her, as be⯑ing the greateſt heireſs in the kingdom. A re⯑queſt, ſo ſeemingly reaſonable, was readily com⯑plied with. Ethelwolfe returned to his wife, and their nuptials were ſolemnized in public. He had the precaution, however, of not permitting her to appear at court, before a King ſo ſuſceptible of love, and ſhe ſo capable of inſpiring paſſion. Not⯑withſtanding all theſe precautions, it was impoſſible to keep his treachery long concealed. Favourites are never without private enemies, who deſire an opportunity of riſing upon their ruin. Edgar was informed of all, but, diſſembling his reſentment, he took an occaſion to viſit that part of the coun⯑try where this miracle of beauty was detained. Accompanied by his favourite, when he was near the place, he told him, he had a curioſity to ſee his wife, of whom he had formerly heard ſo much. Ethelwolfe, thunderſtruck at the propoſal, did all in his power, but in vain, to diſſuade him; all he could obtain was leave to go before, on pretence [48] of preparing her for the King's reception. On his arrival, he fell at his wife's fee, confeſſing what he had done to be poſſeſſed of her charms; conjured her to conceal, as much as poſſible, her beauty from the King, who was but too ſuſcep⯑tible of paſſion. Elfrida promiſed compliance, but, prompted either by vanity, or revenge, ſhe adorned her perſon with the moſt exquiſite art, and called up all her beauty upon this occaſion. The event anſwered her expectations: the King no ſooner ſaw, but he loved her, and was inſtant⯑ly reſolved to obtain her. The better to effect his deſign, he concealed his ſenſations from the huſ⯑band, and took his leave with a ſeeming indiffe⯑rence. Soon after Ethelwolfe was ſent to Nor⯑thumberland, upon pretence of urgent affairs, but he never performed the journey; he was found murdered in a wood, by the King's command, who took Elfrida to court, where their nuptials were celebrated with the uſual ſolemnity.
I have been the more explicit in this ſtory, as, in the firſt place, it ſerves to ſhew, that ladies were admitted to court in this early period; it alſo demonſtrates, that men and women were never kept ſeparate in England, as in Spain and other countries; it ſtill evinces, that, however polite they might be at the time I am ſpeaking of, there was ſtill a ſavage air, that mixed in every action, and ſufficiently diſtinguiſhed thoſe ages of barbariſm from the civilized ages of Greece and Rome. But, to ſtamp the age with ſtill greater rudeneſs, Edgar, who was thus guilty of murder, ſacrilege, and adultery, was placed among the number of ſaints, by the Monks who have written his hiſtory.
The defects of Edgar's government fell upon his ſucceſſors; the power of the Monks increaſed, [49] and that of the ſtate was diminiſhed in proportion. Every proviſion for the ſafety of the kingdom be⯑gan to decline; and the remiſſneſs of the Engliſh made way for new incurſions of the Danes, who exacted exorbitant tributes from the Kings, and plundered the ſubjects at diſcretion. Edward the Martyr, who had not the leaſt title to ſo glorious an appellation, was crowned King by the ſingle authority of Dunſtan, and, conſequently, in⯑creaſed Monkiſh power: he was murdered by order of Elfrida, who ſeems to have the higheſt contraſt, in her own perſon, of the greateſt exter⯑nal charms, and the moſt odious internal defor⯑mity.
Ethelred II, finding himſelf unable to oppoſe the Danes, compounded with them for his own ſafety. But, ſoon after, being ſtrengthened by an alliance with the Duke of Normandy, he laid a deteſtable ſcheme for maſſacring all the Danes in the kingdom. This plot was carried on with ſuch ſecrecy, that it was executed in one day, and all the Danes in England were deſtroyed without mercy. A maſſacre, ſo cruel and perfidious, in⯑ſtead of ending the long miſeries of this wretched country, only made way for new and greater ca⯑lamities than before.
Swayne, King of Denmark, exaſperated by the ſlaughter of his countrymen, and, among the reſt, of his own ſiſter, who was beheaded in Ethelred's preſence, ſoon after landed in England, and filled the whole kingdom with the marks of an horrid vengeance, obliging Ethelred to fly to Normandy for relief. The Engliſh, unable to oppoſe, yet unwilling to ſubmit, for a ſhort time groaned un⯑der the Daniſh yoke, and again, upon an oppor⯑tunity given, called their baniſhed Monarch back [50] to his throne. Ethelred returned, but, being a weak, as well as a cruel Prince, he loſt the hearts of his ſubjects, and, with their love, all his au⯑thority. He never, therefore, could recover ſtrength enough to oppoſe the forces and numbers of the Danes, to whom many of the Engliſh nobles, as well as commonalty, had, in his abſence, ſubmitted.
Swayne was the firſt Daniſh Monarch who ſwayed the Engliſh ſceptre, but he died before he could be ſaid to come to a peaceable enjoyment of what he had ſo hardly toiled for. His ſon Canute, however, atchieved what the father had begun: Edmund Ironſide, elected by the Engliſh, who was his rival in government, and who ſucceeded Ethelred in this diſputed ſovereignty, continued, for a ſhort time, to oppoſe the progreſs of the Da⯑niſh conqueſts with ſucceſs; but, Canute gaining a bloody victory over the forces of this Monarch, he was obliged, firſt, to a diviſion of the kingdom, and his untimely death, ſoon after, gave Canute quiet and undiſturbed poſſeſſion of the whole.
This fierce Monarch cut off ſome of the Royal Saxon line, and forced others into exile. He was at once King of England, Denmark, and Nor⯑way; and, from the extent of his dominion, per⯑haps, rather than from the greatneſs of his mind, he received, from hiſtorians, the title of Canute the Great. The end of his life, however, was ve⯑ry different from the beginning: the firſt part of it was marked with invaſion, rapine, and cruelty; but the latter equally remarkable for juſtice, humanity, and religion. Upon a certain occa⯑ſion, being deſirous of ſhewing his flatterers how l [...]ttle he deſerved the exaggerated praiſe with which they loaded him, he ordered a chair to be brought, and, ſeating himſelf on the ſea-ſhore, where the [51] tide was about to flow, he addreſſed the ſea in this manner: ‘O ſea, thou art under my dominion, and the land which I ſit upon is mine; I charge thee, ap⯑proach no further, nor dare to wet the feet of thy Sove⯑reign:’ the tide, however, advancing as uſual, he turned to his courtiers, and obſerved, that the titles of Lord and Maſter only belonged to him whom both earth and ſeas were ready to obey.
Harold Harefoot and Hardicanute, his Daniſh ſucceſſors, were unworthy of him; the firſt is re⯑markable for no virtue, and the latter is diſtin⯑guiſhed, principally, for his cruelty and avarice. This laſt, dying ſuddenly, at a feaſt, left the Da⯑niſh race of Kings ſo hated, by their exactions and impoſitions on the people, that Edward, ſir⯑named the Confeſſor, of the Saxon race, found, both from Danes and Saxons, an eaſy acceſſion to the crown.
Thus expired, not only the dominion, but all attempts or invaſions of the Danes for the future. Though their ravages had continued for above two hundred years, yet they left no change of laws, cuſtoms, language, or religion. The many caſtles they had built, and the many families they left behind them, ſerved alone to diſcover the places of their eſtabliſhment. After the acceſſion of Edward the Confeſſor to the crown, the Engliſh and Danes, as if wearied with mutual ſlaughter, united to ſupport his government, and, peace⯑ably living amongſt each other, formed ever after but one people.
The reign of Edward the Confeſſor was long and happy. He had lived long in Normandy, and, in ſome meaſure, adopted the language and learning of that country. His wars were ſucceſs⯑ful, both in Scotland and Wales, though managed [52] by his leaders, and without his perſonal attendance. The eaſineſs of his diſpoſition, however, together with his credulity and ſuperſtition, paved the way for another invaſion of his country, as if the Eng⯑liſh were deſtined to be governed only by foreign maſters.
The Earl Godwin, by whoſe intereſt Edward had come to the crown, exerted all his influence to eſtabliſh his own ſon, Harold, as his ſucceſſor. This too powerful ſubject pretended to be much diſpleaſed at the favour ſhewn, by the King, to the Norman nobility, who came over, in numbers, to the Engliſh court. Theſe diſcontents at length produced an inſurrection. Edward, now grown old, and indolent by nature, undertook to oppoſe thoſe diſorders, rather by negotiations than arms. Treating with rebels is a certain method of in⯑creaſing their power: by this means Harold gain⯑ed, by degrees, the authority he contended for, and had power ſufficient to ſettle the ſucceſſion upon himſelf.
While Edward was thus leaving his earthly kingdom to contention and miſery, he was, in the mean time, buſily employed in gaining, as he imagined, an heavenly one. It was not ſufficient for him to aſpire to all the virtues neceſſary for carrying him to heaven; he deſired to be reckoned a ſaint of the firſt order. He pretended to ſeveral revelations, was poſſeſſed of the gift of prophecy, and was the firſt who touched for thoſe ſcrophu⯑lous diſorders, which, from hence, have been de⯑nominated the King's Evil. But what gained him a diſtinguiſhed place among the ſaints, was his continence, his refraining from the woman to whom he was actually married. It is ſaid he eſ⯑pouſed the beautiful Editha, purely to exerciſe his [53] virtues, by withſtanding a continual temptation. This, as we may ſuppoſe, left her to ſterility, and thus his leaving no iſſue was the cauſe of num⯑berleſs miſeries which fell upon the kingdom ſoon after.
Edward, as I obſerved, had no children. He ſeemed, however, deſirous of leaving the crown to his nephew Edgar Atheling; but, diſtruſting his weakneſs to defend this title, and knowing the ſtrength of Harold, his opponent, he left the ſuc⯑ceſſion undecided. It is probable, however, this weak Monarch was no way ſollicitous who ſuc⯑ceeded in a government which he ſeemed himſelf to deſpiſe.
LETTER IX.
UPON the death of Edward, Harold now al⯑ledged that he was appointed, by will, his ſucceſſor. This was no more than what the peo⯑ple of England had expected long before; his pre⯑tenſions were believed by ſome, and allowed by all. He had ſome right to a crown, hitherto elective, from his private virtues; and he confirm⯑ed his rights by the moſt irreſiſtible argument, his power. Thus this Monarch came to the throne by the moſt equitable of all titles, I mean, the conſent of the people.
His exaltation ſeemed only to be the commence⯑ment of his calamities. His firſt trouble was from his own brother, who, being the elder, obtained aſſiſtance from Norway to ſet up a title to the Engliſh crown. Harold immediately levied a nu⯑merous army, and marched to meet the Norwe⯑gians, [54] who, with a vaſt force, had overrun all the northern parts of the kingdom, and had committed incredible devaſtation. Both armies ſoon joined battle; the Norwegians, for ſome time, bravely defended a bridge which lay between them, but, at length, the valour of the Engliſh ſurmounted every obſtacle. Harold paſſed the bridge, renew⯑ed the aſſault, and, after an obſtinate reſiſtance, entirely routed the invaders. There had never before been ſeen in England an engagement be⯑tween two ſuch numerous armies, each having no leſs than threeſcore thouſand men. The news of this victory diffuſed the greateſt joy over the whole kingdom; but their raptures were ſoon ſup⯑preſſed by an information, that William of Nor⯑mandy, ſirnamed the Conqueror, had landed at Haſtings, with a vaſt body of diſciplined veterans, and laid claim to the Engliſh crown.
This Prince was the natural ſon of Robert Duke of Normandy: his mother's name was Ar⯑lette, a beautiful maid of Falaize, with whom Robert fell in love, as ſhe ſtood gazing at her door whilſt he paſſed through the town. William, who was the offspring of this amour, owed his great⯑neſs to his birth, and his fortunes to his perſonal merit. His body was vigorous, his mind capa⯑cious, and his courage not to be intimidated. His father, Robert, growing old, and, as was uſual with Princes of that age, ſuperſtitious, reſolved upon a viſit to the Holy Sepulchre at Jeruſalem. The nobility uſed every argument to diſſuade him, but the perſiſted in his deſign. He ſhewed them William, whom, though illegitimate, he tenderly loved, recommending him to their care and loyal⯑ty. He then exacted their homage and fealty to this Prince, not yet above ten years old; and then [55] put him under the tutelage of the French King, in whom he placed the higheſt confidence.
Robert, ſoon after going into Aſia, and dying, left his ſon rather inheritor of his wiſhes than his crown. Our young ſoldier found himſelf at once expoſed to many dangers, from his youth and in⯑experience, from the reproach of his birth, a ſuſ⯑pected guardian, a diſputed title, and a diſtracted ſtate. However, he ſurmounted all with uncom⯑mon fortitude and bravery, nor, till he had eſta⯑bliſhed peace, order, and tranquillity, in his own kingdom, did he turn his ambitious views abroad.
It has been already ſeen, that Edward the Con⯑feſſor, in flying from his enemies, reſided for a long time at the court of Robert, Duke of Nor⯑mandy; and upon this William founded his claim. Whether gratitude might engage this exiled Prince to make William, his benefactor's ſon, any pro⯑miſes of the kingdom of England, after his de⯑ceaſe, is, at this diſtance of time, uncertain: William, however, upon the death of Edward, immediately made his pretenſions, and, upon the former promiſe of Edward, founded all the juſtice of his demaud. To this he added, that Harold had himſelf aſſured him of his intereſt in the ſuc⯑ceſſion, when forced upon the Norman coaſt; and he therefore ſent to remind him of fulfilling his engagements.
Harold admitted of neither of theſe claims, and reſolved to defend, by his valour, what he had acquired by his intrigues. He was at the head of a large army, lately victorious, and now confident. He obſerved, that he had been elected by thoſe who only had the power of placing Kings on the throne, namely, by the people; and that he could not reſign his crown without a breach of [56] that truſt repoſed in him by his conſtituents. He added to theſe reaſons one of ſtill greater weight, he was poſſeſſed of power, and knew how to de⯑fend his property.
William, who had landed his army at Haſtings in Suſſex, about the beginning of October, at firſt made no appearance of invading an hoſtile country, but rather of incamping in his own. But he was ſoon rouſed from his inactivity by the approach of Harold, who returned from the de⯑feat of the Norwegians, with all the forces he had employed in that expedition, and all he could invite, or collect, in the country through which he paſſed. Theſe were, in general, brave, active, and valiant troops, in high ſpirits, ſtrongly attach⯑ed to their King, and eager to engage. The ar⯑my of William, on the other hand, conſiſted of the flower of all the continent: the troops of Bre⯑tagne, Brabant, Bologne, Flanders, Poictou, Maine, Orleans, France, and his own, were united under his command. He had long been familiar with conqueſt, and his troops were confident of his military capacity. England, ne⯑ver before, nor ever ſince, ſaw two ſuch armies drawn up to diſpute its crown. The day before the battle William ſent an offer to Harold, to de⯑cide the quarrel between them by ſingle combat, and thus ſpare the blood of their people; but Ha⯑rold refuſed, and ſaid he would leave it to God to determine. Both armies, therefore, that night pitched in ſight of each other, expecting the next terrible day with ſollicitude: the Engliſh paſſed the night in ſongs and feaſting, the Normans in de⯑votion and prayer.
The next morning, at ſeven, as ſoon as day appeared, both armies drew up in array againſt [57] each other. Harold appeared, leading on the centre of the Engliſh army, on foot, that his men might be more encouraged by ſeeing their King expoſed to equal danger with themſelves. William fought on horſeback, and commanded the body of reſerve. The Normans began the fight with their croſs-bows; theſe at firſt galled and ſurprized the Engliſh, and, as their ranks were cloſe, the arrows did great execution: but, when they came to cloſe fight, the Normans were hewn down by the Engliſh bills, which, of all weapons, inflicted the moſt terrible and ghaſtly wounds. William, endeavouring to pierce their ranks, aſ⯑ſaulted them ſo often, and with ſuch bravery, that he had three horſes killed in the attempt. Perceiving that they ſtill continued impenetrable, he now pretended to fly; this drew the Engliſh from their ranks, and he was inſtantly ready to take advantage of their diſorder. Upon a ſignal given, the Normans returned to the charge with greater fury than before, broke the Engliſh troops, and purſued them to a riſing ground. Harold now flew from rank to rank, though he had toiled all day, from morning till now near night-fall, in the front of his Kentiſh men; yet ſtill he conti⯑nued, with unabated vigour, to renew the fight, and exhort his men by his voice and example. The day now again ſeemed to turn againſt the victors, and the Normans fell in great numbers. The fierceneſs and obſtinacy of this memorable battle was often renewed by the courage of the leaders, wherever that of the ſoldiers began to ſlacken. Fortune, at length, determined a victo⯑ry, that valour was unable to decide: Harold, making a furious onſet at the head of his troops, was ſhot into the brains by an arrow. All the [58] courage of the Engliſh expired with their brave, but unfortunate, leader. He fell with his ſword in his hand, fighting for his country, amidſt the heaps of ſlain, ſo that the royal corpſe could hard⯑ly, after the battle, be diſtinguiſhed among the dead.
This was the end of the Saxon monarchy in England, which had continued for more than ſix hundred years. Before the times of Alfred the Kings ſeemed totally immerſed in ignorance; and, after him, taken up with combating ſuper⯑ſtition, or blindly obeying its dictates. As for the crown, it was rather bequeathed by its poſſeſſor to whom he thought proper, than tranſmitted by he⯑reditary and natural ſucceſſion. As for the laws and cuſtoms of this race, they brought in many of their own, and adopted ſeveral of the ancient Btitons and Romans, which they found in the country upon their invaſion. They aſſumed the name of Kings, nay, ſome took the Greek appel⯑lation of Baſileus, titles unknown in the country from whence they came. Their Earls were called Dukes, or Duces, a name borrowed from the Romans, and ſignifying Captains. The lower claſſes of people were bought and ſold with the farms they cultivated; a cuſtom firſt introduced by the conquerors of the world, and which ſubſiſts in ſome countries, where the Roman laws continue, to this day. Their canon laws alſo at that time were often mixed with their civil laws, and were equally coercive; but theſe canon laws had their origin from Rome, and the Prieſts and Monks, who drew them up, generally had their education there. We muſt not, therefore, aſcribe all the laws and cuſtoms, which at that time prevailed over England, to a Saxon original, ſince they were, [59] in ſome caſes, derived from the Britons and Ro⯑mans. But now all thoſe cuſtoms and laws, of whatever original, were caſt down into one com⯑mon maſs, and cemented by thoſe of Norman in⯑ſtitution. The whole face of obligation was changed, and new maſters and new forms obſerved. The laws were improved, but the taſte of the people for polite learning, arts, and philoſophy, for more than four hundred years to come, were ſtill to continue the ſame. It is, indeed, ſurprizing, that in ſuch a variety of events, ſuch innovations in manners, and ſuch changes in government, true politeneſs never came to be cultivated. Perhaps the reaſon may be, that the people ſuffered them⯑ſelves to be inſtructed only by the clergy, and the clergy have a certain ſtandard of politeneſs which they never go beyond, and at which they were arrived at the time we are ſpeaking of. A Monk of the tenth century, and a Monk of the eighteenth century, are equally enlightened with ſcience, and equally fit to promote the arts of happineſs. I am,
LETTER X.
YOU now enter upon that part of the Engliſh hiſtory, which gives birth to our preſent hap⯑py conſtitution. Thoſe laws, which are ſo much eſteemed by the reſt of Europe; thoſe liberties, which are ſo dear to us at home, begin to dawn at this period. The Engliſh, hitherto almoſt un⯑known to the reſt of the world, began, after this [60] revolution, to make a conſiderable figure in Europe. The variety of diſpoſitions of ſeveral foreign coun⯑tries, being imported here, blended into one com⯑mon national character, and produced ſentiments of courage, freedom, irreſolution, and pride.
Immediately after the victory at Haſtings, in which, it is ſaid, ſixty thouſand Engliſh were ſlain, the Conqueror marched towards London. He car⯑ried before him a ſtandard which had been bleſſed by the Pope, and to this all the clergy quickly re⯑ſorted. The Biſhops and Magiſtrates of the me⯑tropolis came out to meet him, and offer him a crown which they no longer had in their power to refuſe. William was glad of thus peaceably be⯑ing put in poſſeſſion of a throne, which ſeveral of his predeceſſors had not gained but by repeated victories; he complied with the terms which were offered him, and, among theſe terms, it is to be preſumed, the Church's intereſts were not for⯑gotten. Though William had it in his power to force the people into a compliance with his views, yet he choſe to have their election of him conſi⯑dered as a voluntary gift of their own. He knew himſelf to be their conqueror; he deſired to be thought their lawful King.
Thus was William poſſeſſed of an idea of his own power to enforce obedience; and the Eng⯑liſh of their own generoſity, in having freely preſented him with a crown. Impreſſed with ſuch oppoſite ſentiments, the one was inclined to op⯑preſs a people, whom he, in fact, thought inca⯑pable of reſiſtance; and they, on the other hand, were inclined to revolt againſt one, whom they fancied to have had received, from their own hands, all authority. Numberleſs, therefore, were the inſurrections of the Engliſh againſt their [61] new Monarch; and every ſuppreſſed rebellion on⯑ly gave freſh inſtances of the Conqueror's mild⯑neſs and humanity. The Engliſh were unwilling to pay any taxes, towards inriching thoſe they now began to look upon as conquerors; and Wil⯑liam was under the moſt ſolemn engagements of providing for thoſe adventurers who had left their native country to place him on the throne.
Hitherto William had acted like one who was rather the father than the invader of the country, when news was brought him, that a body of Nor⯑thumbrian Engliſh, aſſiſted by the Danes, had ſet upon the Norman garriſon in York caſtle, and put every man to the ſword. After repeated re⯑bellions, which he had quelled before, and ſuch frequent pardons, which were the conſequence, he now found that nothing but rigour would do for the future. He marched therefore to meet the enemy, bought off the Danes for a ſum of money, and took a ſignal revenge upon the Northumbrians, unable to oppoſe him.
From this time he ſeems to have regarded Eng⯑land rather as a conqueſt than a juſtly acquired dominion. His diffidence of the Engliſh became more conſpicuous every day, and his partiality to the Normans more galling. All places of truſt and confidence were taken from the one and given to the other: from this time he thought only of eſtabliſhing himſelf on the throne, without nicely examining whether the means were conſonant to juſtice and humanity.
If hiſtorians, who ſeem partial in other re⯑ſpects, are to be credited, England was then in a moſt deplorable ſituation. The Normans com⯑mitted continual inſults on the conquered people, and they ſeldom found any redreſs from their go⯑vernors; [62] in both caſes, therefore, they generally revenged themſelves by private murders, and a day ſeldom paſſed but the bodies of aſſaſſinated Nor⯑mans were found in the woods and highways, without any poſſibility of bringing the perpetrators to juſtice. But what is repreſented as the pecu⯑liar grievance of the times, was, that the Engliſh were deprived of arms, and were forbid having any lights in their houſes after eight o'clock in the evening. At this hour a bell was rung to warn them to put out their fire and candle; and this, which was called the Curfew, was very grating to the ears of the people.
Inſurrections are ever the conſequence of op⯑preſſion, in a brave nation; William was ſenſible of this, and generally attempted to moderate the cruel counſels of his countrymen by a gentle treatment of the offenders. Edgar Atheling, who had the beſt ſucceſſive right to the crown, was amongſt the number of thoſe who experienced his lenity and faith. This Prince had gone over to the Scotch, and had perſuaded their King to join him, with an army, in aſſerting his right to the Engliſh crown. William met their forces in the northern parts of England, and, inſtead of a bat⯑tle, propoſed a negotiation. Peace was eſtabliſhed between the two nations, and Edgar was included in the treaty. He continued, from that time, to live, as a private man, in opulence and ſecurity, and paſſed the reſt of his life, perhaps, more hap⯑pily than if he had continued in the career of his ambition.
William, having nothing at preſent to fear from war, turned all his thoughts to the arts of peace. He was not yet ſufficiently arbitrary to change all the laws, now in being, for thoſe of his own [63] country: he only made ſeveral innovations, and ordered all law pleas, in the ſeveral courts, to be made in the Norman language. Theſe precautions, inſtead of making the Norman language the ſtudy of all, confined the law to the peculiar ſtudy of a few. The Engliſh language ſtill continued to be ſpoken; and, ſuch was the eſteem it was held in, even ſo early, that it began to be ſpoken at the court of Scotland, and in ſeveral adjacent coun⯑tries; and never was the French leſs engrafted up⯑on our language, than at this very time when they were our maſters.
William now thought proper to deprive Biſhops of all judgment in civil caſes, which they had en⯑joyed during the whole Saxon ſucceſſion, from their converſion to Chriſtianity. He reſtrained the clergy to the exerciſe of their eccleſiaſtical power alone. He endeavoured to aboliſh trials by Ordeal and Camp Fight. The Ordeal trial, which had been a remainder of Pagan ſuperſtition, and ſtill was held in veneration by the Saxons, was either by fire or water. It was uſed in criminal caſes, where the ſuſpicions were ſtrong, but the proofs not evident. In that of fire, the perſon accuſed was brought into an open plain, and ſeveral plough⯑ſhares, heated red hot, were placed at equal in⯑tervals before him: over theſe he was to walk blindfold, and, if he eſcaped unhurt, he was ac⯑quitted of the charge. In the other trial of wa⯑ter, the accuſed was thrown into the water: if he ſunk, he was declared innocent; but, if he ſwam, guilty.
The trial of Camp Fight was another inſtance of the deplorable barbarity of the times. This was performed by ſingle combat, in liſts, appoint⯑ed for that purpoſe, between the accuſer and the [64] accuſed: he that, in ſuch a caſe, came off victo⯑rious, was deemed innocent; and he who was conquered, if he ſurvived his antagoniſt's reſent⯑ment in the field, was ſure to ſuffer, as a male⯑factor, ſome time after. Both theſe trials this King aboliſhed as unchriſtian and unjuſt, and re⯑duced all cauſes to the judgment of twelve men, of a rank nearly equal to that of the priſoner. This number was called a Jury, and this was a method of trial common to the Saxons and Nor⯑mans long before, but confirmed by him with all the ſanction of royalty.
Having continued thirteen years in England, he now thought of re-viſiting his native dominions: but, no ſooner was his back turned, when a new conſpiracy was ſet on foot. This was more terrible, as it was carried on by the joint counſels of Nor⯑mans as well as Engliſh: ſeveral Lords, of both nations, already poſſeſſed of opulence, were de⯑ſirous of independence alſo; and pretended many grievances, or imagined themſelves aggrieved. The Earl Walthof, who had been formerly pardon⯑ed for a like offence, entered ſecretly into a cor⯑reſpondence with Swayne, King of Denmark, and Drone, King of Ireland. Their meaſures were conceived with caution, and purſued with ſecrecy; but ſome delays, intervening, were fatal to coun⯑ſels which were entruſted, neceſſarily, to many: the plot was diſcovered ſome days before the Danes arrived; the heads of the conſpiracy were taken, and Fitz-Auber, a noble Norman, and Walthof, were beheaded upon this occaſion. Whether this act of rigour was executed by the King's com⯑mand, ſent over from Normandy, or by Odon, his brother, left behind, and naturally inclined to ſeverity, is not apparent. However, theſe two [65] were the only noblemen executed in England du⯑ring the reign of William the Conqueror, not⯑withſtanding ſo many revolts on their ſide, and ſo much power in him to puniſh.
Though good fortune ſeemed to attend this Mo⯑narch thus far on his reign, here the curtain may be drawn for the reſt. His decline was marked with domeſtic quarrels, which could neither end in glory nor in gain; his endeavours were oppoſed by his own ſubjects, for whom he had laboured with ſuch perſeverance. He had four ſons, Ro⯑bert, Richard, William, and Henry, beſides ſe⯑veral daughters. The moſt poignant of his diſ⯑treſſes muſt, therefore, come from that quarter, where he leaſt expected an attack, and was leaſt guarded to oppoſe. His eldeſt ſon, Robert, en⯑couraged by the King of France, pretended a right to poſſeſs Normandy, even during the life of his father. William could place confidence in none but the Engliſh, to bring this unnatural ſon to his duty; and, drawing an army of Engliſhmen together, he paſſed over into Normandy, to put a ſtop to the progreſs of ſo unexpected an inſurrec⯑tion. It is remarkable enough, that the ſame commander, who formerly led over an army of Normans to conquer England, now returned with an army of Engliſh to ſubdue Normandy. To re⯑duce his ſon, however, was found a much more difficult taſk than William had at firſt expected. Robert ſeemed to inherit, though not his father's virtues, at leaſt his conduct and intrepidity. He led on his troops with courage, and laid his am⯑buſcades with ſecrecy: In one of theſe, after he had killed part of a troop of Engliſh, and put the reſt to flight, he boldly advanced againſt the main body, where William commanded in perſon. By [66] a ſtrange fatality of circumſtances, the father and ſon were oppoſed, without knowing each other. William was now grown old, and unable to perform thoſe extraordinary feats, for which he was once ſo famous. The ſon charged with ſuch fury, that his aged father fell to the ground with the blow: death would inevitably have been the conſequence, and the ſon's arm was juſt lifted to ſtrike his fa⯑ther, had not William called out, and Robert im⯑mediately recollected his father's voice. At once, ſtung with a conſciouſneſs of his crime, and his duty, he leaped from his horſe, and raiſed the fallen Monarch from the ground; then, proſtrating him⯑ſelf in his preſence, he aſked pardon for his of⯑fences, and promiſed, for the future, an adhe⯑rence to his duty. The King, moved by the im⯑pulſe of nature, took once more his long loſt ſon to his arms, and the armies, ſpectators of this moving ſcene, participated in their joy and recon⯑ciliation.
But this ſubmiſſion of Robert was of no long continuance; he once had taſted the ſweets of power, and knew not how to ſubmit to ſubordina⯑tion: again, therefore, he revolted, and again was pardoned by his indulgent father. But the French, who inſpired him to theſe acts of diſobedience, and were at beſt inſidious allies, particularly felt the vehemence of William's diſpleaſure. After he had adjuſted the government of England, to which he was returned ſome time before, he again led over a brave army of Engliſhmen into Normandy, in⯑tent to make the ſtorm fall upon thoſe who were primarily the diſturbers of his tranquillity. The King of France rightly conſidered, that this ar⯑mament could only be deſigned againſt himſelf, and attempted to divert it by a truce, which was [67] agreed on, but a jeſt of the French King's ſerved to renew hoſtilities. William had been confined to his bed by an indiſpoſition, which, added to his natural corpulency, threatened the moſt dangerous conſequences. This was a ſituation which it was cruelty to ridicule; however, the Frenchman, with a levity natural to his nation, obſerved, that the King of England was lying-in of a big belly. This raiſed William's indignation to ſuch a pitch, that he immediately took the field, where, leap⯑ing a ditch, the pomel of the ſaddle bruiſed his belly, and gave him a rupture. This, added to his former bad habit of body, brought on a morti⯑fication, of which he died.
The characters of Princes are beſt ſeen in their actions, nor is it neceſſary to give an outline at the end of what the hiſtorian has painted more ſtrongly in his narration. There is ſcarce a great quality which this Monarch does not ſeem emi⯑nently to have poſſeſſed; and, conſidering the mo⯑rality of the times, ſcarce a good one in which he was entirely deficient. The only objections of any weight, are his avarice and his depopulating a part of this country, in order to make a foreſt to hunt in for his amuſement. The avarice of Kings, at that time, was different from what it is now. Kings acquired money then for the uſes of the public; Kings acquire fortunes now only for themſelves: the wars of the ſtate were then ſup⯑plied by treaſures of the crown; the wars of the ſtate at preſent are ſupplied by finances appropriated to that purpoſe by the people. His making ſo ex⯑tenſive a foreſt can be vindicated only from the barbarity of the times; a method rather of making his guilt general, than of wiping it away. Upon the whole, however, England ſeemed to improve [68] by the conqueſt, and loſt neither its name nor its language. It increaſed in ſtrength and naval power; its laws became more numerous and ra⯑tional; the manner of living, among the natives, more elegant and expenſive, and the ſuperſtition of the clergy leſs groſs and abſurd.
LETTER XI.
FEW nations have gone through more revo⯑lutions; few governments have appeared more unſteady, or fluctuated more, between prerogative and privilege, than this of Great Britain. The Engliſh have been ſurprized, betrayed, forced in⯑to ſituations little preferable to downright ſlavery; but thoſe convulſions, though they have diſor⯑dered the frame, yet could not deſtroy the princi⯑ples of a free conſtitution.
We have ſeen the Norman alter the whole model of government, but he was unable to extinguiſh the Saxon ſpirit of freedom, which formed its ground-work: on the contrary, the Normans, and other ſtrangers who ſettled here, were ſoon ſeized with a ſpirit of liberty themſelves, inſtead of being able to communicate their native principles of ſlavery.
William left three ſons: Robert, to whom he bequeathed his Dukedom of Normandy; William Rufus, who had the newly acquired kingdom of England; and Henry, who was put in poſſeſſion of the greateſt part of his perſonal treaſures.
William Rufus, upon coming to the crown, had two very powerful parties to oppoſe and to humble. [69] The nobility, who ſtill aſpired to the ſame degree of freedom which they poſſeſſed under the Saxon Kings; and the clergy, who deſired to erect them⯑ſelves into a diſtinct government, independent of Secular power. One or the other of theſe claims, gave riſe to the inſurrections and diſcontents of this reign. Nothing can be more eaſy than to imagine, how ill a people, who thought themſelves free, muſt brook a Monarch who looked upon them as his property, by a ſucceſſion originally founded in conqueſt.
Odo, his own uncle, was the firſt to diſpute his title; but he was ſoon taken priſoner, and, ſome time after, contrived means of flying into Normandy, where he found protection and honour from Duke Robert. This was a ſufficient pretext for William to make war upon his brother: it was carried on with vigour and ſucceſs. Henry, the third brother, was alſo involved in this war, ſeparately, and upon his own account, having taken up arms for not being paid thoſe treaſures bequeath⯑ed him by his father. Thus were there three dif⯑ferent armies, each exaſperated againſt the other, and each led on by one of thoſe diſunited brothers. Such an unnatural conteſt, as my eaſily be con⯑ceived, ſerved only to weaken themſelves, and ſtrengthen their enemies. The Scotch and Welch, therefore, took this opportunity to make ſeveral incurſions upon the Engliſh, while William was thus purſuing conqueſts that could end neither in advantage nor fame. To increaſe the confuſion, the clergy loudly complained of incroachments upon their privileges: the people murmured at every increaſe of their taxes; Robert de Mowbray was actually taken priſoner, while he commanded a fortreſs that had ſhaken off the royal authority. [70] What effects theſe diſcontents, which were in⯑creaſed alſo by the King's avarice, intemperance, and prodigality, might have produced, is uncer⯑tain, the moſt melancholy were expected; but now the attention of all Europe was called off to one of the moſt remarkable events that hiſtory can produce, I mean the arming for the firſt Cruſade.
Peter, ſirnamed the Hermit, who had beheld, with indignation, the cruel manner in which the Infidels, who were in poſſeſſion of the Holy Se⯑pulchre, treated the Chriſtians who went on pil⯑grimages thither, returned to Europe, reſolved to inſpire the Princes of Chriſtendom with a zeal for its recovery. Bareheaded and barefoot, he tra⯑velled from court to court, preaching, as he went, and inflaming the zeal of every rank of people. Pope Urban II. preached the Cruſade himſelf at the council of Clermont, and numberleſs perſons, of all degrees and nations, ardently embraced the cauſe, and put on the red croſs, the badge of their profeſſion. Among this number was Robert, Duke of Normandy: he was brave, zealous, fond of glory, and ſtill more fond of change. In order to ſupply money to defray the neceſſary charges of ſo expenſive an undertaking, he offered to mort⯑gage his dukedom with his brother, for a ſtipulated ſum. William eagerly embraced the propoſal: he was no way ſollicitous about raiſing the money agreed on, for he knew the riches of his clergy: heedleſs, therefore, of their murmurs, he rigo⯑rouſly levied the whole, making uſe of the moſt pious pretences to cover his extortion. Thus, ſend⯑ing his brother to the Holy Land, he took peace⯑able poſſeſſion of his dukedom.
In this manner was Normandy again united to the Engliſh crown, and from this union afterwards [71] aroſe thoſe wars with France, which for whole cen⯑turies continued to depopulate both nations, with⯑out conducing in the end to the inriching of either.
William was not a little pleaſed with this un⯑expected acquiſition; and, as one ſucceſs only pro⯑duces a deſire of more, he began to conceive more extenſive ſchemes of ambition. Poictou and Guienne were offered to be mortgaged for the ſame reaſons as Normandy. William immediately raiſed the neceſſary ſum, but death interrupted the payment. Happening to hunt in that foreſt, from whence his father had baniſhed the huſbandman and legal poſſeſſor, he was accidentally ſhot thro' the heart, with an arrow, by one Tyrrel: he died in the forty-fourth year of his age, reigned twelve, and left a dominion which he had contributed to ex⯑tend, to impoveriſh, and inſlave.
There were now two competitors for the crown: Robert, who was engaged in the Holy war; and Henry, the youngeſt brother, who remained at home. The right of ſucceſſion was evidently in favour of the firſt, but the latter was upon the ſpot: nothing can be a more evident inſtance how little hereditary ſucceſſion was minded at that time, than that Henry's title prevailed, and that he was elected by the joint acclamations of the people. Whenever there is a diſputed throne, the people generally regain their liberty: Henry, knowing the weakneſs of his pretenſions to the crown, was reſolved to ſtrengthen his power, by gaining the affections of his people. He, therefore, once more confirmed the ancient Saxon laws, and in⯑dulged the clergy in all their former privileges.
Upon Robert's return from the Holy Land. where he refuſed to be crowned King of Jeruſa⯑lem, he found himſelf deprived, in his abſence, [72] a kingdom which he conſidered as his birth-right. His attempts, however, to recover it were without ſucceſs. This Prince ſeemed only born to be the ſport of fortune: his bravery, his generoſity, and a thouſand other good qualities, of which he was poſſeſſed, ſerved to render him the dupe of every deceiver, and the inſtrument of impoſing villainy. At one time, we behold him proſecuting his pre⯑tenſions with ſpirit; at another, giving up his juſt claims with vicious generoſity. Thus, after a life ſpent in toil, fatigue, and ambition, he found himſelf, at laſt, utterly deprived, not only of his patrimonial dukedom, but of his fortune, his free⯑dom, and friends. Normandy he ſaw fall to the conqueror: to add to his misfortunes, he at laſt languiſhed, for twenty-ſix years of his life, a pri⯑ſoner in Cardiff caſtle in Wales, where he died in captivity. To want prudence is, in ſome mea⯑ſure, to want virtue.
Henry, having acquired poſſeſſion of Normandy, might now be ſaid to be maſter of a theatre where many a ſucceeding tragedy was to be performed; and ſoon his neighbour of France began to ſhew his jealouſy of ſo powerful a rival. Theſe wars now began which were to be ſo fatal to diſtant poſterity. The ravages of the French were at firſt neglected, and Henry remained a quiet ſpec⯑tator in England, as if unprovoked at their inſo⯑lence: but foon he ſhewed, that his unwillingneſs to engage was by no means the effect of fear. He paſſed into Normandy with a powerful army, and offered the enemy battle: the challenge was ſoon accepted, and a furious combat enſued. During the fight, a French cavalier, named Criſpin, per⯑ſonally attacked the King of England, and ſtruck him twice on the head, with ſuch force, that all [73] his armour ſtreamed with an effuſion from the wound. The King, however, no way intimidated, continued the ſingle combat with reſolution, and, ſummoning all his ſtrength, diſcharged ſuch a blow at his adverſary, as threw him from his horſe, and he became the priſoner of his Majeſty's own hand. This decided the victory in favour of the Engliſh, who purſued the French with great ſlaughter, which haſtened the peace, that was concluded ſoon after.
Fortune now ſeemed to ſmile upon Henry, and promiſe a long ſucceſſion of felicity: he was in peaceable poſſeſſion of two powerful ſtates, and had a Prince for undiſputed heir, now arrived at his ſixteenth year of age, a youth of great hopes. All his enemies were humbled, and many actually in his own power. Matilda, his daughter, was married to the Emperor Henry IV, and he had the hearts of the greateſt number of his ſubjects, par⯑ticularly the Engliſh. All his proſpects, however, were at once clouded by an unforeſeen misfortune, an accident which tinctured his remaining life with miſery. Henry, returning victorious from abroad, brought with him a numerous retinue of the chief nobility. In one of the veſſels of the fleet, his ſon, and ſeveral young noblemen, his companions, went together to render the paſſage more agreeable. The young Prince, deſirous to be firſt aſhore, promiſed the ſeamen a reward, if they came in foremoſt. This emulation was fatal to them all; the pilot ran the ſhip upon a rock, and immediately ſhe was daſhed to pieces. The Prince, however, was put into the boat and would have eſcaped, were he not called back by the cries of Matilda, his ſiſter. He was now out of dan⯑ger himſelf, but could not leave her to periſh: he [74] prevailed upon the ſailors to row back to take her in: the approach of the boat giving others an op⯑portunity to attempt ſaving their lives, ſeveral leap⯑ed in alſo, ſo that the boat was overloaded, and all, except one, went to the bottom. When Henry was informed of the cataſtrophe of his only ſon, he covered his face, and never laughed after.
The reſt of his life ſeems a mere blank, his reſt⯑leſs ſpirit of ambition had nothing now to toil for. His daughter, Matilda, however, becoming a widow, he married her a ſecond time to Geoffry of Plantagenet, and, when brought to-bed of a ſon, named Henry, he cauſed the nobility to give an oath of ſucceſſion, in her favour. The great men of thoſe times were ready to ſwear whatever the Monarch commanded, but obſerved it no longer than while they were obliged to obey. He did not long ſurvive this attempt to confirm the ſucceſſion; he died, as it is ſaid, of a ſurfeit, cauſed by eating lampreys, in the ſixty-eighth year of his age, having reigned thirty-ſix.
It is ſtrange, that hiſtorians impute it as a fault to ſeveral Engliſh Monarchs of thoſe times, that they came to the crown without hereditary claims to ſupport their title: this is one of the faults al⯑ledged againſt Henry, but it is none, if we conſider the uſual ſpirit of other ſucceſſions.
During the reign of Henry, the barons and the clergy were growing into power: each was a pet⯑ty tyrant over thoſe who held under him. In order, therefore, to confirm privileges ſo lately acquired, they joined in electing a King, who might owe to them, and not to any previous claim, his prerogative and ſceptre. With ſuch in⯑tentions they pitched upon Stephen, nephew to the deceaſed King; and, as for their oaths to Ma⯑tilda, [75] the Biſhops gave them an abſolution. They could not, indeed, have made a properer choice than him whom they elected; but their conduct proceeded only from a concern for themſelves, and not for the people. Stephen was ready enough to conſent to all their exorbitant demands; he acknowledged the crown as their gift, not his juſt inheritance; and confirmed all the immuni⯑ties, privileges, and claims of the clergy.
The kingdom now began to wear the face of an ariſtocracy, in which the barons and clergy might be ſaid to command. They built caſtles, fortified and garriſoned them with their own troops, from whence, when offended, they would bid their Monarch defiance. Of all miſeries that ever af⯑fected kingdoms, an uncontrouled power among the great is certainly the moſt afflictive. The tyranny of a ſingle Monarch only falls upon the narrow circle around him; the arbitrary will of a number of delegates falls moſt heavily upon the lower ranks of people, who have no redreſs. In ſhort, the barons clamoured for their own privi⯑leges, the clergy for their own liberty, but the people were ſlaves.
Stephen was ſenſible of this, and, in order to diminiſh their power, poſſeſſed himſelf, by force, of ſome of their caſtles, which were incompatible with the ſafety of the kingdom.
Thus we may diſcern three different contending powers at this time: the King and his followers, the barons and their adherents, and the clergy, aſſiſted by the generality of the people: to theſe was ſoon added a fourth, Matilda, who claimed the crown in purſuance of Henry's command. This haughty woman, who had been wife to an Em⯑peror, and ſtill ſeemed to retain a conſciouſneſs of [76] her dignity, landed from Normandy, accompanied only by a few followers, and openly laid claim to the crown. Mean time, Stephen, being inform⯑ed of her arrival, flew to beſiege Arundel, a caſtle belonging to the Queen Dowager, where Matilda had taken up her reſidence. This fortreſs did not ſeem to promiſe a long defence, and would have been ſoon taken, had it not been repreſented to him, that, as this was a caſtle belonging to the Queen Dowager, it would be an infringement of the reſpect due to her to attempt taking it by force. There was a ſpirit of generoſity prevalent in the times I treat of, which was unknown to their degenerate poſterity. Stephen permitted Ma⯑tilda to come out, and conveyed her, in ſafety, to Briſtol, another fortreſs equally ſtrong with that from whence he permitted her to retire.
It is a deplorable conſideration, that our virtues, often inſtead of being attended with happy conſe⯑quences here, are found fatal to ſuch as adhere to them without deviation. Matilda, owing her free⯑dom merely to the generoſity of the King, made no other uſe of it but to levy an army againſt him, and this army, at length, proved victorious. During the continuance of this civil war, the whole king⯑dom was divided; pillage and deſolation were the conſequence, whoever happened to be conqueror.
It was at length, however, determined, by a deciſive victory obtained over the King. The troops he led, were, in general, foreign merce⯑naries, and commanded by tumultous barons, more accuſtomed to command than to conquer. His horſe gave way, and his infantry, being deſtitute of their aſſiſtance, ſoon followed their example, and deſerted their King. All the race of the Norman conqueror were brave: Stephen, unknow⯑ing [77] how to fly, was left alone, and fought on foot in the midſt of the field of battle, aſſaulted by multitudes, and reſiſting all their efforts with aſto⯑niſhing valour. Had his horſe then railied, he might have come off victorious. He was now hemmed in on every ſide, but, with his battle-ax, made way for ſome time: that breaking, he then drew out his ſword, and dealt his blows round the circle in which he was incloſed. At length, after performing more than could naturally be expected from a ſingle arm, his ſword flying in pieces, he was obliged to ſurrender himſelf a priſoner. In this manner he was conducted, by the conqueror, from the field, and ignominiouſly laid in irons.
Matilda now was proclaimed Queen, and, for ſome time, her power was acknowledged by the generality of the nation. But, as ſhe diſdained to accept the ſhadow of royalty, which was all the barons and clergy intended to grant, ſhe diſguſted them by her pride, and ſoon made thoſe repent who had raiſed her from their levity. The Biſhop of Wincheſter ſeems, at this time, to have been poſſeſſed of unbounded power. He had been chief⯑ly inſtrumental in raiſing her to the throne; he now, therefore, levied an army, to convince her, that it was no leſs in his power to deprive her of a kingdom, than to put her in poſſeſſion of it. He was ſucceſsful in his deſigns: Matilda was obliged to quit England once more, and Stephen was taken from chains, and once more placed upon the throne.
Again put in poſſeſſion of this uneaſy ſeat, he ſeemed only exalted to give new inſtances of his refuſing the exorbitant demands of the barons and the clergy. He endeavoured to get the crown to devolve upon his ſon, but this was not complied [78] with by the Biſhops. It is ſaid, though it has ſcarcely the appearance of truth, that he confined them in one houſe, and there threatened to detain them till they complied with his will. This was an extraordinary method of obtaining their con⯑ſent, and ſeems inconſiſtent with his uſual wiſdom: his precautions, accordingly, proved unſucceſsful, and the Archbiſhop found means to eſcape his guards, and fly into Normandy, in order to bring over a new King, and to raiſe a new inſurrection.
In conſequence of this Biſhops intrigues, Henry, ſon to the Empreſs Matilda, and who had been long acknowledged for Duke of Normandy, ſoon landed with a formidable army. The barons, ever reſtleſs and regardleſs of their obligations, were again divided upon this occaſion, and a terrible civil war threatened the kingdom afreſh, when, happily for the people, a truce was propoſed be⯑tween the oppoſite powers: this paved the way to a more laſting peace. It was agreed, that Stephen ſhould enjoy the crown of England during his life, and that Henry ſhould be acknowledged as his ſucceſſor. In this manner a civil war was termi⯑nated, which had, for ſome years, laid England in blood. The nation once more began to reſpire from their calamities, and Stephen's death ſoon put his rival in poſſeſſion of a crown, which, to the former, had afforded only diſappointment, fatigue, and danger.
LETTER XII.
[79]YOU have hitherto ſeen the barons and clergy becoming powerful in proportion to the weakneſs of the Monarch's title to the crown, and enriching themſelves with the ſpoils of depreſſed Majeſty. Henry Plantagenet had now every right, both from hereditary ſucceſſion, and univerſal aſ⯑ſent, that could fix a Monarch on his throne: conſcious, therefore, of his ſtrength, he began to reſume thoſe privileges which had been extorted from his predeceſſor's weakneſs.
He firſt commenced by demoliſhing thoſe caſtles which the barons and clergy built, and which only ſerved as ſanctuaries to guilt, treaſon, and debauchery: he diſmiſſed the foreign troops which had been mercenaries to his predeceſſor; and, per⯑ceiving the poverty of the crown, reſumed all thoſe lands which properly belonged to it; and enacted ſome laws, by which the people, in ſome mea⯑ſure, became independent of their barons, by whom they were claimed as appurtenances to their eſtates and manors.
He gave charters to ſeveral towns, by which the citizens claimed their freedom and privileges, independent of any ſuperior but himſelf. Theſe charters may properly be called the ground-work of Engliſh liberty: the ſtruggles heretofore were, whether a monarchy, or an ariſtocracy, ſhould prevail? whether the King, or the nobility only? But, by this grant, the loweſt orders of people began to have a juſt value for themſelves, and to claim the prerogatives of humanity. Thus was the foeudal government, firſt impaired; liberty began [80] to be diffuſed more equally upon every rank of people, and the Kings became capable of levying armies independent of their vaſſals.
But, though he in ſome meaſure diminiſhed the power of the barons, by enlarging that of the people, yet ſtill there was a third power, namely, the clergy, which daily grew ſtronger, and united by one bond, purſuing the ſame deſign, were mak⯑ing large ſtrides to independence. He undertook to humble them alſo; he perceived the clergy were reſolved, not only to be exempt from the uſual taxes of the ſtate, but even its puniſhments. They had extorted an immunity from all but eccleſiaſti⯑cal cenſures, in the preceding reign, and conti⯑nued to maintain that grant in the preſent. It may eaſily be ſuppoſed, that a law, which thus ſcreened their guilt, ſerved but to increaſe it: ac⯑cordingly, more than an hundred murders, upon proof, were committed by the clergy, of which not one was puniſhed, even with degradation. What is ſtill more aſtoniſhing, the Biſhops gloried in their horrid indulgence. Among the number of murderers who were pardoned, was a clergy⯑man of the dioceſe of Sarum: the complaint was brought before the Archbiſhop's court, and the circumſtances of his guilt appeared moſt atrocious. However, the only puniſhment decreed was, that the murderer ſhould be deprived of his benefice, and confined to a monaſtery. The King, ſtruck with horror at ſuch injuſtice, reproached the Arch⯑biſhop, who, on the other hand, aſſerted, that an eccleſiaſtic could not be puniſhed with death, and that the King had no right to intermeddle in the affairs of the church. This Archbiſhop was the noted Thomas a Becket, who had been advanced, by the King, to this high ſtation from the meaneſt [81] obſcurity: he was a man of ſtrong paſſions, great pride, and great zeal, which had been, in the early part of life, ſmothered in deep diſſimulation and apparent humility. He was, at this time, poſſeſſed at once of the chancellorſhip, of the archbiſhopric of Canterbury, and was legate to the Holy See. Theſe were great truſts; but, what rendered him ſtill more powerful, he either thought himſelf a ſaint, or affected to be thought ſo; he wore ſackcloth next his ſkin, and his equipage and diet were mean and ſimple. So much power, pride, and ſeeming humility, united, were formi⯑dable; and ſuch Henry found them.
The King propoſed, in a council of the nobles, that the Biſhops ſhould not be permitted to go to Rome; that no ſubject ſhould appeal to the Holy See; that no officer of the crown ſhould be ex-communicated, or ſuſpended, without the Sove⯑reign's permiſſion; and laſtly (which was the great article he aimed at) that the clergy ſhould be ſub⯑ject to the temporal judges, as well as the reſt of his ſubjects. Such juſt propoſitions were agreed upon by all preſent, even Becket heſitated not to ſign his name: they were referred next to the Pope, for his approbation; the Pope diſapproved of them all. Upon this, therefore, Becket declared his repentance, for having complied with the King in ſigning the Conſtitutions of Clarendon, as they were called; and, in order to carry on the farce, ſuſpended himſelf, as unworthy to perform his functions till the Pope ſhould be pleaſed to ab⯑ſolve him.
This pardon he quickly obtained, and now he ſet no bounds to his obſtinacy and ambition. Some hiſtorians deſcribe Becket as a ſaint, and ſome as a deſigning hypocrite; neither are, probably, juſt [82] in their opinions. He purſued, with inflexibility, what was in fact wrong, but what education, and the manners of the times, had taught him to be⯑lieve was right: his errors were rather of judgment than of will; the world abounds with men who are erroneous, there are but few villains.
The King was reſolved to humble a man him⯑ſelf, who had, by his own authority, been lifted into power, and accuſed him of embezzling the public money, while Chancellor. While the judges were conſulting, Becket inſolently entered the council, with a croſier in his hand, to intimidate his judges: but, notwithſtanding this boldneſs, he was condemned as a traitor, although he found means of avoiding puniſhment, by eſcaping into Flanders.
The Popes had long been growing formidable to the Kings of England. Alexander III. imme⯑diately eſpouſed Becket's quarrel, and brought the King to conſent to a conference, which came to nothing; another ſucceeded, but with as little ſucceſs; a third was propoſed, and accepted. The King, wearied out with the repeated threats of the Pope, and the excommunications of his clergy, conſented to almoſt every thing the haughty pre⯑late demanded. But when all the articles were ſettled, and Becket was to give the King the kiſs of peace, he took it into his head to ſay, that it was for God's honour: the King inſiſted that this expreſſion ſhould be retracted; Becket inſiſted upon uſing it: this renewed the debate, and the conference ended once more without effect.
At length, however, after an interval of ſome years, they were reconciled, and the Archbiſhop made his entry into London, amidſt the acclama⯑tions of the populace. His pride was now in⯑creaſed [83] by ſucceſs, and he went from town to town in a ſort of triumphal cavalcade. But he was ſcarce⯑ly re-inſtated in his power, when he began to exert it to its utmoſt extent: he ſolemnly excom⯑municated two lords who had oppoſed him, and publiſhed the Pope's letters, for the ſuſpenſion of ſeveral biſhops who had ſhewn themſelves his ene⯑mies. The King, who was in Normandy, ſoon received information of this prelate's pride and po⯑pularity, and ſoon after the ſuſpended Biſhops came over to lay before him their complaints: throwing themſelves at his feet, they implored his protection, and inveighed againſt their oppreſſor. Henry was now quite exaſperated by their com⯑plaints, and continually uneaſy from the repeated inſtances of Becket's inſolence, was heard to ſay, ‘Is there none to revenge their Monarch's cauſe upon this audacious prieſt?’ Theſe words ſeemed to arm the moſt reſolute of his attendants, and four knights, whoſe names were Hugh Norvil, William Tracy, Hugh Brito, and Richard Fitzurſe, haſtened to Canterbury, and, entering the cathedral, where Becket was officiating, with a few attendants, they beat out his brains, with clubs, at the foot of the altar.
His death confirmed thoſe privileges to the clergy, which his oppoſition could not do. His reſolution, during life, and his reſignation, when dying, gained the hearts of the people. He was looked upon as a martyr, and the clergy took care to confirm his ſanctity by miracles. When the people are reſolved to ſee miracles, they are ſeldom diſappointed: it was not ſufficient that his ſhrine had a power of reſtoring dead men to life, it re⯑ſtored alſo cows, dogs, and horſes. It was re⯑ported, and believed, that he roſe from his coffin [84] before he was buried, to light the tapers deſigned for his funeral; and, when the funeral ceremony was over, that he ſtretched forth his hand to bleſs the people. Thus Becket became a ſaint, and Henry was ſuſpected of being the author of his aſſaſſination.
In order to divert the attention of the public from ſuſpicions of this nature, Henry undertook the conqueſt of Ireland; a project formed ſome years before, but deferred on account of his long protracted quarrel. The more readily to gain the Pope's approbation of his undertaking, (for no⯑thing could then be atchieved without the ſanction of Rome) he cleared himſelf, by oath, of being any way privy to the aſſaſſination, and made a ſolemn vow to go barefoot to Becket's tomb, there to receive the diſcipline of the church.
Thus furniſhed with Pope Adrian's bull, which granted him a kingdom that was not his to give, he ſubdued Ireland with a rapidity equal to his moſt ſanguine hopes: but it was no hard matter to conquer a country which was at that time barba⯑rous, and divided under different chiefs, and each purſuing different views and intereſts.
But the happineſs this Monarch received from this acceſſion of power, was ſoon allayed by a con⯑ſpiracy in his own family. Among the few vices of this Monarch, unlimited gallantry was one. His Queen was diſagreeable, and he was faithleſs: but, though an admirer of all the ſex, he ſingled out, with particular affection, Roſamond Clifford, a lady of matchleſs beauty. Hiſtorians and poets talk of the fair Roſamond in the warmeſt ſtrains of rapture; if what they ſay be true, never did Eng⯑land produce ſo much beauty united with ſo much grace before. He kept her concealed in a laby⯑rinth [85] at Woodſtock park, and, in her company, paſſed his hours of vacancy and pleaſure. But the Queen at length came to a knowledge of this amour, and, purſuing her happy rival to her re⯑treat, guided, ſay ſome, by a clew of ſilk, ſhe obliged her to take poiſon.
As this was an offence which the Queen could not be forgiven, ſhe was reſolved not to forgive. Her ſons were ſoon brought to ſhare her reſent⯑ments, and a conſpiracy was formed, abetted by all the malecontents of the kingdom. To this unnatural combination Henry oppoſed his uſual prudence and reſolution: he ſeemed on every ſide aſſaulted, but every-where came off victorious. Aſcribing, however, the oppoſition of his own children to the indignation of offended Heaven, he was reſolved, by an exemplary penance, to conciliate its favour.
Now was the time in which the clergy were to come off victorious; this was the ſeaſon in which they were to reap the labours of their martyred defender; and by one weak action the King was now to cancel what a great part of his life he had been employed in bringing to ripeneſs. Being come within ſight of Canterbury, he walked barefoot to Becket's tomb, in extreme pain; there he was ſcourged by the Monks, and ſpent the whole night upon the pavement. The Monks were thus re⯑inſtated again in all their claims, and the people involved in greater ſuperſtition than before.
This penance, however, no way ſerved to re⯑concile him to his family; he even curſed their ingratitude, and, wearied with domeſtic conten⯑tion, reſolved, at laſt, to undertake a cruſade: his ſon Richard, however, ſtill purſuing the dic⯑tates of ambition rather than of nature, deprived [86] him of all power to put this deſign into exe⯑cution. Paſſion and diſappointment, therefore, began to make viſible depredations on his conſti⯑tution, and mark him for the grave: he fell ſick at Chinon in Normandy, and, finding his end approach, he cauſed himſelf to be carried into the church, before the altar, where he expired, with ſcarce a ſingle attendant to deplore his fall.
LETTER XIII.
WHEN I compare the Engliſh, at this pe⯑riod, with the neighbouring nations, I can't avoid remarking in them a peculiar degree of cou⯑rage, generoſity, and politeneſs. They had, during the Saxon Kings, ſunk into bigotry and effemina⯑cy; but a mixture of the Norman fierceneſs im⯑proved their characters, and rendered them at once valiant yet forgiving.
You have ſeen Henry, as well as all his Nor⯑man predeceſſors, improve thoſe good qualities in his ſubjects, not leſs by influence than exam⯑ple. You have ſeen him attempting to increaſe the freedom of the people by corporation charters, and to diminiſh the power of the barons by weak⯑ning the foeudal government, by which the peaſants and huſbandmen were ſlaves. In theſe deſigns he ſucceeded, but he failed in his endeavours of leſ⯑ſening the power of the clergy. The kingdom at his deceaſe, therefore, aſſumed a different ap⯑pearance from what it wore before his acceſſion. The people now began to have ſome, though but [87] a ſmall ſhare of, power: the barons had ſtill vaſt authority, though leſs than formerly; while the clergy might be conſidered as a body entirely diſ⯑tinct from the reſt of the community, governed by their own laws, and profeſſing ſubjection only to the Pope.
In this fituation were affairs, when Richard, the ſon of Henry, came, by ſucceſſion, to the govern⯑ment, in which his reign made no material altera⯑tion. The prieſts being the moſt powerful body of men, it is not ſurprizing to find the King ſe⯑conding their ſchemes, which perhaps he found it impoſſible to oppoſe. Religion was then the pretext for every ſiniſter action, obedience to the church the only rule of merit, and, to oppoſe the ene⯑mies of Chriſtianity, preached up as an antidote for every former tranſgreſſion. The kingdom of Paleſtine had been, for ſome time, the theatre of war, and had drained Europe of its moſt choſen troops, which fell like leaves in autumn, either by peſtilence, famine, or the ſword. In this quar⯑rel the clergy found means to embark the King, by awakening his ambition, and ſtrengthening his natural ſuperſtitions. A romantic deſire for ſtrange adventures, and an immoderate zeal for the exter⯑nal parts of Chriſtianity, were the ruling paſſion of the times, and they eaſily became the ruling paſſion of Richard.
Impreſſed with a deſire of reſcuing the Holy Land from the Infidels, he left England; and with a numerous army paſſed through France, took Cy⯑prus from a Chriſtian Prince, landed in Paleſtine, overcame Saladine, with a ſlaughter of forty thou⯑ſand Saracens; took ſeveral cities from the Infi⯑dels, and gained much reputation for conduct and perſonal bravery, yet, after all, acquired no real [88] advantages for himſelf, or the cauſe in which he was engaged. Having concluded a truce for three years with Saladine, he ſet fail for his return; but, his ſhips being diſperſed by a tempeſt, he was obliged to land upon the coaſts of Italy, where, purſuing his way homeward by land, he was ar⯑reſted by the Duke of Auſtria, and put into the power of the Emperor, who cruelly and ungene⯑rouſly detained him a priſoner, upon the ſlighteſt and moſt trivial pretences.
In the mean time England had been left under the government of two prelates, the Biſhop of Durham, and Longchamp, Biſhop of Ely. The clergy, ſole poſſeſſors and rulers of the kingdom, might have given what laws they thought proper; but there is a fatality in the affairs of men, that, when friends are deſtitute of other enemies, they generally make foes of each other. The governors, now without rivals in the temporal intereſt, diſagreed among themſelves, and thus weakened the power of the clergy. John, brother to Richard, who long had aſpired to the crown, fomented this jea⯑louſy among the clergy, and, putting himſelf at the head of the temporal lords, increaſed their authority by the addition of his own. He heard of the impriſonment of his brother with ſecret ſa⯑tisfaction, and uſed all his intereſt to continue his captivity.
The Engliſh, notwithſtanding theſe ungenerous efforts, continued faithful to their King: his bra⯑very and generoſity had ſecured the hearts of the people, and the cauſe he fought for engaged the affections of the clergy. The monaſteries, there⯑fore, ſtrained their finances to raiſe a ſum to pro⯑cure his releaſe, and the churches gave up their treaſures upon promiſe of having them reſtored [89] upon his return. By theſe efforts Richard at length procured his liberty: the Emperor, either aſhamed of his own baſeneſs, or fearing the re⯑ſentment of the German Princes, agreed upon his releaſe for a large ranſom, and England once more ſaw her brave Monarch return crowned with conqueſt, after numberleſs victories, diſtreſſes, and ſurmounted dangers.
The generoſity of this Prince was equal to his valour; he knew that his brother John had, in his abſence, attempted to ſupplant him in the throne; he had an exact information of all his intrigues with the French, who had long endeavoured to blaſt his laurels, and interrupt his conqueſts; yet, upon this Prince's ſubmiſſion, he generouſly for⯑gave him all: ‘I wiſh, cried he, taking his brother by the hand, I wiſh I could as eaſily forget your offences, as you will my pardon.’ This condeſcenſion was not loſt upon a man whoſe heart, though naturally bad, was not dead to all the ſentiments of huma⯑nity. From this time John ſerved him with fide⯑lity, and did him noble ſervices in his battles with the French, which followed ſoon after.
While Richard was engaged upon the conti⯑nent in a French war, an infurrection was ſup⯑preſſed at London, which, though but ſlightly mentioned by hiſtorians, ſhould be particularly marked by ſuch as would trace the conſtitution. William Fitzoſborn, commonly called Longbeard, is repreſented at once as a man brave and enter⯑priſing. He had long been an advocate for the poor and meaneſt of the people, and had gained the hearts of the populace, who held him in ex⯑treme veneration. Upon inflicting a new tax, the hurthen of which was to fall entirely on the poor, he raiſed an inſurrection of the people, which the [90] Archbiſhop was, at firſt, unable to appeaſe. The principal citizens being called, upon this occaſion, to arms, Longbeard was at length hard preſſed, and obliged to take refuge in one of the churches; but no ſanctuary could ſcreen this ſelf-delegated champion; he was ſeized, convicted, and, with nine of his accomplices, hanged in chains. This was the firſt inſtance of the people's ſtruggling for privileges, as a body diſtinct from the barons and clergy. Longbeard may be conſidered as the firſt victim to that untameable ſpirit, which ever ſince has actuated this people in ſupport of their privileges, and prompted them to the rights of humanity.
Upon a review of the reſt of this reign, we find the Monarch almoſt always in the field, or intent upon ſchemes to ſupply his warlike expeditions; diſappointed of the fruits of conqueſt, or groan⯑ing in captivity. If, indeed, it were juſt to aſcribe his misfortunes to his incenſed father's malediction, we might be apt to ſuſpect it, in ſome meaſure, as the cauſe. However, after a reign of ten years, thus paſſed in turbulence and fruitleſs victory, he died of a wound received from an arrow at the ſiege of Chaluz. While he was yet alive, the ſoldier, by whoſe hand he died, was brought before him: the King ſternly demanded the reaſon why he ſought his life? ‘My father and my brothers, replied the undaunted ſoldier, died by your hand, and Heaven has given me the opportunity of a juſt and glorious revenge.’ The dying Monarch, no way exaſperated by this reply, obſerved, that the centinel had done his duty, ordered him a preſent, and forgave him. But the Flemiſh General was unacquainted with ſuch generoſity: inſtead of complying with the King's command, he ſeized the miſerable wretch, [91] and, aſter Richard's death, commanded him, in his preſence, to be flead alive.
All the actions of this Prince were generous and brave. I know not what pleaſure, Rapin, that ſo frequently injudicious hiſtorian, can take in leſſening the virtues of the race of Norman Monarchs. Among other faults aſcribed to Ri⯑chard, he accuſes him of pride; yet it appears he bore the admonitions of his inferiors with gentle⯑neſs and good humour. The eaſineſs of his diſ⯑poſition, as well as the delicacy of his wit, are apparent from the quickneſs of his replies. It is ſaid, that being one day admoniſhed, by an ob⯑ſcure Monk, to part with his three daughters, by which he meant his pride, his luſt, and his avarice: he wittily made anſwer, that he deſired nothing more, and had already pitched upon proper huſ⯑bands for their diſpoſal; hereſolved to give his pride to the Templars, his avarice to the Monks, and, as for his luſt, the Clergy ſhould ſhare that among them. Such inſolent advice, from a churchman, at this day, would be attended with a very different reply. I am,
Dear Charles, &c.
LETTER XIV.
THE wars that were now kindled up between England and France, continued to depopu⯑late both countries, without making, in the end, any material alteration. John, the brother and ſucceſſor of Richard, purſued them with unabating vigour. We may regard theſe, and ſuch-like com⯑motions, among Chriſtian Princes, as peſtilences, which lay whole provinces waſte, without making [92] any change in their limits, their manners or go⯑vernment.
John, who was ſirnamed Lackland, was, in fact, poſſeſſed of the moſt extenſive dominion of any Prince in Europe. Beſides the lands left him by ſucceſſion, he had wreſted Bretagne from Ar⯑thur, his nephew, whoſe right it was. However, John, by thus pretending to what was not juſtly his, in the end loſt even what he had.
Having made himſelf maſter of Bretagne, the unfortunate Arthur alſo fell into his power. He cauſed him to be confined in a tower, and what became of him was never after explained to the public ſatisfaction. John was ſuſpected, and not without reaſon, of the death of his nephew. He made ſome efforts to wipe off the odious ſtain, yet without effect: happily, for the inſtruction of fu⯑ture Princes, this crime only opened a way to his future ruin; and, having begun his reign by be⯑ing the enemy of mankind in proſperity, the whole world, in the end, ſeemed to turn their back upon him in his diſtreſs. The power of the nobility of France was now exerted, with juſtice, againſt him: thoſe aſſemblies of noblemen, each of which was, at that time, the petty lawleſs tyrant of his dependants, in this inſtance, at leaſt, undertook to puniſh the guilty. Conſtance, the unfortunate mother of the murdered Prince, flew for protec⯑tion to the peers, and implored redreſs. The King of England was ſummoned to appear; he refuſed, and the peers of France confiſcated all the lands and poſſeſſions which were held under that crown. This confiſcation was ſoon attended with vigorous efforts to put it into execution; John, at once both weak and cowardly, a tyrant when unoppoſed, but timorous in danger, ſuffered himſelf tamely to [93] be ſtripped of them all. He ſucceſſively loſt Nor⯑mandy, Touraine, and Poictou, and then fled back to England, to make himſelf hated and deſpiſed.
Hitherto, however, he was only contemptible to his neighbour Princes; he ſtill had ſome ex⯑pectations from the eſteem and affection of his natural ſubjects, but he ſoon ſhewed, that all his ſkill was only in making enemies, but that he wanted abilities to reconcile them. The clergy had, for ſome time, acted as a ſeparate body, and had their elections of each other generally con⯑firmed by the Pope: the election of Archbiſhops had, for ſome time, been a continual ſubject of diſpute between the ſuffragan Biſhops and the Auguſtine Monks, and both had precedents to confirm their pretenſions: things being in this ſituation, the Archbiſhop of Canterbury happened to die, and the Auguſtine Monks, in a private manner, made choice of Reginald, their Sub⯑prior. The Biſhops exclaimed at this as invading their privileges, and here was likely to begin a theological conteſt. A politic Prince would have managed the quarrel in ſuch a manner, as to let the body of the clergy thus grow weaker by diviſion; but John was not a politic Prince; he immediately ſided with the ſuffragan Biſhops, and the Biſhop of Norwich was unanimouſly choſen. To decide theſe differences, an appeal was made to the Pope. Innocent III, who then filled the chair, poſſeſſed an unbounded ſhare of power, and his talents were equal to the veneration he was held in: he vacated both claims, and enjoined the Monks to chuſe Stephen Langton, an Engliſhman then at the court of Rome. John knew how to oppoſe, though not to negociate; he received the Pope's decree with a degree of ungoverned fury, and re⯑turned [94] the Pope a letter filled with abuſe. Inno⯑cent, in return, put the whole kingdom of Eng⯑land under an interdict, and forbad the King's ſub⯑jects longer to obey him. Theſe eccleſiaſtical thun⯑ders were, at that time, truly formidable, and the more ſo, as the execution of them was committed to Philip-Auguſtus, King of France, an ambitious and a politic Prince. To him the Pope gave the kingdom of England, as a perpetual inheritance, aſſuring him of a remiſſion of all his ſins, if he happened to ſucceed in conquering it. He grant⯑ed all who embarked in this cauſe alſo the ſame indulgences as were uſually given to ſuch as went upon a cruſade. Philip immediately embraced the offer; not content with depriving John of his con⯑tinental dominions, he devoured, in imagination, the kingdom of England alſo. By his preparations it was evident how deſirous he was to ſucceed in this undertaking; the ſhips, of which his fleet was to conſiſt, came together to the mouth of the Seine, whilſt the Princes, his vaſſals, collected their forces to the ſhore from all parts of the coun⯑try. His army was numerous, and the diſcontents of the Engliſh were equivalent to thouſands more. Philip was ready, therefore, to ſet ſail, and John, on his part, made an expiring effort to receive him. All-hated as he was, the natural enmity between the French and the Engliſh, the name of a King, and ſome remaining ſhare of power, put him at the head of an army of ſixty thouſand men, with which he advanced to Dover.
Europe regarded ſuch important preparations with impatience, and the deciſive blow was ſoon expected. The Pope was too refined a politician for both, and took upon himſelf what he pretend⯑ed to have deſigned for Philip. This ſingular ne⯑gotiation [95] was executed by Pandulph, as the Pope's legate to France and England. He paſſed through France, where he beheld Philip's great armament, and highly commended his zeal and diligence: from thence he went over to Dover, under pre⯑tence of negotiating with the Barons, in favour of the French King, and had a conference with John upon his arrival. He there repreſented the number of the enemy, the hatred of many of his own ſubjects; he intimated, that there was but one way to ſecure himſelf from impending danger, which was, to put himſelf under the Pope's pro⯑tection, who, as a kind and merciful father, was ſtill willing to receive him to his boſom.
John was too much intimidated by the apparent danger, not to embrace every means of offered ſafety. He conſented to the legate's remonſtrances, and took an oath to perform what the Pope ſhould impoſe. Having thus ſworn to perform he knew not what, the artful Italian ſo well managed the Barons, and intimidated the King, that he took the following extraordinary oath, before all the people, kneeling upon his knees, and putting his hands between thoſe of the Legate:
‘"I John, by the grace of God, King of Eng⯑land and Lord of Ireland, in order to expiate my ſins, from my own free will, and the ad⯑vice of my Barons, give to the church of Rome, to Pope Innocent, and his ſucceſſors, the king⯑dom of England, and all other prerogatives of my crown: I will hereafter hold them as the Pope's vaſſal. I will be faithful to God, to the church of Rome, and to the Pope my maſ⯑ter, and his ſucceſſors legitimately elected. I promiſe to pay him a tribute of a thouſand marks yearly, to wit, ſeven hundred for the [96] kingdom of England, and three hundred for Ireland."’
By this mean conceſſion John ſecured his crown from a foreign invaſion, but became effec⯑tually contemptible in the eyes of his people: ſtill, however, he was not hated by his ſubjects, their hatred only was wanting to ſink him into complete wretchedneſs. After being expoſed to ſo many diſgraceful humiliations, he now thought, at the expence of his honour, to ſpend the remain⯑ing years of his life in tranquillity. But, in pro⯑portion as he loſt the eſteem of the Engliſh, he loſt their affections alſo. The former Monarchs ſupported their power by a nice oppoſition of the clergy and the barons; when they intended to humble the nobility, they granted new privileges to the church; when they deſired to leſſen the power of the clergy, they gave greater force to the temporal intereſts. John was ignorant of the manner of conducting this oppoſition: he had of⯑fended the clergy, and increaſed their power, with⯑out making them his friends; he had it only left now to offend his barons, to render himſelf ob⯑noxious to every order of people. His former pu⯑ſillanimity ſoon gave this powerful body hopes of expecting a renewal of thoſe powers, of which they had been deprived in the preceding reign. They demanded, therefore, the re-eſtabliſhment of their ancient privileges, and John believed himſelf authoriſed to refuſe them. This created new diſſenſions: the King, with a ſtrange per⯑verſeneſs, in turn demanded their aſſiſtance for the recovery of his loſt dominions on the continent, and they refuſed to follow him. Their refuſal was ſoon followed by more open acts of hoſtility; they formed a confederacy, and, at an appointed [97] meeting, forced the King to grant all their de⯑mands, and ſign that charter by which the Engliſh are ſaid to hold their liberties at this day.
The barons and the clergy by this ſeemed the only governors of the kingdom: the commonalty had no ſhare in the legiſlature, they were paſſed away, with the lands on which they were born, by their haughty poſſeſſors: they were reckoned only as the ſheep, oxen, and other moveable poſ⯑ſeſſions, which were upon the eſtate. The guar⯑dian of an heir was to preſerve the lands entire, and, to uſe the words of the Magna Charta, ‘ſine deſtructione et vaſto hominum vel rerum,’ without de⯑ſtruction or waſte of the men or the things upon it. The King, the Barons, and the clergy, were all, in reality, enemies to public liberty. Their party were ſo many factions in the nation, ſubver⯑ſive of the rights of mankind: how they, in turn, helped to eſtabliſh liberty, you ſhall ſee in my fu⯑ture correſpondence.
This charter was, in fact, giving the barons a definitive judgment upon whatſoever they thought proper to repreſent as a grievance: they were to prefer their complaints to the King, and he was, in forty days, to give them ſatisfaction, or they were legally impowered to command it. This was an infringement of the prerogative, which he complied with through fear, and, as ſoon as he was at liberty, he retracted all he had agreed to: he loudly complained of the force with which it had been exacted, and he demanded juſtice from the Pope, his new maſter.
The Pope, who had lately excommunicated the King, now excommunicated the barons: the ba⯑rons, exaſperated, did exactly what the Pope had formerly done upon a like occaſion; they offered [98] the crown of England to France. Philip, ever ready to profit by theſe commotions, accepted their offer with joy, but, fearing the Pope's diſpleaſure if he aſſumed a title to what was now conſidered as a patrimony of the Holy See, prevailed upon the barons to elect his ſon Lewis. To this league of the barons with France the city of London lent its aſſiſtance. We ſhould be careful to ob⯑ſerve every beginning of power among the com⯑mons of England, and this ſeems to be one of the moſt obvious inſtances. This noble city was the firſt that freed itſelf from foeudal government, and ventured to follow leaders of its own appointment: in ſhort it may, at this period, be looked upon as a little republic, fighting between the powers of ariſtocracy, repreſented in the barons, and of de⯑ſpotiſm, aſſumed by the King.
In the mean time, the army of Lewis, which was called over to the aſſiſtance of the barons, committed ſtrange diſorders; while, on the other hand, that of John, which, like the former, was moſtly compoſed of foreigners, was ſtill more inſo⯑lent and audacious. Never was England in a more deplorable condition; ſhe had two armies of hun⯑gry foreigners in her bowels, ravaging the country in a mercileſs manner, and threatening ruin which⯑ſoever proved victorious. John was, at length, de⯑poſed by his barons, and Lewis ſolemnly crowned at London. The new Monarch then firſt thought of having the Pope's ſanction to his claim. The Pope debated in council the juſtice of a cauſe, which ſcarcely deſerved a moment's heſitation; while John led his harraſſed army from city to ci⯑ty, diſtruſting even his moſt faithful adherents. Pity then procured friends which proſperity could not procure: and now the barons were ſtruck with [99] ſome remorſe to ſee their native country, by their procurement, thus laid deſolate, and their King a wanderer; but what added to their afflictions was, that their ſervices were hitherto ſlightly re⯑paid by the new-crowned Monarch, and, from a knowledge of his diſpoſition, they could hope for no increaſe of future favours. It was even re⯑ported among them, that his intentions were to baniſh them for their diſloyalty to their former ſo⯑vereign, though exerted in his own favour. What⯑ever their motives might be, forty barons addreſſed letters of ſubmiſſive ſuit to King John; the Pope alſo held the juſtice of his claim in ſuſpenſe; a gleam of diſtant proſperity ſeemed to brighten his affairs: but, while the conjuncture ſeemed big with new events, the death of both the Pope, and of John, decided the conteſt. This Monarch died in the fifty-firſt year of his age, after a reign of more than ſeventeen years, ſpent in wars without ſucceſs, and exertions of power without increaſe of authority. I am,
Dear Charles, &c.
LETTER XV.
HAD Lewis, who was crowned King, diſſem⯑bled till poſſeſſed of uncontrouled power, he might have retained the crown. But the ba⯑rons wanted a Monarch ſubſervient to their power, and Lewis refuſed a kingdom upon ſuch condi⯑tions. They now, therefore, turned from the French intruder to the young Monarch, from whom they expected greater condeſcenſion.
[100] Henry III, appointed ſucceſſor to the crown by John his father, was but ten years of age when made King, and the Earl of Pembroke was, by mutual conſent, conſtituted his guardian. The inconſtancy of the Engliſh was now more than ever apparent: Lewis was, in ſome meaſure, for⯑ſaken by his new ſubjects, and, after a defeat, obliged to relinquiſh all pretenſions to the king⯑dom. What the barons, however, had hoped from the King's tender age, did not anſwer their expectations. The Earl of Pembroke, who go⯑verned his nonage, made a powerful intereſt with the clergy, and, by their means, ſerved to balance the ſtate.
While Henry acted under the direction of others, the power of the barons ſeemed to have been kept under; he had the clergy for him, and conſequent⯑ly the people, and theſe two were equivalent to all the nobility. But, as ſoon as Henry came to take the reins into his own hands, numberleſs in⯑ſurrections and calamities were the reſult of his obſtinacy, folly, and vice. Infinite were the ſtruggles for power between the barons and the King. Henry's luxury and profuſeneſs continu⯑ally rendered him a petitioner to the aſſembly of barons for money (for now the Kings began to aſk money inſtead of men) and they as conſtant⯑ly demanded a confirmation of thoſe privileges which had been granted them under the reign of his predeceſſor.
In order to render himſelf independent of them, he found a thouſand ridiculous pretences for raiſing money without their aſſiſtance. He would invite himſelf to the houſes of his ſubjects, and always expected a preſent at the door: he extorted from the Jews, wherever he found them, without any [101] remorſe. He even ſcrupled not to defraud minors of their lawful inheritances, to which he had been left protector; while the people had the mortification to ſee thoſe ſums laviſhed upon un⯑deſerving favourites, foreigners without merit, ſtrumpets, flatterers, and all the vermin of a vi⯑cious court.
But all his exactions were not ſufficient to ſup⯑ply his prodigality; he ſtill wanted money, he ſtill was obliged to have recourſe to his barons, and yet he ſtill deſired to be abſolute. The barons, on the contrary, who had long aimed at indepen⯑dence, and who deteſted his cowardice and luxury, refuſed his requeſt. Though no Monarch was more timid in danger, none was more preſumptu⯑ous in proſperity: he threatened them, for refuſing, with his ſevere di [...]pleaſure, and ſtrengthened him⯑ſelf by the aſſiſtance of the Pope, in order to plun⯑der the kingdom.
Whilſt the Engliſh were complaining of the avarice of their King, and his profuſion to foreign favourites, the Pope's legate made his triumphal entry to rob them of what the King had not laid hands on: the intereſts of the clergy and of the Pope were formerly one, but they now began to flow in divided channels. The riches, which ſome years before ſettled in their monaſteries at home, were now drained off to enrich a diſtant kingdom, already too luxurious. The clergy, therefore, juſtly dreaded the arrival of an extraordinary le⯑gate, whoſe only aims were directed by avarice and extortion. They expoſtulated, but in vain, to the King, againſt this unneceſſary ambaſſador from the head of the church: the King hoped to reap ſome private advantage from his arrival, and he was but little concerned for public grievances. [102] In every demand the King made for himſelf, the legate would take care to make one for the Pope alſo: he even propoſed, that the Monks ſhould ſign their names to notes, where a blank was left for the ſum ſpecified. The exactions, thus daily committed upon the churches, compelled the Biſhops to carry their complaints to the Pope him⯑ſelf, but the King ſtill vindicated the legate's con⯑duct. At length, the prelates, quite tired with the repeated demands of the legate, who daily had ſome new pretext for getting money, reſolved to meet and conſider of ſome remedy to prevent his rapacity. They accordingly aſſembled, but had ſcarce begun to complain to each other of the mi⯑ſeries they ſuffered, when the legate entered the aſſembly, with a demand for more money: this they conſidered as an accumulation of impudence and extortion, and they gave him a blunt denial. The legate, being diſappointed, for this time left the aſſembly, and went to pillage the Scotch cler⯑gy with better proſpects of ſucceſs.
An accident happened about this time, which ſerves as a ſtrong inſtance of the ſubmiſſion the people yielded to the power of Rome. Some buſineſs induced the legate to take Oxford in his way: he was received with all that grandeur and magnificence, which, from his character, he had a right to expect. As the luxury, in which theſe Italian dignitaries lived, was great, ſeveral ſcholars of the Univerſity, while the legate's dinner was preparing, entered his kitchen, incited by motives of curioſity or hunger. While they here and there admired the opulence and luxury of all they ſaw, a poor Iriſh ſcholar ventured to beg relief from the cook: the cook, inſtead of giving an alms, threw a ladle full of boiling water in his face; [103] an action which ſo provoked a Welch ſtudent who was preſent, that, having a bow in his hand, he ſhot the cook dead with an arrow. The legate, hearing the tumult, retired in a fright to the tower of the church, where he remained till night⯑fall. As ſoon as he thought he might retire with ſafety, he haſtened to the King, and complained of this outrage. The King, with his uſual mean⯑neſs, flew into a violent paſſion, and offered to give immediate ſatisfaction, by putting the of⯑fenders to death. The legate, at firſt, ſeemed to inſiſt upon vengeance, but, at length, was appeaſed, by proper ſubmiſſion from the Univerſity: all the ſcholars of that ſchool, which had offended him, were ordered to be ſtripped of their gowns, and to walk barefoot, with halters about their necks, to the legate's houſe, and humbly crave pardon and abſolution. It would be no eaſy matter to bring the ſtudents of Oxford to ſuch an humiliation at preſent.
In this manner this brutal and capricious tyrant went on, leagued with the Pope againſt his own dominions. He had now neither barons nor clergy in his intereſt, and owed all his ſupport to the au⯑thority of the papal and royal names. The Pope con⯑tinued to make reiterated demands upon the clergy, and the King would beg from his ſubjects at their own houſes, as if he had been aſking charity. At one time he would get money, by pretending to take the cruſade; at another he would prevail, by go⯑ing to re-conquer his dominions in France; again he would extort aid, under pretext of portioning a relation: and he would frequently aſſure his par⯑liament of barons, that, though he had hitherto behaved unworthily, yet, upon being ſupplied once more, with proper aſſiſtance, he would reform, [104] and give univerſal ſatisfaction. Thus he drew forth various ſums, which, without ſhame, he be⯑ſtowed upon flatterers, panders to his pleaſures; or an army of foreigners, which he kept to intimi⯑date his native dominions.
At length, however, the parliament, fatigued with his unperforming promiſes, reſolved to refuſe his demands for the future: they therefore entered into an aſſociation, and the city of London was invited to accede. At the head of this powerful combination was the Earl of Leiceſter, the King's brother-in-law, who had riſen into power mere⯑ly by his maſter's profuſeneſs. The King, by a ſtrange abſurdity of thinking, as he became more feeble and unpopular, increaſed his demands for freſh ſupplies. He was worſted in France, and obliged to purchaſe a ſhameful truce. He was conquered by the Welch, and became contempti⯑ble to Scotland; yet, ſtill he continued to har⯑raſs his own ſubjects with his uſual extortion, as if he deſigned to create in them that awe with which he failed to impreſs his enemies. The barons, finding him incorrigible, after an expe⯑rience of near forty years, at length ſhook off their allegiance, and ſent the King notice, that they renounced the fealty they owed him, and now conſidered him only as the common enemy of mankind.
Both ſides were now up in arms, and the coun⯑try again became the theatre of civil ſlaughter. The firſt advantages in this conteſt were in fa⯑vour of the King: he was a coward in danger, and ſhewed himſelf a tyrant in victory. Fluſhed with the ſucceſs with which his arms had been juſt crowned, he reſolved to march directly to London. He made no doubt but the city, inti⯑midated [105] by his late advantages, would declare in his favour; and, had he formerly behaved with paternal indulgence, perhaps his preſent hopes would not have been groundleſs; but a remem⯑brance of his former ill uſage repreſſed their loyal⯑ty. Inſtead of opening their gates to receive a conqueror, they ſent forth an army to oppoſe his entry. Henry ſtopped his forces in a panic, and returned to meet the Earl of Leiceſter, who ad⯑vanced with his army near Lewes in the county of Suſſex.
All hopes of reconciliation being now laid aſide, nothing was thought of but the deciſion of the ſword. The Earl, advancing with his army, drew up in order of battle near the King, who pre⯑pared, though with reluctance, to receive him: the fight was begun by Prince Edward, the King's ſon, who attacked the Londoners with great fury, and drove them off the field of battle: on the other hand, the King's body of forces were de⯑feated, after a ſhort reſiſtance, by the Earl of Leiceſter. His Majeſty, who commanded them in perſon, gave no inſtances of valour, but tame⯑ly ſuffered himſelf to be taken priſoner, which ſoon paved the way for the defeat of the whole army, and Prince Edward's ſurrendering at diſ⯑cretion.
The King and the Prince being thus priſoners, the barons took all advantages that the moſt re⯑fined policy could ſuggeſt. They knew how to operate upon the King's puſillanimity, and obliged him to ſend letters to all the governors of the kingdom, to renounce their obedience, and ſur⯑render his caſtles to the conquerors. They who draw their ſword againſt their King, ſays the pro⯑verb, ſhould fling the ſcabbard away. The barons, [106] with this in view, were reſolved entirely to new⯑model the conſtitution, for they now knew, that a compoſition with the royal captive was impoſſi⯑ble; and at this period we muſt fix the date of Engliſh liberty. The privileges of the King, the barons, and the clergy, were but different modes of various uſurpations; the commonalty had little or no ſhare in the legiſlature, and only looked tame⯑ly on, or were led to ſlaughter without hopes of ſharing the rewards of victory.
The barons and clergy, however, now ſaw, that the government could not readily be tranſ⯑ferred, without ſome greater power than they were at preſent poſſeſſed of. The dethroning a King, the reſiſting a Pope, were actions that they could not defend upon the principles of the times: they called in, therefore, an aid till now entirely un⯑known in the world, they called in the ſanction of the people. The authority of the barons, clergy, and the people of England, were ſet to oppoſe the royal and papal authority. And here, my dear Charles, I cannot but admire the ſtrange concurrence of circumſtances which brought this firſt dawn of liberty into being. To effect this, it was firſt neceſſary that England ſhould be poſ⯑ſeſſed of a conteſted foreign dominion; that the King ſhould have frequent neceſſities for money to preſerve it; that this neceſſarily ſhould produce a dependence upon the barons and clergy, and that this dependence ſhould give them, in turn, a ſhare of power. It was neceſſary, that the intereſts of the clergy ſhould be ſeparated from thoſe of the crown, and ſhould concur in the oppoſition: in ſhort, it was neceſſary that the powers on both ſides ſhould be ſo exactly balanced, that ſo ſmall [107] a weight as that of the people, as it was then con⯑ſidered, ſhould be thrown in to turn the ſcale.
A parliament was called, in which the King was obliged to give orders, that four Knights from each county ſhould ſit, in order to repreſent their reſpective ſhires, and deliberate for the general be⯑nefit of the people. This is the firſt rude outline of an Engliſh Houſe of Commons; the people had been gaining ſome conſideration ſince the diminu⯑tion of the foeudal laws, and the eſtabliſhment of corporation charters, by which men were, in ſome meaſure, reſcued from the power of their maſters, and permitted to improve a ſpirit of freedom in towns. As arts increaſed, the number of theſe little republics (if I may ſo call them) increaſed; and we find them, at the preſent period, of con⯑ſequence enough to be adopted into a partnerſhip of the legiſlation. But theſe privileges were grant⯑ed by the barons, merely to confirm their own; and, could they have now agreed among them⯑ſelves, they might have continued in poſſeſſion of all the authority of the kingdom, and the conſti⯑tution might thus ſettle into a confirmed ariſtocra⯑cy; but they grew jealous of each other's power; they began to fear the Earl of Leiceſter, who had abrogated kingly authority, and was intent only upon eſtabliſhing deſpotiſm. This produced new ſtruggles, and theſe ended once more in the reſto⯑ration of the King and his family: the Earl of Leiceſter was defeated and ſlain upon the field of battle. Henry, who had been led about as a cap⯑tive, and always expoſed in the front of that army which had dethroned him, was once more ſet at liberty by his victorious ſon Edward; and though, to the end of life, he perſevered in his former fol⯑lies, yet the people retained that ſhare of liberty [108] which they had acquired in the turbulent parts of his reign. A ſpirit of liberty had now diffuſed it⯑ſelf from the incorporated towns thro' the whole maſs of people, and ever after blazed forth at con⯑venient ſeaſons; afterwards whoever loſt they were ſure to be gainers; and, if in the conteſt they laid down their lives, and ſuffered all the hardſhips of war, yet they conſidered thoſe calamities as trivial, if liberty were left improved and better ſecured to their poſterity. I am,
Dear Charles, &c.
LETTER XVI.
AT the death of Henry III, Edward, his ſon and ſucceſſor, was employed in the Holy wars, in which, though he gained nothing to the cauſe for which he fought, he acquired the cha⯑racter of an excellent general and an intrepid ſol⯑dier. As he came to an undiſputed throne, the oppoſite intereſts were proportionably feeble. The barons were exhauſted by mutual diſſenſions, the clergy hated the Pope, and the people, as is evi⯑dent from ſome inſurrections at that time, were not much ſatisfied with the clergy. It was natu⯑ral to ſuppoſe, that a politic and a conquering Prince would take this opportunity of giving the royal prerogative its former ſplendor and authority. Wiſe princes, however, are ſatisfied with mode⯑rate power, and Edward only laboured to be ter⯑rible to his enemies.
The Welch had long enjoyed their own laws and cuſtoms; they were the only remains of the ancient Britons, and had ſtill preſerved their free⯑doms and their country uncontaminated from fo⯑reign [109] invaſions: incapable, however, of reſiſting their enemies in the plain, their chief defence was in their inacceſſible mountains, thoſe natural bul⯑warks of their country. Whenever England was diſturbed by factions at home, or its troops called off to wars abroad, the Welch would continually pour in their irregular troops, and lay the open country waſte with ravage and deſolation. No ſituation can be worſe, than that of ſeveral petty principalities bordering upon each other, under different commanders, and purſuing different in⯑tereſts. Senſible of this, Edward led a powerful army againſt Lewellyn, their King: he had fre⯑quently before been chaſtiſed, obliged to beg peace, but was ever ready to ſeize an opportunity of making an advantageous war. Upon the approach of Edward, he took refuge upon the inacceſſible mountains of Snowden, and there maintained his poſt without danger. The King of England, not diſcouraged by the difficulty of the ſituation, was reſolved to inveſt his army, by ſecuring all the avenues by which it might eſcape. Poſted as Lewellyn was, he might certainly have harraſſed his enemies without ever himſelf being deſtroyed, had not a trifling victory over a body of his be⯑ſiegers induced him to come down and face the enemy upon more equal terms. A ſmall advantage gained was interpreted as the beginning of the com⯑pletion of Merlyn's prophecy, in which he was to poſſeſs the whole kingdom without a rival. Flattered with ſuch expectations, he deſcends into the plain, without conſidering the inequality of his forces: the Welch and the Engliſh now, for the laſt time, drew up againſt each other. Lewellyn, after hav⯑ing performed all that courage and deſperation could inſpire, found himſelf, at laſt, fatally de⯑ceived: [110] he was killed upon the field of battle, and his forces utterly routed. With him expired the diſtinction of his nation; it was ſoon after united to the kingdom of England, and made a principa⯑lity, given to the eldeſt ſon of the crown. Foreign conqueſts might add to the glory, but the preſent added to the felicity of the kingdom. The Welch were now blended with their conquerors, and, in the revolution of a few ages, all national animo⯑ſity was entirely forgotten.
His native dominions being thus freed from eve⯑ry invader, the King ſoon had an opportunity to increaſe his power, by the diſſenſion of his neigh⯑bours. The crown of Scotland, after the death of Alexander the Third, became deſtitute of any apparent heir: John Bruce and Robert Baliol divided all the ſuffrages of the kingdom. A civil war impended, and nothing but an umpire, ap⯑pointed by mutual conſent, could determine the conteſt without blood [...] For this purpoſe, by a fatal miſtake in the politics of the Scotch, Edward was choſen, accepted the mediation with pleaſure, came to Norham, and, from being choſen um⯑pire, claimed a ſuperiority over the country, whoſe crown had been ſubmitted to his deciſion, and aſſerted his right to the government. To wear the appearance of juſtice, however, after long de⯑liberations, in which great care was taken to in⯑culcate his right to the crown of Scotland, he fixed Baliol on the throne, leſs as King than as a vaſſal of England.
The firſt ſtep taken by Edward, after placing Baliol on the throne, was ſufficient to convince the Scots of his intentions to ſtretch his ſuperior prerogative to the utmoſt. A merchant of Gaſ⯑coigne [111] preſented a petition to him, implying, that Alexander, late King of Scotland, was indebted to him a certain ſum, ſtill unpaid, notwithſtand⯑ing all his ſollicitations to the new King for pay⯑ment. Edward eagerly embraced this opportunity of exerciſing his new right, and ſummoned the King of Scotland to appear at Weſtminſter, to anſwer, in perſon, to the complaint which was brought againſt him by the merchant. Upon ſub⯑jects equally trivial he ſent ſix different ſummons, at different times, in one year; ſo that the Scotch King ſoon perceived himſelf only poſſeſſed of the name, without the authority. Willing, therefore, to ſhake off ſo troubleſome a maſter, Baliol re⯑volted, and procured the Pope's abſolution for the infraction of his former oaths of homage. Edward now offered the crown to Bruce, who accepted it with joy; and thus a ſtrong party of the Scotch was added in ſtrengthening the Engliſh King to ſubdue their native country. Edward, at the head of a numerous army, marched into the coun⯑try: numberleſs were the victories gained on one ſide and the other, in which the conquerors acquired much honour, but either country loſt the braveſt of its ſubjects. But wars like theſe, though mi⯑nutely related by every hiſtorian, are ſcarce worth treaſuring in any memory, but that of an herald or antiquarian. The whole may be comprized in the following ſhort deſcription: one barbarous na⯑tion meets another in ſome plain, generally by mutual appointment; little art, evolution, evaſion, or ſubterfuge, was practiſed or known; they ruſh⯑ed upon each other, and numbers and tumult ge⯑nerally decided the victory: the revolutions of the government, and not the deſcription of battles fought in theſe reigns, ſerve to adorn the page of [112] hiſtory. At one ſeaſon Scotland was brought to the loweſt degree of humiliation, and Edward had laid a plan, which probably he ever had in view, of uniting, it as a conqueſt, to the crown of England. But his ſcheme proved abortive, the time of that kingdom's deliverance was at hand; they found ſafety in deſpair, and, upon the King's return to England, they once more ſallied down from their mountains upon the Engliſh army which he had left, and gained a complete victory.
This was terrible news to Edward, who had already built upon that kingdom as his own. He was now implacably exaſperated againſt the Scots, and reſolved to take a ſignal vengeance: to this purpoſe, he ſummoned all the vaſſals of the crown, without diſtinction, to be ready at a time and place particularly appointed. His intention was, to march into the heart of that kingdom, and deſtroy it, to uſe his own expreſſion, from ſea to ſea. He ſoon ſaw himſelf at the head of the fineſt army England had ever produced: the Scotch trembled at his approach, but death ſtopped the courſe of his in⯑tended devaſtations.
As ſoon as he perceived that his diſorder was to be fatal, he ſent for the Prince his ſon, whom he had appointed to ſucceed him, and, taking him by the hand, earneſtly recommended, with his dying breath, three things: he firſt enjoined him not to recal Gaveſtone, a flatterer, who he knew would poiſon his principles; he next deſired, that his heart might be ſent to the holy ſepulchre; and, thirdly, he recommended him to proſecute the war with the Scotch, till he had entirely ſubdued them; deſiring his bones might be carried about at the head of the army, the more effectually to ſtrike terror into an enemy he had ſo often ſubdued.
[113] England began to grow truly formidable under this reign, the oppoſition of the barons was but feeble and ill ſupported; the Monarch was, in ſome meaſure, abſolute, though he was prudent enough never to exert his power: he is accuſed of ſeverity, and it is probable he might have exerted juſtice with too heavy an hand; yet it ſhould be particu⯑larly remarked, that he was the firſt who began to diſpenſe indiſcriminate juſtice. Before him, the people who roſe in inſurrections were puniſhed in the moſt ſevere manner, by the ſword or the gib⯑bet; while the nobility, who were almoſt always refractory, were treated with a degree of lenity which encouraged future diſobedience; a ſmall fine, which, in fact, only fell upon their poor dependants, generally wiped off their offences. He puniſhed both with equal ſeverity.
However, you ought to remark the alterations in the ſpirit of the times: the Engliſh, now in⯑corporated with their fierce Norman conquerors, were no longer the tame conſenting people they formerly appeared, and always were prepared to elude that authority which they could not reſiſt. With this ſpirit of oppoſition a ſpirit of cruelty alſo ſeemed to enter; regardleſs of their own lives, the people did not ſeem very ſollicitous about the lives of others. The penal laws now began to aſſume more rigour: in the times of William the Conqueror, it was a law, that no man ſhould be puniſhed with death; but that law was at preſent quite laid aſide, and ſeveral crimes were rendered capital.
But what gave the reign of Edward a true value with poſterity, was the degree of power the people began to aſſume during this period. The clergy and the barons he conſidered, in ſome meaſure, as rivals; and, to weaken their force, he gave au⯑thority [114] to the commons: a law was enacted, by which no tax could be-levied without their conſent. His intentions were to render himſelf abſolute by their aſſiſtance; and, it is but too probable, he might have become ſo, had he lived to put his de⯑ſigns in execution; but he died at a time he was beginning to throw off parliamentary reſtrictions, and left the people a ſhare of authority which had been given them for very different purpoſes than the promotion of liberty. The moſt healing me⯑dicines are often extracted from poiſons: in ſhort, whatever Edward's character was, as a man, as a King, he was of infinite ſervice to his country.
LETTER XVII.
IT was long an opinion of the Engliſh, and grounded on obſervations made from the days of King Arthur, that, between two valiant and able Princes in the nation, there always inter⯑vened a King of leſs ſenſe and courage, ‘moins ſuffiſans de ſens et de proueſſe;’ that there was ſome⯑thing in the remark you have hitherto ſeen in ſe⯑veral ſucceſſions.
No Monarch could come to a crown with more advantageous omens than Edward II. an army prepared for victory, a people united, and an un⯑diſputed ſucceſſion. But he ſoon gave them reaſons to fear his future conduct, by the commencement of his reign. Regardleſs of his father's dying admonitions, he diſcontinued the war with Scot⯑land, [115] and recalled Gaveſtone, his favourite, from exile.
Gaveſtone was a foreigner by birth, adorned with every accompliſhment of perſon and mind that could create affection, but deſtitute of thoſe qualities of heart and underſtanding that ſerve to procure eſteem. He was beautiful, witty, brave, but, at the ſame time, vicious, effeminate, and debauched: he had aſſiſted in all Edward's youth⯑ful extravagancies and pleaſures, had been, to uſe a Latin expreſſion, his arbiter elegantiarum, and thus had ſecured this young voluptuous Monarch's affections.
A prudent King may have private friends, but ſhould never retain a public favourite: royal fa⯑vour ſhould ſhine with indiſcriminate luſtre, and the Monarch ſhould ever guard againſt raiſing thoſe he moſt loves to the higheſt preferments. In being thus biaſſed by his affections, he will pro⯑bably be induced to reward talents unequal to the burthen of affairs, or impatient of the fatigues of application. Such was the caſe of Edward, with regard to his new favourite; he loaded him with favours, at a time when he was giving up his title to the ſovereignty of Scotland, which had been ſo hardly earned by his predeceſſor.
The barons, at this time, were not ſo entirely humbled, but that they reſented a conduct ſo in⯑jurious to the intereſts of the kingdom as well as their own. Gaveſtone's pride, his being a fo⯑reigner, his inſolence, ſoon raiſed a ſtrong party againſt him: an army was formed to oppoſe his adminiſtration; Gaveſtone was taken and behead⯑ed, without even the formality of a trial. Thus you perceive a ſpirit of cruelty beginning to enter the nation; the death of Gaveſtone was, proba⯑bly, [116] ſupported by the precedents found in the for⯑mer reign. The ſucceſſors of Edward the Firſt, copied after him in his faults alone; the vices of conquering Monarchs and great Kings are ever moſt dangerous, becauſe they moſt generally pro⯑duce imitation.
From this time the ſcaffolds were drenched with Engliſh blood; each party, as it happened to prove victorious, brought their priſoners, as traitors, to the block or the gibbet; never was ſo much blood ſpilt in a juridical manner in England, as in this hideous reign. The Scotch, during theſe ſtorms, endeavoured to fortify their government: they conquered the Engliſh in more than one battle, Robert Bruce, being made King, became powerful from the diviſions of the Engliſh, who pretended to be his maſters.
Edward, in the mean time, ſeemed only intent on proſecuting his pleaſures, or becoming formi⯑dable to his own ſubjects. The mutual hatred between him and the barons ſeemed daily to in⯑creaſe, or, in other words, as he ſtill became more deſpicable in the eyes of the people, the barons, lately depreſſed, grew into power. His ſupineneſs gave them an opportunity of executing all their deſigns, ſo that at laſt he ſuffered himſelf to be taken a priſoner; but he was ſoon after releaſed, upon a promiſe of future amendment. A certain number of the barons were admitted into his coun⯑cil, and he gave his word to perform nothing with⯑out their conſent and approbation: but he was only born for misfortunes. This Monarch, of an eaſy nature, and who, probably, if born in a pri⯑vate ſtation, would have been conſidered as a wor⯑thy man, could not live without a favourite. Into the place which Gaveſtone held in his affections, [117] Hugh Spencer, a youth of great addreſs and ma⯑ny accompliſhments, ſucceeded. This young gen⯑tleman, no way intimidated by the misfortunes of Gaveſtone, in ſimilar circumſtances, purſued his conduct in every particular; he even went beyond him in pride, avarice, and prodigality. An uni⯑verſal diſcontent ſoon became viſible: all the vices of the King were imputed to young Spencer alone, and his own were enough to ſink him into ruin. The barons, therefore, once more combined to deſtroy this favourite, who was, in reality, with⯑out a protector: they therefore baniſhed him and his father out of the kingdom, with great threats, if ever he attempted to return. This indignity to the King ſeemed to rouſe him from his former lethargy; the Queen alſo, a bold haughty woman, endeavoured to ſtimulate him to revenge: ſhe had received an affront on a pilgrimage to Canterbury, in being denied admittance, by the governor, in⯑to the caſtle of Leeds, on the way. She there⯑fore perſuaded her weak conſort, that the preſent conjuncture was very favourable for freeing himſelf from the power of the barons, and, that puniſh⯑ing the governor of Leeds would intimidate them ſo far, as to prevent any future oppoſition. Her advice was embraced with avidity; the King raiſed an army without oppoſition; he beſieged the caſtle of Leeds, the governor was taken, and the Queen now had an opportunity of ſatiating her revenge, by beheading him.
Succeſs only ſeemed to puſh this weak Prince on to new violences: he beſieged the caſtles of ſe⯑veral other barons, and became maſter of them with equal eaſe. To complete his contempt for all former compacts, he recalled his young favou⯑rite, Spencer, once more from baniſhment. We [118] may eaſily, upon this occaſion, perceive how much the barons were declined from that degree of power they poſſeſſed two or three reigns before. The Monarch, at preſent, that oppreſſed them, was voluptuous, ignorant, and a coward, in the ge⯑neral opinion of the people; yet, feeble as he was, the barons were ſcarce able to reſiſt him: the power of the people was now grown truly formidable, and Edward had addreſs enough to procure a part of them to ſecond his pretenſions. The King now, therefore, in the meridian of power, proſecuted the moſt rigorous meaſures: the Queen, cruel by nature, and Spencer, his favourite, actuated by re⯑venge, ſtimulated him to numberleſs acts of cruelty. Among others who periſhed in the oppoſition, was Thomas, Earl of Lancaſter: this nobleman had always been ſignalized for his valour among the confederate Lords, and was a peculiar oppoſer of the growing power of the family of the Spencers: he was taken fighting, at the head of a body of forces which he had, in vain, endeavoured to rally. He had no great hopes to expect any favour from judges who were his enemies, from perſonal mo⯑tives: he was condemned to be quartered, as a traitor; but, from a regard to his ſtation, the King changed his puniſhment to beheading. In this manner nine other Lords were executed at York, as a terror to the kingdom; but theſe ter⯑rors could not ſecure a Monarch, who was in him⯑ſelf contemptible. Whatever might have been the Earl of Lancaſter's real character, his death left it uncertain, whether he acted with views to get himſelf created King, or was only the champion of public liberty. However that be, the people in general had his memory in great veneration, and conſidered him as a martyr. We may by this ſee [119] what ſide in this quarrel was eſpouſed by the cler⯑gy; immediately after the Earl's death, miracles were ſaid to be wrought at his tomb, and every pretended miracle of this kind was productive of a thouſand enemies to the King.
The favourite Spencer and his father ſtill gave an unbounded ſcope to their revenge; not content with putting to death the heads of the oppoſite party, with depriving others of their eſtates, and with condemning great numbers to perpetual ba⯑niſhment, they were reſolved to level their rage againſt Roger Mortimer, now actually in their cuſtody, and confined within the Tower. There were few circumſtances that could apparently ſcreen him from their reſentment; he had been openly in arms, and active in the oppoſition; he had no character to render his puniſhment unpo⯑pular, and none that he knew to intercede for him with the King: yet he found his puniſhment re⯑mitted, to his aſtoniſhment, notwithſtanding all the ſollicitations of his enemies to the contrary. The Queen was fallen in love with this youth, and uſed all her intereſt to procure his pardon: an intimacy had actually commenced between them; and this protection, with which he was publicly honoured by her, drew down the reſentment of the two favourites. In this oppoſition of intereſts, Edward ſeemed entirely paſſive; he wiſhed to oblige both parties, and one day gave orders to ſcreen young Mortimer from purſuit, and the next, to ſecure him wherever he could be detected: the feeble King knew not how to refuſe any requeſt, when he loved thoſe who made the demand.
A diſſenſion thus between two parties, who ſhared the affections of the King, muſt ſoon ter⯑minate in the diſmiſſion of either. To get the [120] Queen removed, the Spencers contrived to per⯑ſuade her to go upon a certain negotiation to the court of her brother, the King of France. With this propoſal, tho' from her enemies, the Queen readily complied; ſhe foreſaw it would give her an uncontrouled liberty of enjoying the company of her gallant, and might give her power of being revenged upon his oppreſſors. Philip the Fair, who was at that time upon the throne of France, purſued the politics of every wiſe King; he encouraged the Queen, his ſiſter, to oppoſe Edward, her huſband, and thus, by dividing his enemies, he hoped to weaken them. Thus heart⯑ened, ſhe loudly inveighed againſt the favourites of the King, levied troops in France to oppoſe their power, and, with this army, landed in Eng⯑land, where her expectations were anſwered, in being joined by a powerful body of malecontents. Mortimer, her lover, was with her at the head of theſe troops, at the ſame time that the favou⯑rite Spencer was the heart of the oppoſite party.
Edward was little able to withſtand his enemies: all his endeavours to raiſe troops proved ineffectual; none would venture to expoſe themſelves in the King's defence, for they ſaw that an ignominious death muſt be the conſequence of a defeat, and ingratitude of victory. The Queen took Spencer, the father, at Briſtol: this gentleman, fourſcore and ten years old, had paſſed a youth of tranquil⯑lity and reputation; he had been eſteemed and loved by all the kingdom, but his fond compliance with his ſon's ambition involved his old age in the turbulence of faction: he was immediately hanged up in his armour, without even the forma⯑lity of a trial. His unhappy ſon did not long ſur⯑vive him; he was taken, with a few more, at⯑tending [121] the King their maſter, in an obſcure con⯑vent in Wales. Revenge, and not juſtice, prompt⯑ed all the puniſhments of this reign. The Queen had not patience to ſtay, till the meeting of a par⯑liament, to deſtory her enemy; ſhe ordered him to be produced before the inſulting populace, en⯑joyed herſelf the pleaſure of ſeeing him led to the place of execution, where he was hanged on a gibbet fifty feet high. Several other Lords ſhared his fate, all deſerving pity indeed, had they not formerly juſtified this inhumanity by ſetting a cruel example.
The unhappy King, now abandoned, ſaw him⯑ſelf in the power of his enemies, without a ſingle friend to ſtand between him and univerſal reproach; he was conducted to the capital, amidſt the inſults and reproaches of his ſubjects; confined in the Tower, judged by the parliament, and ſolemnly depoſed. He was aſſigned a penſion for his ſup⯑port; his ſon, a youth of fourteen, was crowned King, and the Queen appointed regent during his minority.
The depoſed Monarch but a ſhort time ſurvived his misfortunes: he was ſent from priſon to priſon, a wretched outcaſt, and the ſport of his mercenary keepers: in theſe journies they made him ſuffer all the indignities, that cruel and ingenious villainy could deviſe. Among others, it is ſaid, they ſhaved him for ſport, in the open fields, uſing water from the neighbouring ditch: the genius of the people muſt ſurely have ſuffered a gradual deterioration, or they would never have permitted the venerable head of Majeſty, a Monarch, whoſe greateſt fault was the violence of his friendſhips, to be uſed with ſo much indignity. What firm⯑neſs ſoever the depoſed Prince had hitherto ſhewn [122] in his misfortunes, it left him upon this occaſion [...] he looked upon his mercileſs inſulters with an a [...] of fallen Majeſty, and ſhed a torrent of tears [...] the cruelty of his death alone was [...]nting to ter⯑minate a life of complete miſery. The laſt place of his impriſonment was Berkley caſtle: here he was kept totally deſtitute of all the comforts, and almoſt all the neceſſaries of life. But theſe miſeries were not long to continue: the two keepers, en⯑tering his apartment one night as he lay in bed, to ſtifle his cries, covered his face with a pillow, and then, with a cruelty not to be paralleled, thruſt an horn pipe up his body, through which they ran a red-hot iron, and burnt his bowels: his horrid ſhrieks, however, were heard at a diſtance from the caſtle, and, though all poſſible care was taken to conceal it, his murder ſoon after was diſcovered by one of the accomplices. Misfortunes, like his, muſt ever create pity, and, a puniſhment, ſo diſ⯑proportionate to his guilt, in ſome meaſure ſoften the ſeverity of reproach.
LETTER XVIII.
I FANCY you now begin to have ſome faint idea of the origin of our happy conſtitution; and, as I am going to lead you to a reign which gave new ſtrength to the people, permit me to entertain you a moment with the ſpirit of thinking in the na⯑tion, at that juncture I am ſpeaking of. By the continual admiſſion of foreigners, in ſeveral of the preceding reigns, the number of the commons [123] was ſurpriſingly increaſed; and the introduction of ſome new manufactures, of wearing woollen cloaths, and making glaſs, for inſtance, ſtill de⯑creaſed the retinue of the nobles, and threw great⯑er numbers of the inhabitants into chartered towns. The barons, however, ſtill continued to reſide at their caſtles in the country, gave laws to the pea⯑ſants around them, and exerciſed a deſpotic autho⯑rity over all their dependants. The clergy had, for ſome time, been at variance with the Pope, and this diffenſion contributed to ſtrip the maſk of ſanctity from both: the diviſion of the church was a moſt certain means of rendering it contemptible, ſince all its ſtrength lay only in the influence it had over the minds of its votaries. But, there was another principle, which had been, for ſome time, operating, and which, in time, promiſed to be a certain means of diminiſhing the power of the barons and the clergy; I mean a diminution of perſonal ſervice in war. In former times, every vaſſal was to appear, at the command of his lord, with horſe attendants, and all the apparatus ne⯑ceſſary for a campaign. If the nobility, or vaſſals of the crown, refuſed to march, the King was un⯑able to compel them. In this manner a combina⯑tion of the nobility had it ever in their power to give laws to the crown, becauſe they were not only the deliberating power, but the acting power alſo: but, from the increaſe of the people, from the more extenſive uſe of money inſtead of barter, and from the number of independant foreigners ready to accept pay, from theſe cauſes, I ſay, the Kings began to levy armies without the aſſiſtance of the nobility. Monarchs now only wanted mo⯑ney to be at the head of armies as numerous and powerful as they thought proper; wherever money [124] was, there lay power; and, the people, by traffic and induſtry, beginning to grow rich, they were neceſſarily admitted into ſome ſhare in the legiſla⯑ture. Thus we ſee the nobility, the clergy, and the people, different from what they were two or three reigns before this; and the ſtrength of the King did not ſuffer a leſs mutation. Former Mo⯑narchs might be conſidered only as the firſt and moſt powerful Baron of the land: a Baron was, in miniature, what the King was in the great. The Monarch had ſcarce any real power but what he derived from his own crown-lands and vaſſals: when he was reſolved to exert his ſtrength, he could only command his own tenants, and thoſe who held immediately under him; the barons were ſummoned, indeed; but, if they were diſpleaſed, they might refuſe their aſſiſtance, and all their de⯑pendants were obliged to imitate their example; theſe acknowledged ſubjection, not to the King, but their own maſter; and nothing but a civil war with the refractory nobleman could bring him to juſtice. But the face of the old conſtitution was now beginning to be changed; every order in the ſtate began to have a mutual dependence on each other; the power of the King to extend to the higheſt and the loweſt of his ſubjects, and oppoſite intereſts to concur for the benefit of all.
This change of government ſeemed to influ⯑ence the manners of the nation; a ſpirit of gal⯑lantry prevailed, which, probably, took its firſt riſe in thoſe Eaſtern countries, which had long been famous for every luxurious refinement. Hiſ⯑torians repreſent the kingdom as immerſed in de⯑bauchery and licentiouſneſs: that ladies, laying aſide their modeſty, ſeemed to glory in the loſs of their virtue. Nothing, ſay they, was more com⯑mon, [125] than to ſee them riding in troops to the tournaments, dreſſed like cavaliers, with ſwords by their ſides, their horſes adorned with rich trap⯑pings, and behaving with more than maſculine ef⯑frontery. Whatever Monks may obſerve upon this ſubject, this aukwardly gallant behaviour, in ſome meaſure, expreſſed a degree of growing ele⯑gance in the times, and that the people were emerg⯑ing from primitive barbarity.
Under Edward III, the conſtitution of our par⯑liaments, and the whole frame of our government, became reduced into a better form. A ſpirit of liberty breathes in all his laws: yet, no King knew how to make himſelf more abſolute. As the father loſt his crown and his life, in the moſt miſerable manner, by ſuffering himſelf to be go⯑verned by his miniſters, and protecting them from the reſentments of the people; ſo the ſon very early exerted his own authority, and freed himſelf from the guardianſhip, or rather ſubjection, of his mo⯑ther the Queen, and her paramour, who had long oppreſſed the nation, and diſhonoured him, by their ſcandalous conduct. Mortimer was dragged from the Queen's apartment, in the moſt ignominious manner, while ſhe implored, all the while, that they would ſpare the gentle Mortimer. But the young King was deaf to her intreaties; the pity which ſhe once refuſed her unhappy huſband was now denied her: the parliament condemned Mor⯑timer to die, without being permitted to plead, as he had ſerved Spencer ſome time before. He fell by the hands of the hangman; and Iſabella was confined to the caſtle of Riſings, with a penſion of three thouſand pounds a year. Her confine⯑ment was ſevere, though ſhe ſurvived her diſgrace twenty-five years, and, abandoned to univerſal [126] contempt, wept in ſolitude rather her misfortunes than her vices.
Edward III. well knew, that a conquering Mo⯑narch was fitteſt to pleaſe a warlike people. The Scotch had long triumphed with impunity; he therefore began his reign by reducing them to the moſt diſtreſsful circumſtances, and once more brought them to acknowledge his ſovereignty over their crown. But he was ſoon drawn off from theſe conqueſts to objects of greater victories: a new ſcene began to be opened in France, and Europe, in ſuſpenſe, began to doubt whether Ed⯑ward's claims to that kingdom were ſecured to him by right of inheritance, or by the rights of conqueſt. France, at that time, was by no means ſo extenſive as at preſent: it comprehended neither Dauphine, nor Provence, nor Franche Comte. It was rendered ſtill more feeble, from the nature of its government; ſeveral powerful neighbours, who pretended to be vaſſals of that crown, rather ſerved to weaken than ſtrengthen the monarchy.
The people of that kingdom were unhappy, from their mutual diviſions; and the King, at that time, was ſtill more ſo. The three ſons of Philip the Fair, in full parliament, accuſed their wives of adultery; they were each condemned, and or⯑dered to be impriſoned for life. Lewis Huttin, the eldeſt ſon, cauſed his wife to be ſtrangled; her lovers died by a new kind of puniſhment, they were flead alive.
After the death of Lewis Huttin, King of France, a queſtion aroſe about the validity of the Salic law; a law made in the early period of French Monar⯑chy, importing, that no woman ſhould rule. As this is a ſubject of ſome importance in the Engliſh hiſtory, it is neceſſary to expatiate here a lit⯑tle: [127] they had hitherto never inquired, in France, whether a female could ſucceed in the kingdom. Laws are only made to regulate what may happen by what has happened already, and, as an inſtance of this kind had never occurred, there were no laws to direct them. Precedents, in leſſer inſtances, were the only guides in ſuch a circumſtance, but theſe precedents had varied with the occaſion. The parliament of France had often adjudged the ſuc⯑ceſſion to women; as Artois was formerly given to a female in prejudice of the male heir. The ſucceſſion of Champagne had been, on ſome oc⯑caſions, given to the daughters, and, on others, they were held unqualified to ſucceed. We thus ſee that right changed with power; and juſtice, in ſuch a caſe, was either unknown or diſregarded.
Lewis Huttin left an only daughter, and two brothers: the elder, Philip the Tall, aſſumed the crown, in prejudice of Huttin's daughter, and at⯑tempted to cover his uſurpation by the Salic law. The younger brother, Charles the Fair, jealous of his elder brother's fortune, oppoſed his preten⯑ſions, and aſſerted the daughter's right to ſucceed. This cauſe was carried before the French parlia⯑ment, and decided in favour of Philip. This Monarch enjoyed the crown but a ſhort time, and, dying, left only daughters to ſucceed him: Charles the Fair, however, was now of a diffe⯑rent ſentiment from what he had been formerly; he now maintained the law for the excluſion of females, becauſe it made in his favour. He ſeized the crown without oppoſition, and enjoyed it for ſome time, but, dying, left his wife with child. As there was now no apparent heir, the next heir to the crown was to be regent, and two perſons aſſerted their claim upon this occaſion: Edward III, [128] laid his claim, as being, by his mother Iſabella, who was daughter of Philip the Fair, and ſiſter to the three laſt Kings of France, rightful heir to the crown. Philip Valois, on the other hand, had ſeized upon it, as being the next heir by the male ſucceſſion. The claims of Philip were preferred; he was conſtituted regent of France, and, the Queen being unfortunately brought to-bed of a daughter, he was unanimouſly elected King. He was crowned by his ſubjects with univerſal ſatiſ⯑faction, had the appellation of Philip the Fortu⯑nate given him, and to this he added thoſe which might merit good fortune, virtue and juſtice. Among other inſtances of his felicity, he might reckon that of the homage paid him by Edward, his rival, which he came to offer at Amiens: how⯑ever, this homage was ſoon followed by a war, and Edward diſputed that crown, of which he had juſt before declared himſelf the vaſſal.
A brewer at Ghent was one of thoſe who gave the greateſt aſſiſtance to Edward in this war, and determined him to aſſume the title of King of France. This citizen's name was James Ardevet, grown too powerful for a ſubject, and one of thoſe, according to Machiavel, whom Kings ought to flatter or deſtroy. Thus aſſiſted, Edward made a powerful invaſion: upon landing, he was chal⯑lenged by Philip to try their fortune upon equal terms, in ſome appointed plain. Edward accept⯑ed the challenge, for in every action this Prince affected the hero; but, ſome obſtacles intervening, the war was proſecuted in the uſual manner, by taking every advantage where it happened to offer.
In theſe battles there are little materials for in⯑ſtruction, nor can they afford any thing more en⯑tertaining, than the hiſtory of a maroding party [129] in one of our modern gazettes. It is ſufficient to obſerve, that ſeveral ſkirmiſhes only drew on the great and deciſive victory of Creſſy, which every honeſt Engliſhman boaſts of to this very hour. In this memorable battle, Philip was at the head of an hundred thouſand men, and Edward only of thirty thouſand. The Black Prince, his ſon, as yet but a youth of fifteen, commanded the firſt line of the Engliſh army. The ſecond was con⯑ducted by the Earls of Northampton and Arundel; and the body of reſerve was headed by the King in perſon. He and the Prince of Wales had that morning received the ſacrament with great devo⯑tion, and his behaviour denoted the calm intrepi⯑dity of a man reſolved on conqueſt or death. The army being thus arranged, the King rode from rank to rank, with a chearful countenance; bad his ſoldiers remember the honour of their country, while his eloquence animated the whole army to a degree of enthuſiaſtic expectation. To oppoſe the Engliſh, Philip had drawn up his formidable army in three diviſions alſo; the firſt commanded by John of Luxembourg, the blind King of Bohe⯑mia; the ſecond was led by the Count of Alencon, and, Philip, in perſon, commanded the body of reſerve. This was the firſt battle that the Black Prince had ſeen, but he now appeared foremoſt in the very ſhock, and continued, for ſome time, to turn the fortune of the day; but his courage would have been ſoon oppreſſed by numbers, had not the Earl of Northampton come to his relief. The very thickeſt of the battle was now gathered round him, and the valour of a boy filled even veterans with aſtoniſhment: but their ſurprize at his cou⯑rage could not give way to their ſears for his per⯑ſon; apprehenſive that ſome misfortune might hap⯑pen [130] to him in the end, they ſent the King word to haſten to the Prince's relief. Edward, who had all this time viewed the engagement from a wind⯑mili, with great deliberation aſked if his ſon was dead; and, being anſwered, that he ſtill lived and was giving aſtoniſhing inſtances of valour, ‘Then tell my Generals, cried the King, that he ſhall have no aſſiſtance from me; the honour of this day ſhall be his, and he ſhall be indebted to his own merit alone for victory.’ Upon this occaſion thirty thouſand of the French were killed in the field of battle, and the day after they experienced another defeat. This victory is partly aſcribed to four pieces of artillery, which the Engliſh firſt made uſe of here, and the uſe of which had been but lately diſcovered. Edward, after two victories gained in two days, took Calais, of which the Engliſh remained in poſſeſſion two hundred and ten years.
This war, which was at once carried on in three different counties of France, thinned the inha⯑bitants of the invaded country, and drained that of the invaders. But a deſtruction, ſtill more ter⯑rible than that of war, contributed, at this time, to deſolate the wretched inhabitants of Europe. A peſtilence more terrible than any mentioned in former hiſtory, which had already almoſt diſpeo⯑pled Aſia and Afric, came to ſettle upon the weſ⯑tern world, with increaſed malignity. The fourth part of the people were cut off by it: in London it raged with ſuch violence, that in one year's ſpace there were buried, in Charter-houſe church⯑yard, above fifty thouſand perſons. It was in the midſt of this terrible ſcourge of nature, that the ambition of Edward and Philip were contending for new conqueſts, and adding to the calamities of mankind. Theſe ravages, however, were ſilently [131] repaired by commerce and induſtry: thoſe arts, which were then deſpiſed by Princes, were laying the ſeeds of future opulence and increaſed popu⯑lation. Theſe arts were travelling, gradually, from Italy, and had begun to find harbour in England: the refinements and the pleaſures of ſenſe every day began to improve, but intellectual refinement was yet unknown: ſenſual enjoyments muſt ever be carried to ſome height, before man⯑kind can find leiſure or taſte for entertainments of a more delicate nature.
During the Engliſh victories on the continent, the Scotch, ever willing to embrace a favourable opportunity of rapine or revenge, invaded Eng⯑land with a numerous army. This unexpected invaſion, at ſuch a juncture, alarmed the Engliſh, but, however, was not capable of diſheartening them. Lionel, Edward's ſon, who was left guar⯑dian of England during his father's abſence, was yet but a boy, incapable of commanding an army; but the victories on the continent even ſeemed to inſpire women with ardour. Philippa, Edward's Queen, took upon her to repulſe the enemy, in perſon: to that end, heading the troops drawn to⯑gether from all parts, with wonderful expedition, ſhe marched directly againſt the Scots, and offer⯑ed them battle. The Scotch King was no leſs impatient to engage: he imagined a victory would be eaſy againſt undiſciplined troops, and headed by a woman: but he was miſerably deceived; he had not only the mortification to loſe the day, but to be made a priſoner by the hands of the Engliſh.
Theſe conqueſts abroad were, however, no way favourable to the cauſe of liberty at home. As the King became victorious, he neceſſarily in⯑creaſed in independence. The barons, clergy, [132] and people, balanced each other's power; the royal power alone was growing beyond its bounds. Yet Edward was too ſenſible a Monarch to give open diſguſt; he was only laying a foundation of de⯑ſpotiſm for his ſucceſſor to build upon; and, had he been of equal capacity with his father, he might have ſeized upon public liberty with impu⯑nity. But I have tranſgreſſed the bounds of a let⯑ter, without coming to the concluſion of this Prince's reign; I muſt therefore refer you to my next.
LETTER XIX.
YOU have already ſeen how unjuſtly the peo⯑ple diſtribute titles to Kings, before they have deſerved them: you have ſeen the ſecond Edward called the Father of his country, in the beginning of his reign; and yet fall, in the end, a miſerable ſacrifice to its reſentment. You have ſeen Philip Valois, ſirnamed the Fortunate, upon coming to the crown, ſuffering the moſt ſignal de⯑feats, but ſome time after.
John ſucceeded Philip in the throne of France, but had his pretenſions conteſted by Edward the Black Prince, who commanded the army of his father. This young Prince's gallantry, bravery, and modeſty, had won the affections of his ſol⯑diers, and he almoſt became invincible at their head. John, in the mean time, was at the head of a divided and factious nobility; the govern⯑ment [133] of France, being under this John, exactly what that of England had been under a Prince of the ſame name ſome reigns before. They had their parliaments of barons, deſpotic over their own hereditary poſſeſſions; and they obliged John of France to ſign a charter, very much reſembling the Magna Charta, which had been ſigned by the Engliſh Monarch. The warlike reſources of France and England were, therefore, at this time very un⯑equal. John was at the head of a nobility which acknowledged no ſubordination amongſt each other: they led their dependant ſlaves to the fight, and obeyed ſuperior command only as it ſuited their in⯑clination; their King might more juſtly be ſaid to command a number of ſmall armies under diſtinct leaders, than one vaſt machine operating with uni⯑formity and united force. The French barons paid their own ſoldiers, puniſhed their tranſgreſ⯑ſions, and rewarded their fidelity. But very dif⯑ferent were the forces of England: the main body of the Engliſh army was compoſed of the people, indiſcriminately levied, paid by the King, and regarding him as the ſource of preferment or diſ⯑grace. Inſtead of perſonal attendance, the nobi⯑lity contributed ſupplies in money; and there was only ſuch a number of nobles in the army, as might keep the ſpirit of honour alive, without diminiſhing military ſubordination.
With an army thus compoſed, the Black Prince advanced to Poictiers, and ravaged a country that once belonged to his anceſtors. King John, at the head of ſixty thouſand men, came up to give him battle: the Engliſh army was in ſuch a ſitua⯑tion, that he might readily have ſtarved it into any terms he thought proper, but he was impa⯑tient of ſuch a delay: both generals committed [134] unpardonable faults; the one in being led thus into a defile, the other in not taking a proper ad⯑vantage of the ſituation. But, at this age, we muſt not expect Caeſars or Hannibals to conduct armies; ignorant generals were oppoſed by gene⯑rals ſtill more ignorant. The battle of Poictiers, which ſoon followed, very much reſembled that of Creſſy: the ſuperior diſcipline of the Engliſh ar⯑my came off victorious, the flower of the French were cut off, and the King, being wounded in the face, was taken priſoner. A particular, worth noting, is, that he ſurrendered himſelf to one of his own ſubjects, whom he had formerly baniſhed, and who now fought for his enemies. Of four ſons the King of France had with him, the three eldeſt quickly fled, and, by their cowardice, con⯑tributed to the defeat of the army: his fourth and youngeſt ſon, as yet but thirteen years old, ſtill fought by his father, ſtuck near him in all the vi⯑ciſſitudes of the field, and, at length, was taken priſoner by his ſide. This is a remarkable inſtance of the education Princes then gave their children.
This victory was, in a great meaſure, owing to the valour of the Black Prince, but his modeſty, after conqueſt, was ſtill more remarkable. In the moſt humble manner he remonſtrated with his royal captive, who was complaining of his miſ⯑fortunes, that ſtill he had the comfort left to re⯑flect, that though he loſt the victory, yet his cou⯑rage deſerved it, and that a ſubmiſſive deference to his perſon ſhould never be wanting to make him forget his captivity. In April following, the Prince arrived in England, bringing his priſoner with him, entering into London in a remarkable manner. The Prince, upon the left, rode a little black horſe, while the royal priſoner was mounted [135] on a ſtately white charger, remarkable for its fur⯑niture and beauty.
Two Kings, priſoners in the ſame court, at the ſame time, were conſidered as glorious conqueſts; but all that England gained by them was only glo⯑ry. Whatever was acquired in France, with all the ſplendors of triumph, was ſucceſſively, and in a manner, ſilently loſt, without even the morti⯑fication of a defeat. The treaties that were made with the captive Kings, as may be eaſily imagined, were highly to the advantage of their conquerors; but thoſe treaties were no longer obſerved than while the Engliſh had it in their power to enforce obedience. It is true, John held to his engage⯑ments as far as was in his power; but, by being a priſoner he loſt his authority, and his misfortunes rendered him contemptible. Upon his return from captivity, he not only found himſelf without fi⯑nances, but at the head of an exhauſted ſtate; ſoldiers without diſcipline, and peaſants without law. One of the chiefs of the banditti, upon this occaſion, aſſumed the title of The Friend of God, and the Enemy of Mankind. A citizen of Sens, called John of Gouge, alſo got himſelf, by means of robberies, to be acknowledged King, and cauſed as many calamities by his devaſtations, as the real King had cauſed by his misfortunes. Such was the ſtate of France upon the arrival of John from England; yet, ſuch was the abſurdity of this Monarch, that he immediately prepared for a cru⯑ſade into the Holy Land, before he was ſcarce re⯑placed on his throne: had his exhauſted ſubjects been able to furniſh him out for this chimerical project, it is probable he would have gone through with it, but their miſeries were ſuch, as to be even incapable of paying his ranſom; upon which he [136] again returned to England, where he died in leſs than a year. It is ſaid his paſſion for the Counteſs of Saliſbury was the real cauſe of this journey; and, indeed, his age, he being near ſixty, when men too often indulge this prepoſterous paſſion, and the gallantry of the times ſeem to countenance this opinion.
If England, during theſe ſhining revolutions, gained any real advantage, it was only that of having a ſpirit of elegance and honour now diffuſed through every rank of people. The meaneſt ſol⯑dier now began to follow his leader from love, and not compulſion; he was brave from ſentiment alone, and had the honour of his country beating at his heart, even though in the humbleſt ſtation. This was the time when chivalry was at the high⯑eſt, and all the ſucceſſes of England, at this pe⯑riod, were owing to a concurrence of circumſtances not much regarded by hiſtorians: ‘A romantic nation was led on by a romantic King.’
This ſpirit of chivalry, in ſome meaſure, ſerved to ſoften the ferocity of the age; it was a mixture of love, generoſity, and war. You have already ſeen, that the ſons of Princes and the nobility, in⯑ſtead of being bred to arts, or poliſhed by the ſciences, were brought into the field at an early age, and inſtructed in no other arts, but thoſe of arms.
This inſtruction conſiſted in little more than merely how to ſit on horſe-back, to wield the lance, to run at the ring, to flouriſh at a tourna⯑ment, to fall at the feet of a miſtreſs, and attain ſuch accompliſhments as inured their bodies to bear the fatigues of a campaign. The rules of tactics, of incampments, of ſtratagems, or ſorti⯑fications, were but little minded by any.
[137] Charles the Wiſe, of France, ſoon therefore, by a finely conducted policy, regained whatever was loſt by John, his predeceſſor. Edward the Black Prince, emaciated by a lingering conſump⯑tion, died at the palace of Weſtminſter, in the forty-ſixth year of his age. England began to wear a face of diſcontent; the public treaſure was laviſhed without any advantage to the kingdom; the ſubjects laboured under numberleſs grievances; in ſhort, the kingdom ſeemed now to feel, that a nation might be at once very victorious and very unhappy. But, to complete their miſeries, Ed⯑ward, their King, was now no longer what he was in the earlier parts of his reign: he was ſunk into unmanly indolence, and gave himſelf up to the en⯑joyment of looſe deſire, in the arms of a favourite concubine, called Allice Perrers. His parliament made frequent remonſtrances againſt this baſe ob⯑livion of himſelf: the parliaments, at this time, were not as formerly, factions ready to oppreſs public liberty, but aſſemblies of wiſe and good men, ſedulous for common welfare, and of wiſ⯑dom equal to the rectitude of their intentions; they frequently remonſtrated againſt the King's and his miniſters conduct; they, at one time, had in⯑fluence ſufficient to get his concubine removed, but he ſoon took her back, for the paſſions of age are incurable. In her company he forgot all the burdens, duties, and fatigues of ſtate, and left the kingdom to be plundered by a rapacious mi⯑niſtry: he did not live to ſurvive the conſequences of his bad conduct; he died at Shene in Surry, deſerted by all, even by thoſe who had formerly grown rich by his bounty. Richard II, ſon of the Black Prince, was conſtituted his ſucceſſor, [138] and came to govern a diſcontented people, a rapa⯑cious miniſtry, and an impoveriſhed ſtate. Theſe were the calamities conſequent upon the errors of the preceding reign. Edward III. eſcaped them, but they fell heavily upon Richard, his ſucceſſor.
LETTER XX.
THE faults of conquerors, as I have already obſerved, generally fall upon their ſucceſſors. Richard II. came to the throne of his grandfather, when yet but eleven, and found the people diſcon⯑tented, and poor. The gentry were, in fact, luxurious, a ſpirit of profuſion had entered with the ſpirit of gallantry; this neceſſarily produced indolence and rapacity among the higher orders of the kingdom, and their wants muſt neceſſarily produce an oppreſſion of the reſt.
The regents, however, appointed during the King's minority, ſeemed no way ſollicitous to ap⯑peaſe theſe murmurings. The Duke of Lancaſter, better known by the name of John of Ghaunt, in the very beginning, diſguſted the people, by robbing two Knights of a priſoner, which they had taken in war; and, at the ſame time, ſeveral expeditions againſt the French and Scotch happen⯑ed to be carried on without ſucceſs. But a new engagement, entered into by the crown, of aſſiſt⯑ing Portugal, at a time when the government was inſulted by nearer enemies, raiſed the people's in⯑dignation. To ſupport this unneceſſary alliance, a ſubſidy was to be levied by a poll-tax, payable [139] by all above the age of fifteen: this, at laſt, raiſed the people's refentment into an inſurrection.
Notwithſtanding the numbers, who by war, by a reſidence in towns, and by other means, had be⯑come free, yet there were ſtill multitudes in the country who had lands in villenage, that, as yet, were only ſlaves to their lords from whom they held. Theſe men had ſeen the charms of liberty, from its effects upon others; and they panted for freedom themſelves. The luxury and opulence which they ſaw others enjoy, but for which they toiled, became an incentive to them to ſtruggle for liberty alſo. Several of theſe had become opulent enough to purchaſe their freedom, but, by an un⯑juſt act of parliament, thoſe purchaſes were de⯑clared of no validity. This the peaſants conſider⯑ed as an infraction of the laws of humanity, and ſuch, indeed, it actually was. A parliament of lords, and rich commoners, in this inſtance, feem⯑ed to have no regard for the rights of men whom they conſidered as ſlaves, as if ſome orders of man⯑kind were held even too vile to find juſtice. The minds of the people were, therefore, thus prepared for ſedition, when the manner of collecting the polltax provoked them to open revolt.
We have, in preceding reigns, perceived popu⯑lar inſurrections only in the towns; we now find the ſpirit of ſeditious liberty ſpreading into the country. Citizens, at firſt, begin to perceive their own ſtrength, and next the ſame manner of think⯑ing is embraced by the peaſant, whom the ſeveri⯑ty of the laws had annexed to the ſoil. We now begin to find a knowledge of the rights of huma⯑nity diffuſed even to the very loweſt of the peo⯑ple, and exerting itſelf in rude and terrible efforts for freedom.
[140] The preſent inſurrection began in Eſſex, where a report was induſtriouſly ſpread, implying, that the peaſants were doomed to death; that their houſes would be burned, and their farms plun⯑dered. The country people, alarmed at this in⯑telligence, roſe in their own defence, and, their numbers continually increaſing, they advanced near London, to the number of an hundred thou⯑ſand, with banners diſplayed. At the head of this undiſciplined concourſe was one Walter, by trade a tyler; he was one of thoſe hardy ſpirits ſo fre⯑quently found among the common Engliſh, ready to face any danger, and ſupport every calamity: in exacting the poll-tax he had refuſed to pay for his daughter, alledging, that ſhe was under the age mentioned in the act of parliament. The brutal collector inſiſted upon her being a full grown wo⯑man, and, in order to aſcertain his aſſertions, pro⯑ceeded to acts of indecency; this provoked the fa⯑ther to ſuch a degree, that he ſtruck him dead at one blow with his hammer: Wat Tyler was there⯑fore conſidered as a champion in the cauſe, and appointed ſpokeſman to the people. It is eaſy to imagine the diſorders committed by ſuch a tumul⯑tuous aſſembly; they burned and pillaged where⯑ever they came, and revenged their former miſeries upon their maſters, the gentry, to whom they no longer acknowledged ſubjection. After having entered the Tower, and murdered ſuch as they re⯑garded as enemies, they divided themſelves into bodies, and took up their quarters in different parts of the environs of the city. At length, Richard, riding towards Smithfield, invited them to a con⯑ference, in order to know and remove their griev⯑ances. Wat Tyler juſt entered Smithfield, when the King's Knight delivered the royal meſſage, [141] without alighting, not imagining he ſhould ſtand upon ceremony: but this haughty demagogue, whoſe pride began to riſe with his exaltation, was ſo offended at this want of reſpect, that he was going to kill him, if the King, who was himſelf advancing, had not ordered him to diſmount. In Wat Tyler's conference with the King, being both on horſeback, he made ſeveral propoſals, which, though cenſured by hiſtorians as extrava⯑gant, in reality breathe nothing but common juſ⯑tice. He deſired that all ſlaves ſhould be ſet free, and that all commonages ſhould be open to the poor as well as the rich: whilſt he made theſe de⯑mands, he now and then lifted up his ſword, in a menacing manner; which inſolence ſo raiſed the indignation of William Walworth, mayor of Lon⯑don, who attended the King, that, without con⯑ſidering to what danger he expoſed his maſter, he ſtunned Tyler with a blow of his mace, and Sir Philpot, riding up, thruſt his ſword through his body: his followers, ſeeing their leader on the ground, encouraged each other to revenge his death, and their bows were now bent for execu⯑tion, when Richard, though not quite ſixteen years of age, inſtead of flying, rode up to the re⯑bels, with admirable conſtancy and preſence of mind, crying out with a reſolute voice, ‘What, my lieges, will you then kill your King? Be not concerned for the loſs of your leader: I myſelf will now be your general, follow me into the field, and you ſhall have whatever you deſire.’
The rebels immediately deſiſted; they followed the King, as if mechanically; and the next day received a charter of freedom and a general par⯑don. But theſe were only extorted grants, they were ſoon retracted, the ring-leaders of the rebel⯑lion [142] were tried, convicted of treaſon, and executed without mercy. The inſurrections of the barons againſt their King, hiſtorians talk of with no great degree of animoſity; the inſurrection of the ple⯑beians againſt the barons, in the preſent caſe, is branded with all the virulence of reproach. The puniſhment of the inſurgent barons, is generally ſtyled cruelty; the puniſhment of men who fought for native freedom, is called juſtice; but, we muſt be contented with ſuch miſrepreſentations of facts, till philoſophers can be found to write hiſtory.
We now ſee the firſt wrong ſtep in Richard's conduct. He granted the rebels a charter, by which he gave the ſanction of juſtice to their claims, but ſoon revoked this charter, which was apparently denying that juſtice they demanded. By theſe means he diſſipated, indeed, the combi⯑nation for that time, but their hatred remained, and was propagated by the ſeverity of puniſhment.
By this means Richard had effectually alienated the affections of the lower orders of people; it now only remained to make the parliament his enemies. Being come to his ſeventeenth year, he began more plainly to diſcover his inclinations, which had hitherto been reſtrained by the authority of his governors: he had been bred up amidſt flatterers, who never ventured to controul his will; he had ſeen the liberties taken by Edward III. over his ſubjects, and he fancied he might imitate him in them; but Richard was not the conqueror of France and Scotland; he was hated by the poor, and envied by three guardians of great power, who ſecretly deſired his crown: every error, there⯑fore, in the conduct of a King, ſo ſituated, muſt be attended with dangerous and violent effects; his indolence in repreſſing the invafions of the [143] Scotch, and the machinations of France, were ſufficient to give diſguſt to his conduct. All his faults were exaggerated, and his behaviour, even when right, publicly reproved. Unaccuſtomed to controul, he laid a ſcheme of becoming abſolute, and governing without his parliament's aſſiſtance or advice. Willing, however, to colour his ar⯑bitrary proceeding with the appearance of juſtice, he aſked the opinion of the Judges: their opinions have been too often found to be influenced by in⯑tereſt; they gave it as their opinion, that the King was above law. Yet perhaps they might have been directed by ancient laws, but cuſtom had in⯑troduced new modes of thinking, and they did not pay a juſt deference to her power. This ſentence the Lords oppoſed by declarations, and, offering various reaſons, were quickly at the head of forty thouſand men to ſecond their arguments: but, what had ſtill greater weight, they threatened to chuſe a new King, which ſo operated upon the King's natural puſillanimity, that he conſented to change his favourite miniſters, who had adviſed him to extend the royal prerogative; he renewed his coronation-oath, and the ſame formalities were uſed as at the commencement of a new reign.
We have ſeen numberleſs of theſe inſurrections without any apparent conſequence; the King cir⯑cumſcribed in one reign, and permitted to range at liberty in another: the only ſecret, at that time, for a King to become deſpotic, was to be ever in the field; a warlike Prince might command the nobility, as they were obliged to follow him in his campaigns; and he might command the people, from that fondneſs which the vulgar have for a conqueror. Richard, however, was no way war⯑like; but, being bred up in the luxury and pride [144] of a court, ſtill expected deference and obedience, which could, at that time, be obtained only by merit in war.
Having, by the removal of his favourites, ren⯑dered himſelf ſtill more feeble than before, he now ran into profuſion, and endeavoured to forget his real weakneſs, in extravagance and luxury. Such expences neceſſarily created new demands upon the people, and they were bold enough to refuſe: this neceſſarily produced new inſurrections, and reiterated puniſhments on the part of the King. Puniſhment and arbitrary proceedings generally produce but a temporary and fatal ſecurity: Richard, however, inſenſible of this, imagined that now was the time to render himſelf deſpotic, and had even influence ſufficient to prevail upon a parlia⯑ment, called in the year 1397, to juſtify his pre⯑tenſions. By this mercileſs ſeſſion, ſeveral of the nobility loſt their lives: the Archbiſhop of Can⯑terbury was baniſhed, the Earl of Arundel put to death, and the Earl of Warwick ſentenced to quit the kingdom.
Every thing ſeemed to contribute to ſupport the King in the acquiſition of his new created power. The moſt forward to oppoſe his deſigns had ſuf⯑fered death or baniſhment, and they who ſtill re⯑mained, were bribed to acquieſce, by penſions, grants, and places. The great officers of the crown, the governors of the towns and counties, were all devoted to his intereſt: yet, all this was but a deceitful ſecurity; this was a power founded upon intereſt or terror alone, and not up⯑on affection; the people hated him, and the gene⯑rality of the nobles only obeyed him through con⯑ſtraint.
[145] In this manner did this giddy Monarch ſuffer himſelf to be deluded by vain hopes, and eve⯑ry day gave ſome new inſtance of ſtraining the royal prerogative beyond what it could bear: but ſoon an opportunity offered to induce the people to refuſe a blind obedience to his unjuſt commands, and to convince him of his former errors; a charge happening to be exhibited by the Duke of Hereford againſt the Duke of Norfolk, for having ſpoken ſeditious words againſt his Majeſty, in a private converſation; for want of ſufficient proof to ſup⯑port the accuſation, it was decreed, by the lords in parliament, that the diſpute ſhould be decided by ſingle combat, according to the laws of chival⯑ry, ſtill in faſhion. The time and the place were appointed for the determining this affair, and the combatants met accordingly. It may not be amiſs to deſcribe the ceremonies upon that occaſion:
Hereford, the challenger, firſt appeared, on a white courſer, gaily capariſoned, armed at all points, with his drawn ſword in his hand: when he approached the liſts, the Mareſchal demanded who he was, to which he anſwered, ‘"I am Henry of Lancaſter, Duke of Hereford, come hither, according to my duty, againſt Thomas Mow⯑bray, Duke of Norfolk, a falſe traitor to God, the King, the realm, and me."’ Then, taking the oath that his quarrel was juſt and true, he de⯑ſired to enter the liſts; which being granted, he ſheathed his ſword, pulled down his beaver, croſſed himſelf on the forehead, ſeized his lance, paſſed the barrier, alighted and ſate down in a chair of green velvet, placed at one end of the liſts. He had ſcarce taken his ſeat, when the King came into the field with great pomp, attended by the peers the Count of St. Pol, who came from France [146] on purpoſe to ſee this famous trial; and ten thou⯑ſand men at arms to prevent tumults and diſturb⯑ance. His Majeſty, being ſeated in his chair of ſtate, the King at Arms proclaimed, that none but ſuch as were appoined to marſhal the field, ſhould preſume to touch the liſts, upon pain of death. Then another herald proclaimed aloud, ‘"Behold here Henry of Lancaſter, Duke of Hereford, who has entered the liſts to perform his devoir againſt Thomas Mowbray, Duke of Norfolk, on pain of being counted falſe and recreant."’The Duke of Norfolk immediately appeared in arms, mounted upon a barbed horſe, with a coat of arms of crimſon velvet, embroidered with lions of ſilver and mulberry trees; and, having taken his oath before the conſtable and mareſchal, enter⯑ed the field, exclaiming aloud, ‘"God defend the right."’ Alighting from his horſe, he placed himſelf in a chair of crimſon velvet, oppoſite to his antagoniſt, at the other end of the liſts: then the Mareſchal, having meaſured their lances, de⯑livered one to the challenger, and ſent a Knight with the other to the Duke of Norfolk, and pro⯑clamation was made that they ſhould prepare for the combat. They immediately mounted their horſes, th [...]n cloſed their beavers, fixed their lances on the reſts; and, the trumpets ſounding a charge, the Duke of Hereford began his career with great violence, but, before he could join his antagoniſt, the King threw down his warder, and the heralds interpoſed. Richard ordered their lances to be taken away, and baniſhed the Duke of Hereford for ten years, and the Duke of Norfolk for life. Nothing could be a ſtronger proof of that unac⯑countable error, which ever attended this King's deſigns, than this behaviour: the one was con⯑demned [147] to exile, without being charged with any offence; and the other, without being convicted of any crime. The whole kingdom was diſpleaſed at the diſappointment, and this determination, in thoſe ferocious times, even ſeemed to argue cow⯑ardice in the King. The Duke of Norfolk was overwhelmed with grief and deſpondence, at the judgment awarded againſt him; he retired to Ve⯑nice, where, in a little time, he died of ſorrow and chagrin. Hereford, on the contrary, bore his fate with great reſignation, and behaved with ſuch reſpectful ſubmiſſion, when he went to take his leave, that the King remitted four years of his exile. From this he withdrew to Paris, where he met with a favourable reception from the French King, and, in all probability, would have married the only daughter of the Duke of Berry, had not the match been interrupted by the interpoſition of Richard, who ſent the Earl of Saliſbury, as his ambaſſador, to repreſent Hereford as a perſon who had been guilty of treaſonable practices, and to aſſure the French court, that he would never be permitted to return to his own country. The Princes of the blood, alarmed at this declaration, broke off the match abruptly; and, when Here⯑ford expoſtulated with them on the ſubject, made him acquainted with their reaſons for retracting the aſſent they had already given to his propoſal. Such complicated injuries could not fail to aggra⯑vate the reſentment of the Duke againſt Richard, which he had hitherto concealed; and theſe, pro⯑bably, firſt turned his thoughts upon acquiring the crown of England. No man could be better qualified for a project of this nature than the Duke of Hereford: he was cool, cautious, diſcerning, and reſolute; he had diſtinguiſhed himſelf by his [148] courage, both at home and abroad: he was the idol of the ſoldiery, and the favourite of the peo⯑ple: he was immenſely rich, and, by blood or al⯑liance, connected with all the noblemen in Eng⯑land. The greateſt part of the kingdom not on⯑ly murmured, but loudly exclaimed againſt the ſentence of baniſhment which had been denounced againſt him, and ardently wiſhed for an opportu⯑nity of doing him juſtice.
It was not long before they were gratified in this particular: his father, the Duke of Lancaſter, dying in February, the baniſhed Duke of Here⯑ford ought to have ſucceeded to his titles and eſtate, by virtue of his hereditary right, as well as of the letters patent which he had obtained, even after his ſentence at Coventry. But Richard, notwith⯑ſtanding his former grants, allured by the great⯑neſs of the prize, by a ſentence no leſs unjuſt than avaricious, ſeized the deceaſed Duke's effects and eſtate, and decreed that the ſon's baniſhment ſhould be perpetual. The laws and liberties of the peo⯑ple were now in a moſt deplorable ſtate; there was ſcarce a man in the kingdom able, though all were willing, to oppoſe the arbitrary power uſurp⯑ed by the King. Finding himſelf above all re⯑ſtraint, he gave himſelf up to a ſoft and effeminate life, regardleſs of the good of the public. His mi⯑niſters, not to be behind their Monarch, gave lit⯑tle attention to buſineſs, but ſaw, without any concern, the Engliſh nation fall into the utmoſt contempt. In this ſituation the people naturally turned their eyes upon the baniſhed Duke, as the only perſon from whom they could expect redreſs: he was ſtimulated by private injuries, and had al⯑liance and intereſt to give weight to his meaſures. [149] The malecontents only waited for the abſence of the King, to put theſe meaſures into execution.
For this an occaſion ſoon offered: the Earl of Marche, preſumptive heir of the crown, having been appointed the King's Lieutenant in Ireland, was ſlain, in a ſkirmiſh, by the native Iriſh; and Richard was ſo incenſed at this, that, with a nu⯑merous army, he went over to revenge his death in perſon. The Duke of Lancaſter, (for this was the title which the Duke of Hereford aſſumed af⯑ter his father's death) being informed of Richard's departure from England, with three ſmall veſſels, landed at Ravenſpur in Yorkſhire, at firſt only pretending that his ſole aim was to obtain juſtice. The Earl of Northumberland, who had long been a malecontent, and Henry Piercy, his ſon, ſir⯑named Hotſpur, immediately joined him with ſome troops: after this junction, the concourſe of people coming to liſt under his banner was ſo great, that, in a few days, his army was threeſcore thouſand ſtrong; ſo eager were the nobles and people to put themſelves under the protection of a Prince, who allured them with the proſpect of freedom.
Whilſt theſe things were tranſacting in England, Richard was in Ireland in perfect ſecurity: the contrary winds, which continued to blow above three weeks, hindered his receiving any news of the rebellion in his native dominions; but, when he heard of it, he immediately impriſoned the Duke of Lancaſter's brothers, whom he had taken over with him; and reſolved to go immediately in⯑to England, to fight the enemy. Yet, ever wa⯑vering in his reſolutions, he was perſuaded to ſtay ſome time longer, till he could prepare ſhips to tranſport all his forces at once. This delay com⯑pleated his ruin: his friends in England had aſſem⯑bled [150] an army of forty thouſand men, who, upon finding the King did not return to head them at the time appointed, diſperſed. Richard, however, landed in England, and ſoon perceived his unhap⯑py ſituation: he ſaw himſelf in the midſt of an enraged people, none of whom he could rely on; forſaken by thoſe who, in the ſun-ſhine of power, contributed to fan his follies. Thus, not know⯑ing whom to truſt, or where to turn, he ſaw no other hopes of ſafety, but to throw himſelf on the generoſity of his enemy: he therefore ſent him word, that he was ready to ſubmit to whatever terms he thought proper to preſcribe, and that he earneſtly deſired a conference. For this pur⯑poſe the Duke of Lancaſter appointed a caſtle within about ten miles of Cheſter, where he came, next day, with his whole army. Richard, who the day before had been brought hither alone, de⯑ſcrying his rival's approach from the walls, went down to receive him; while the Duke, after ſome ceremony, entered the caſtle in complete armour, only his head was bare in compliment to the fallen King. The King, approaching, received him with the ſalutation of, ‘Couſin of Lancaſter, you are welcome:’ at which the Duke, bowing three times to the ground, replied in theſe terms, ‘My Lord the King, I am come ſooner than you appointed, becauſe, your people ſay, you have for one and twenty years governed with rigour and indiſcretion, ſo that they are very ill ſatisfied with your conduct; but, if it pleaſe God, I will help you to govern them better for the time to come.’ To this declaration the King made no other an⯑ſwer, but, ‘Fair Couſin, ſince it pleaſes you, it pleaſes us likewiſe.’
The King was ſoon taught to feel his wretched ſituation; he was led, triumphantly, through every [151] town, amidſt an infinite concourſe of people, who curſed him and extolled the Duke. Long live the good Duke of Lancaſter, our deliverer, was the general cry: but, for the King, to uſe the em⯑phatic words of the poet, ‘None cry'd, God bleſs him.’ After theſe repeated indignities, he was confined a cloſe priſoner in the Tower, there, if poſſible, to undergo ſtill a greater variety of ſtudied inſo⯑lence and flagrant contempt. Unhappy Richard, thus humbled, began to loſe his ſpirits with his power; nor was there any great ſhare of policy required to induce him to reſign his crown. Upon this reſignation the Duke of Lancaſter founded his ſtrongeſt claim; but, willing to fortify his preten⯑ſions with every appearance of juſtice, the parlia⯑ment was ſoon induced to confirm his claims. The King was ſolemnly depoſed, and the Duke of Lan⯑caſter elected in his ſtead, by the title of Henry IV. Thus began the conteſt between the houſes of York and Lancaſter, which, for ſeveral years after, deluged the kingdom with blood; yet, which con⯑tributed, in the end, to give ſtrength and conſiſt⯑ency to the conſtitution.
LETTER XXI.
NUMEROUS formalities are often uſed by Princes, only to cover impotence or impoſ⯑ture. Henry the Fourth, knowing the injuſtice of his title to the crown, was at leaſt determined to give his coronation all poſſible ſolemnity. A peculiar oil was uſed upon this occaſion, he affect⯑ed great devotion, and every action ſhewed with how much humility he could be an uſurper.
[152] Notwithſtanding the validity of his title, what⯑ever pains he took to ſecure it, was contravert⯑ed by ſome, and a conſpiracy was ſoon formed to replace Richard on the throne. This was projected by ſeveral noblemen, and the particu⯑lars of the ſcheme were committed to writing, each being provided with a copy, ſigned by his confederates: among other conſpirators the Duke of Aumerle was one, and he had been one of a conſultation, when it was reſolved, that the King ſhould be aſſaſſinated at Oxford, at a tournament; but, when that opportunity offered, he was miſſ⯑ing among the number. It happened, at that time, he was viſiting his father, the Duke of York, and, ſitting at dinner, let fall a paper from his boſom, which his father took up and examined. The Duke, finding the contents to be a conjuration againſt the King's life, flew with the utmoſt ex⯑pedition to Windſor, to inform his Majeſty of the plot: the ſon, gueſſing his father's intention, went by a ſhorter way, and obtained his pardon before his father's arrival, who, ſoon after com⯑ing, produced the paper with the conſpirators names. Henry, alarmed at this intelligence, uſed the moſt vigorous efforts to diſpel the riſing ſtorm.
The conſpirators had, by this time, dreſſed up one of Richard's ſervants, named Maudlin, in royal robes, giving out, that he was the depoſed King, who, having eſcaped from priſon, was come to implore the aſſiſtance of his ſubjects. Pity is a paſſion for which the Engliſh have ever been re⯑markable; Majeſty, in diſtreſs, was ſufficient to excite all their loyalty and compaſſion, and they flocked in great numbers round the conſpiring leaders. Their army ſoon became conſiderable, and encamped near Cirenceſter, while the leaders [153] took up their head quarters in that city: but they were ſo careleſs, or unexperienced in war, that they neglected to place proper guards at the gates and the avenues of the place. This the mayor ſoon obſerved, and, aſſembling four hundred men in the night, he ſecured the gates, ſo as to exclude the troops that were encamped without the walls: and then attacked the chiefs within. The Duke of Surry and Earl of Saliſbury, two of the princi⯑pal conſpirators, were taken, after an obſtinate defence, and beheaded on the ſpot, by the mayor's order; while the Duke of Exeter, and Earl of Glouceſter, two more of the party, eſcaped over the tops of the houſes into the camp, with a view to ſtorm the town at the head of their forces; but they found the tents and baggage abandoned by the ſoldiers, who, hearing the noiſe and tumult within, had concluded that a party of the King's army had privately entered, and, from this per⯑ſuaſion, fled with the utmoſt precipitation. The two Lords, perceiving it out of their power to execute their deſign, parted, the better to make their eſcape; but they had the misfortune to be taken, and, ſhortly after, loſt their heads upon the ſcaffold.
If we compare the times, which I now at⯑tempt to give you an idea of, with thoſe of King John, or thoſe of ſome reigns before him, we ſhall find a great change, with reſpect to the in⯑ſurgent barons. In the former period they made frequent inſurrections, were often taken in open rebellion, but as frequently pardoned; in the pe⯑riod now in view, they were ſeldom taken with⯑out ſuffering the utmoſt rigour of the law. This plainly ſhews, how much the power of the barons was ſunk in the courſe of a couple of centuries. [154] This revolution of power is, notwithſtanding, na⯑tural and obvious; as the people began to ſhare the government with the nobles, the King was fixed upon as a third perſon, to ſecure the ba⯑lance; and both were contented to make him great, from a jealouſy of each other. Noblemen were therefore now executed, not as petty Mo⯑narchs but offending ſubjects, and none but Kings were conſidered as exempt from penal laws.
In all probability, the ill ſucceſs of this enter⯑prize haſtened Richard's end. One of thoſe aſ⯑ſaſſins, that are found in every court, ready to commit the moſt horrid crimes for reward, came down to the place of this unfortunate Monarch's confinement, and, with eight other followers, ruſhed into his apartment. The King, concluding their deſign was to take away his life, reſolved to ſell it as dearly as he could: he wreſted a poll-ax from one of the murderers, and ſoon laid four of the number dead at his feet; but he was at length overpowered, and ſtruck dead by the blow of a battle-ax. Thus died the unfortunate Richard, in the thirty-third year of his age, while com⯑paſſion for his ſufferings and death made more converts to his family and cauſe, than ever his moſt meritorious actions during life had gained him.
The death of Richard was very ſeaſonable to his ſucceſſor. The King of France had actually raiſed a vaſt armament, in order to replace the depoſed Monarch; and ſo much was Henry ter⯑rified at his intentions, that he ordered the Biſhop of Arundel to arm even the eccleſiaſtics of his pro⯑vince. The preparations of France might have contributed to haſten the fall of Richard; his death was no ſooner known at the French court, than [155] all thoughts of the invaſion were laid aſide, a truce for eight and twenty years was concluded between the two crowns, and it was agreed that Queen Iſabel, who had been married to Richard, but whoſe marriage had never been conſummated, ſhould return to France, her native country.
A kingdom, like England, at that time divided in itſelf, and ſurrounded by enemies on every ſide, could not expect a peace of any continuance; ac⯑cordingly the Scotch began to give new diſtur⯑bances; and, when the armies of England were marched northward, in order to oppoſe their in⯑vaſions, the Welch roſe to vindicate their ancient liberties. Owen Glendour, a name among the people of that country, reſpected even to this day, led them on, and gained ſeveral victories; but his ſucceſſes were only calculated to procure a tempo⯑rary triumph, and no laſting advantage. Whatever honour the Engliſh loſt on the ſide of Wales they gained on that of Scotland: the hiſtories of thoſe times are filled with the petty victories and defeats on either ſide, in theſe wars; but, as they neither ſerved to alter nor transfer power, they ſcarce de⯑ſerve a place in the chronicles of a kingdom.
While Henry was employed in thoſe unavailing campaigns, a more dangerous ſtrom threatened him from his own ſubjects. He claimed the pri⯑ſoners that were taken from the Scotch by the Earl of Northumberland, for himſelf; while the Earl, fluſhed with victory, and conſidering himſelf as the ſupporting column of Henry's throne, reſent⯑ed his demand. A ſcheme was laid, in which the Scotch and Welch were to combine their forces, and aſſiſt Northumberland in elevating Mortimer, as the true heir to the Engliſh throne. As ſoon, therefore, as the confederates were prepared, the [156] Piercies of Northumberland ſuddenly appeared in arms in the North: but, the Earl himſelf falling ill, his brother and ſon marched with his troops to join the Welch, who were advanced as far as Shropſhire. Upon the junction of theſe two ar⯑mies, they publiſhed a manifeſto, which complain⯑ed of many real grievances, and aggravated others. Henry, who had received no intelligence of their deſigns, was extremely ſurprized at the news of this rebellion: but, fortunately, having an army in readineſs, he marched towards Shrewſbury to meet the rebels, who were there encamped. Up⯑on coming up to them, propoſals for a mediation were offered, and ſuch favourable terms promiſed, that it was thought it would end in a reconcilia⯑tion; but diſtruſt on both ſides ſoon broke off the treaty, and the battle ſoon began. In this Henry obtained a complete victory; and Hotſpur, the Earl of Northumberland's ſon, ſo renowned for former ſucceſſes, was ſlain. Mean time the Earl of Northumberland, being recovered, was advanc⯑ing with a body of troops to reinforce the army of the malecontents, and take upon him the com⯑mand: but, hearing by the way of his ſon's and brother's misfortune, he diſmiſſed his troops, not daring to keep the field with ſo few forces before a victorious army. The King, to terminate this troubleſome affair as ſoon as poſſible, promiſed the Earl an abſolute pardon, in caſe he obeyed with⯑out delay, menacing him with utter ruin, ſhould he refuſe the proffered favour. The Earl, finding himſelf without reſource, choſe rather to throw himſelf upon the King's mercy, than lead a pre⯑carious and indigent life in exile: he therefore re⯑paired to York, and threw himſelf at the King's ſeet, who punctually performed his promiſe. Pro⯑bably [157] he thought the criminal was already ſuffi⯑ciently puniſhed in the death of his ſon and bro⯑ther.
The extinction of one rebellion only ſeemed to give riſe to new: the Archbiſhop of York, being diſſatisfied, and eager to revenge the King's death, by whom he was promoted, entered into a confe⯑deracy, with ſome other lords, to dethrone Henry. Northumberland, though pardoned, was again a⯑mong the number; they were, however, once more prematurely diſcovered, and moſt of the con⯑ſpirators died by the hands of the executioner, but Northumberland had the good fortune to eſcape into Scotland.
While the kingdom was thus torn by faction, and threatened with foreign invaſions, a ſtill more terrible calamity threatened it from the clergy. Since Wickliffe publiſhed his opinions, about the end of the reign of Edward III, his doctrine was ſo ſpread, that the clergy were in continual appre⯑henſions of its prevailing: Henry was now to catch at every aſſiſtance, in order to ſtrengthen his uſurped power; among others, that of the clergy was not to be deſpiſed; he therefore ear⯑neſtly recommended to his parliament the care of the church's conſervation. How reluctant ſoever the houſe of commons might be to proſecute a ſect, whoſe only crime was error, the credit of the court, and the cabals of the clergy, obtained, at length, an act for the burning obſtinate heretics. This ſtatute was no ſooner paſſed, than William Sawfre, a follower of Wickliffe, was burned alive, by virtue of the King's writ, delivered to the mayor of London. This was the firſt man in England who ſuffered death for the ſake of religion; but, the fires once kindled, the clergy would not [158] ſuffer them ſoon to be extinguiſhed; they readily perceived, that a power of burning their enemies would revive that temporal power which they poſ⯑ſeſſed about three centuries before: in this they were not miſtaken; they again, by this means, renewed their priſtine authority, but with this dif⯑ference, that as, in the times of the Saxon hep⯑tarchy, their power was founded in the love of the people, in the preſent caſe, it had its original whol⯑ly in their fears.
By theſe means Henry ſurvived all his troubles, and the kingdom enjoyed tranquility. He had no⯑thing to fear from France, diſtracted by its own inteſtine diviſions: the Welch ſued for peace, the regent of Scotland dreaded a rupture with England, leſt Henry ſhould ſend home the King of Scotland, whom he had made his priſoner, and thus terminate the regent's delegated power. Add to this, the male-contents in England were too inconſiderable to at⯑tempt any thing further againſt the government. During this calm, the King endeavoured to efface the impreſſions of ſeverity, which his conduct had made upon the people, by affecting a popularity and regard for the welfare of the ſubject; a never fail⯑ing method to conciliate the affection of the Eng⯑liſh in favour of their ſovereign. While he thus laboured, not without ſucceſs, to retrieve the re⯑putation he had loſt, his ſon, the Prince of Wales, ſeemed bent upon incurring public averſion: he gave a looſe to all kinds of debauchery, and was ſurrounded by a crew of profligate wretches, who made a practice of committing he moſt illegal acts of violence. The father was extremely mortified at this degeneracy in his eldeſt ſon, who had al⯑ready exhibited repeated proofs of his valour, con⯑duct, and generoſity; virtues which he now ſeem⯑ed [159] to renounce; while the ſplenetic and gloomy trembled at the proſpect of his ſucceeding to the throne. Nevertheleſs, in the midſt of theſe ex⯑ceſſes, the nobleneſs of his heart ſeemed, at in⯑tervals, to emerge from the gulph in which it was plunged: one of his diſſolute companions, having been brought to trial for ſome miſdemeanor, was condemned, notwithſtanding all the intereſt he could make in his favour; and he was ſo exaſperated at the iſſue of the trial, that he ſtruck the Judge up⯑on the bench. This magiſtrate, whoſe name was Sir William Gaſcoigne, behaved with the dignity that became his office; he forthwith ordered the Prince to be committed to priſon: when this tranſ⯑action was reported to the King, who was an ex⯑cellent judge of mankind, he could not help ex⯑claiming, in a tranſport of joy, Happy is the King, who has a magiſtrate endowed with courage to execute the laws upon ſuch an offender; ſtill more happy in having a ſon willing to ſubmit to ſuch chaſtiſement.
This, in fact, is one of the firſt great inſtances we read in the Engliſh hiſtory, of a magiſtrate do⯑ing juſtice in oppoſition to power. The govern⯑ment was now much changed from what it was in the times, even of Richard, where Judges were but the miniſters of royal caprice.
Henry did not long out-live this interview: per⯑ceiving his end approach, he diſpoſed his mind to the duties of devotion, and took the croſs, fully determined to conſecrate the remaining part of his life in fighting the cauſe of the pilgrims to Jeruſalem, which was, at that time, conſidered as the cauſe of heaven. This is not the firſt inſtance we have ſeen of Princes endeavouring to ſtrike up a bar⯑gain with Providence, and promiſing to perform [160] particular acts of devotion, upon being indulged with a longer period of exiſtence. He imparted his deſign to a great council, aſſembled for that purpoſe; and began to make preparations for the expedition, when his diſorder encreaſed to ſuch a degree, that he was obliged to lay aſide his inten⯑tion, and think of a voyage of by far greater importance. As his conſtitution decayed, his fears of loſing the crown redoubled, even to childiſh anxiety; he would not ſleep, unleſs the royal diadem was laid upon his pillow: one day, being in a violent paroxyſm of his diſorder, the Prince of Wales took up the crown and carried it away; but, ſoon after, the King recovering his ſenſes, and miſſing the crown, he aſked what was be⯑come of it; and, underſtanding the Prince had car⯑ried it off, ‘"What," ſaid the King to the Prince, with marks of indignation, "would you rob me of my dignity before my death?"’ ‘No, replied the Prince, "Thinking your Majeſty was dead, I took the crown as my lawful inheritance; but, now I ſee you alive. I reſtore it with much more pleaſure, and may God grant you many happy days to enjoy it in peace."’ So ſaying, he re⯑placed the crown upon the pillow; and, having re⯑ceived his father's bleſſing, dutifully retired. The King was ſurprized with his laſt fit, at his devo⯑tions before the ſhrine of St. Edward the Confeſſor, in Weſtminſter-abbey, from whence he was car⯑ried to the Jeruſalem chamber. When recovered from his ſwoon, perceiving himſelf in a ſtrange place, he deſired to know if the apartment had any particular name; being told of its appellation, he now concluded a prophecy fulfilled, which ſaid, that he ſhould die in Jeruſalem; and, after ſome good inſtructions to his ſucceſſor, he recommended [161] his ſoul to heaven, and ſoon after expired, on the twentieth day of March, in the forty-ſixth year of his age, and the fourteenth of his reign.
Henry, whatever he might have been as a man, was certainly an excellent King. The govern⯑ment aſſumed both a form and liberty under his adminiſtration: the diſtinction between the nobi⯑lity and the people was rendered leſs conſiderable, and the magiſtrates were leſs arbitrary and leſs venal.
LETTER XXII.
THE death of Henry IV. gave his people but little affliction, among whom he never ac⯑quired any popularity; but the rejoicings made for the ſucceſſion of his ſon, Henry V, were ma⯑nifeſt and ſincere. This Prince was their favou⯑rite, notwithſtanding the profligacy of his youth: in the very height of riot and extravagance, he would, ſometimes, give inſtances of the ſublimeſt virtues. But his courage ſeemed to be what pe⯑culiarly won their affection and eſteem: at this barbarous period, courage ſeemed to be regarded as the only virtue; courage and ſuperſtition then made up the whole ſyſtem of human duty, and ſtamped the character of heroiſm.
The people of Europe were, by this time, de⯑generated from what they were even two hundred years before; a continuance of war had blotted out the very traces of morality. The vices of the clergy had drawn upon them contempt and oppo⯑ſition, which they returned, not by refo [...]ming themſelves, but by perſecuting thoſe who oppoſed [162] them. This reign was begun in attempting to extirpate the hereſy of Wickliffe: John Oldcaſtle, baron of Cobham, was the moſt conſiderable pro⯑tector of this ſect; he was the King's domeſtic, and ſtood highly in his favour. The Archbiſhop of Canterbury, therefore, undertook to prejudice him in the royal opinion, and endeavoured to per⯑ſuade the young Monarch, that fire and faggot were the only inſtruments that were capable of ſaving an heretic from future damnation; and that Oldcaſtle's opinions deſerved the ſevereſt puniſh⯑ments of the law. The King was, at length, per⯑ſuaded to talk with Oldcaſtle in private, and, find⯑ing him immoveable, gave him up to the fury of his enemies. Perſecution ever produces thoſe crimes which it endeavours to aboliſh; Oldcaſtle was condemned, but, eſcaping, was obliged to become, in fact, that guilty perſon which they had at firſt falſly repreſented him: he headed a body of malecontents, and refuſed to be demeanable to royal power. This unhappy man, after a variety of diſtreſſes, at length fell into the power of his enemies; and never did the cruelty of man in⯑vent, or the crimes of the delinquent draw down, more torments than he was made to endure: he was hung up with a chain by the middle, and, by a ſlow fire, burned, or, rather, roaſted alive.
Such ſpectacles as theſe, muſt naturally produce a diſguſt in the people, both to the government and the clergy; but, to turn their minds from theſe hideous ſpectacles, Henry was reſolved to take ad⯑vantage of the troubles in which France was, at that time, involved. Charles, who was then King of France, was ſubject to frequent fits of lunacy, which totally diſqualified him from reign⯑ing: in theſe intervals the ambition of his vaſſals [163] and courtiers had room for exertion, and they grew powerful from the weakneſs of their King. Iſa⯑bella, of Bavaria, his wife, was at the head of one faction; the Duke of Burgundy of another: the faction of the children of the Duke of Orleans was conſiderable; that only, which held by the King, was feeble. Each of theſe, as they hap⯑pened to prevail, branded their captives with the names of traitors, and the gibbets were at once hung with the bodies of the accuſed and the ac⯑cuſers.
This was thought a moſt favourable opportuni⯑ty to reſcue, from France, thoſe grants that had formerly been given up by treaty: Henry, there⯑fore, invaded that kingdom, with an army of fifty thouſand men. He took Harfleur, and advanced into a country already rendered deſolate by factions, and which he now totally laid waſte by a foreign in⯑vaſion: but, tho' the enemy made but a feeble reſiſt⯑ance, yet the climate ſeemed to fight for them, a contagious dyſentery carried off three parts of Hen⯑ry's ſoldiers. In ſuch a ſituation, he had recourſe to an expedient common enough in the barbarous times I am deſcribing; he challenged the Dauphin to ſingle combat, offering to ſtake his pretenſions on the event; this challenge, as might naturally be expected, was rejected; and the French, tho' diſagreeing internally, now ſeemed to unite at the appearance of foreign danger.
Henry ſoon began to repent of his raſh inroad into a country, where diſeaſe, and a powerful ar⯑my, every moment threatened deſtruction; and, therefore, thought of retiring to Calais. In this retreat, which was at once both painful and dan⯑gerous, Henry took every method to inſpire his troops with courage and perſeverance, and ſhewed [164] them, in himſelf, an example of patience and re⯑ſignation. In the mean time the French army was drawn up to obſtruct his paſſage, nor was there any poſſibility of his paſſing them without a bat⯑tle; yet, even that could promiſe but ſmall hopes of victory: his army was waſted with diſeaſe, their ſpirits worn down with fatigue, deſtitute of provi⯑ſions, and but nine thouſand in number, to ſuſtain the ſhock of an enemy amounting to an hundred and fifty thouſand. This diſparity, as it raiſed the courage of the French, ſo it impreſſed the Engliſh with terror. So confident were the French leaders of ſucceſs, that they began to treat for the ranſom of their priſoners: on the 25th of October, 1415, the two armies drew up in battle array, early in the morning, near the caſtle of Agincourt. A narrow ground, flanked on one ſide by a wood, on the other by a rivulet, was to be the ſcene of action. The Conſtable of France commanded the French, and Henry, with Edward, Duke of York, the Engliſh: both armies, for ſome time, kept ſi⯑lently gazing at each other, as if afraid to begin; which Henry perceiving, with a chearful counte⯑nance cried out, My friends, ſince they will not begin, let us ſet them the example; come on, and the bleſſed Trinity be our protection: and now the whole army ſet forward with a ſhout. The French ſtill continued to wait their approach with intrepi⯑dity, when the Engliſh archers let fly a ſhower of arrows, three feet long, which did great execu⯑tion: the French cavalry, advancing to repel theſe two hundred bow-men, who lay till then conceal⯑ed, riſing on a ſudden, let fly among them: the Engliſh, ſeeing their confuſion, now threw by their arrows, and ſell upon them ſword in hand; tho' feeble by diſeaſe, yet they recompenſed the defect [165] by valour. The French at firſt repulſed the aſ⯑ſailants, but they, reſolving to conquer or die, again burſt in upon the enemy, with ſuch impe⯑tuoſity, that they gave way: in the mean time, a body of Engliſh horſe, which had been concealed in a neighbouring wood, ruſhing out, flanked the French infantry; and now a total diſorder began to enſue.
The firſt line of the enemy being thus routed, the ſecond line began to march up to interrupt the progreſs of victory. Henry, therefore, alighting from his horſe, preſented himſelf to the enemy, with an undaunted countenance; and, at the head of his men, fought on foot, encouraging ſome, and aſſiſting others. Eighteen French cavaliers, who were reſolv⯑ed to kill him or to die in the attempt, ruſhing forth together, advanced, and one of them ſtunned him with a blow of his battle-ax; they then fell upon him in a body, and he was juſt going to ſink un⯑der their blows, when David Gam, a valiant Welchman, and two more of the ſame country, came to his aid: they ſoon turned the attention of the French from the King; but, being over-powered themſelves, they fell dead at his feet. The King had now recovered his ſenſes, and, more help coming in, the eighteen Frenchmen were all ſlain; upon which he knighted the brave Welchmen, who had valiantly fallen in his de⯑fence. The heat of the battle ſtill encreaſing, his courage ſeemed to encreaſe; and, now, the thickeſt of the battle was gathered round his perſon: his brother, being fallen down by his ſide, ſtunned with the blow of a club, he covered him for a while; but, receiving another blow himſelf, it threw him on his knees: he ſoon, however, re⯑covered, [166] and his valour ſeemed to inſpire his troops with fury; they ran headlong upon the enemy, and, by an unexpected attack, put them into ſuch diſor⯑der, that their leaders could never after bring them to the charge. The Duke of Alencon, who com⯑manded the ſecond line, ſeeing it fly, reſolved, by one deſperate ſtep, to retrieve the day, or fall in the attempt: wherefore, running up to King Henry, and crying aloud that he was the Duke of Alencon, he diſcharged ſuch a blow on his head, that it carried off a part of the King's helmet; Henry, not having been able to ward off the blow, ſoon returned it, by ſtriking the Duke to the ground; and he was ſoon killed by the ſurrounding crowd, all the King's efforts to ſave him from their fury being ineffectual.
The two firſt lines being thus diſperſed, the third refuſed to aſſiſt them, and marched off with⯑out fighting. The King, therefore, thinking him⯑ſelf thus ſure of victory, was ſurprized with an account that his baggage was plundering by the enemy: juſt ſtruck with an apprehenſion that the French had rallied, and being ſenſible that the number of his priſoners was greater than that of his army, he raſhly ordered all the priſoners to be put to death; which order was accordingly exe⯑cuted. This ſeverity tarniſhed the glory which his victory would otherwiſe have acquired: but all the heroiſm, and all the virtues of that age, are tinctured with barbarity.
This victory, however great it may appear, was rather oſtentatious than uſeful: it acquired the Engliſh glory, but not dominion; and while it ſet⯑tled Henry's intereſt more firmly in the hearts of his ſubjects, it only ſerved to inſpire him with a love of new conqueſts. With this view, therefore, he [167] returned to England, in order to procure new ſtores of men and money.
The war between the two kingdoms, from this period, ſeemed to be carried on rather by negotia⯑tions, treaſons, plots, and fomented jealouſies, than by the force of arms. France was but as one vaſt theatre of crimes, murders, puniſhments, and devaſtation: the Duke of Orleans was aſſaſſinated by the Duke of Burgundy, and he, in his turn, fell by the treachery of the Dauphin; while the ſon, deſiring to revenge his father's death, acknow⯑ledged Henry as lawful heir to the crown, and a treaty was concluded between Henry and the young Duke of Burgundy at Troyes, by which he was acknowledged heir to the crown of France, after the death of Charles, who ſtill reigned, though, by his diſeaſes, rendered totally incapable of bu⯑ſineſs. Catharine, the French King's daughter, was given to Henry in marriage: and it was re⯑ſolved, that the Dauphin ſhould be brought to an account for the murder of the late Duke of Bur⯑gundy. Things being adjuſted in this manner, Henry entered the city of Paris without oppoſition, and there conducted the government at his plea⯑ſure; while the feeble Charles was attended as a King indeed, but with ſcarce even the liberty of a ſubject.
The Dauphin, in the mean time, wandered about, a ſtranger in his own dominions, while Henry returned to London, to raiſe new ſubſidies and new troops, to ſecure his late conqueſts. His preſence, as might be expected, inſpired his ſub⯑jects with joy, but they, at the ſame time, could not be much pleaſed with a conqueſt, which ſeem⯑ed likely to transfer the ſeat of empire from among them. The parliament, upon various pretences, [168] refuſed him a ſupply equal to his demands: how⯑ever, he again ſet ſail with a new-raiſed army, and the Dauphin, upon his appearance, thought fit a⯑gain to retire. Henry then enters Paris, and, while Charles had but a ſmall court, he was at⯑tended with a very magnificent one. On Whit⯑ſunday they dined together in public, the two Kings and the two Queens, with their crowns on their heads; Charles, indeed, receiving apparent homage, but Henry commanding with abſolute authority. After this he prepared to ſtop the pro⯑greſs of the enemy, who had already taken ſome towns; but, whilſt he flattered himſelf with a ſpeedy victory, he was attacked with a fiſtula, which the phyſicians were, at that time, too unſkilful to treat with judgment. He died at the caſtle of Vincennes, with the ſame intrepidity with which he lived, and was buried at Weſtminſter-abbey. His reign, during the ſhort time he lived, which was but thirty-four years, was rather ſplendid than ſerviceable; the treaſures of his native country were laviſhed upon conqueſts, that to them were unprofitable. His military fame acquired him the reputation of every other good quality; he favour⯑ed the clergy, and they have returned the debt to his memory: in general, the good or the erroneous conduct of a Prince appears rather after his death than during his life-time; and the ſucceſſors of imprudent Kings are often taxed with errors not their own, as we ſhall preſently ſee. He died, however, fortunate, by falling in the midſt of his triumphs, and leaving his ſubjects happy. Charles, who died two months after him, finiſhed a wretch⯑ed reign, long paſt in phrenzy, and by all France branded with contempt, leaving the moſt miſerable ſubjects upon earth.
LETTER XXIII.
[169]OUR triumphs, at this time, in France, pro⯑duced ſcarce any good effects at home; as we grew warlike, we became brutal; and, pant⯑ing after foreign poſſeſſions, we forgot the arts of cultivating thoſe that lay nearer home. Our lan⯑guage, inſtead of improving, was daily becoming more barbarous: Langland and Chaucer, about a century before, ſeemed to have drawn it from ob⯑ſcurity, and enriched it with new terms and combi⯑nations; but it was now relapſed into its former groſſneſs, and no poet or hiſtorian of note was born in this calamitous period.
Henry VI, ſucceſſor to Henry V, was not quite a year old when he came to the throne; and his rela⯑tions began, ſoon after, to diſpute the government during his minority. The Duke of Bedford was ap⯑pointed, by parliament, Protector of England, De⯑fender of the Church, and Firſt Counſellor of the King: his brother, the Duke of Glouceſter, was to govern in his abſence, while he conducted the French war; but ſeveral others aſpired at this poſt as well as he. The ſecond rank in every kingdom, as being the moſt powerful, is generally the moſt envied ſituation: the firſt ſtep his enemies took to render the Duke of Glouceſter odious, was to accuſe his wife, the Ducheſs, of witchcraft. She was charged with converſing with one Sir Roger Bo⯑lingbroke, a prieſt and reputed necromancer, and one Mary Gurdemain, who was ſaid to be a witch: it was aſſerted, that, with their aſſiſtance, ſhe made a figure of the King in wax; this the ac⯑cuſers ſaid was placed before a gentle fire, and, as the wax diſſolved, the King's ſtrength was [170] waſted; and, upon its total diſſolution, his life would be at an end. This charge Bolingbroke utterly denied; but the Ducheſs confeſſed that ſhe had deſired the woman to make her a philtre, to ſecure the affections of the Duke her huſband. Neither their innocence, nor her rank, could pro⯑tect them: ſhe was condemned to penance and perpetual impriſonment, Bolingbroke was hanged, and the woman burnt in Smithfield.
Henry, during theſe conteſts of his miniſters, was, at firſt, from age, incapable of conducting the reins of government; and, when he became adult, he was equally incapable, from ignorance and imbecillity. Whether it was that his gover⯑nors had kept him in ignorance, in order to pro⯑long their own power, or whether he was natu⯑rally weak, hiſtory does not clearly determine. The Earl of Suffolk, one of thoſe who ſhared the power at that time, thought the beſt way of ma⯑naging the King would be to marry him to a wo⯑man who was herſelf capable of reigning alone. He had ſtill another motive, which was to create a new power to oppoſe the Duke of Glouceſter, who was his enemy, and an obſtacle in the road to his ambition: to this purpoſe, he fixed upon Margaret of Anjou, daughter of Rene, King of Sicily, and niece of the King of France. She was a Princeſs of uncommon reſolution, and great penetration, but entirely without fortune; for which, it was ſaid, her other good qualities were ſufficient to atone. This match the Duke of Glou⯑ceſter vainly oppoſed; the match went forward, and the new Queen ſhewed her reſentment, by proving herſelf a formidable enemy, willing and able to undo him.
[171] She firſt began her reign, therefore, with re⯑moving him from the council-board. To palliate this proceeding, perſons were ſuborned to accuſe him of cruelty and injuſtice: to theſe accuſations he pleaded his innocence, with ſuch force of evi⯑dence, that the council, though conſiſting of his enemies, were obliged to acquit him. Still, how⯑ever, the Queen, bent upon his ruin, ordered him to be apprehended, and accuſed before the parlia⯑ment, ſummoned for this purpoſe. As the people thought him innocent, it was expected he would come off now as he had before; but, on the day he was to make his defence, he was found dead in his bed, though without any ſigns of vio⯑lence upon his body.
This violence rendered the Queen and the King equally odious; the Queen eſpecially was charged with the murder, and the dignity of her ſtation only ſerved to render her a more conſpicuous ob⯑ject of reproach. But what ſtill contributed to render the people diſcontented with the admini⯑ſtration, was the indifferent ſucceſs of their arms in France. Triumphs and conqueſts were ever a means of repreſſing the diſcontents of the people; but the preſent government, to their quarrels at home, added the misfortune of being defeated a⯑broad.
Upon the death of Henry V, the Dauphin of France aſſerted his claim to the throne of that kingdom, under the title of Charles VII. Nothing could be more deplorable than his ſituation, upon coming to the crown, of which he was only the nominal poſſeſſor: the Engliſh were maſters of almoſt all France. Henry VI. was ſolemnly in⯑veſted with regal power, by legates from Paris. The Duke of Bedford, with a numerous army [172] in the heart of the kingdom, confirmed his claim, and the Duke of Burgundy was ſteady in the Engliſh alliance. Wherever Charles attempted to face the enemy, he was overthrown; he could ſcarcely rely on the friends next his perſon, and his authority was inſulted, even by his own ſer⯑vants. In this ſituation, nothing but miraculous aſſiſtance, or pretended miracles, could ſave him. To the laſt expedient he had recourſe, and it fully anſwered his intentions: the French, from a van⯑quiſhed nation, are ſuddenly going to be victo⯑rious; and the Engliſh, who had been hitherto deemed invincible,, are going to be every-where worſted, and, at length, totally driven out of the kingdom.
A gentleman, on the frontiers of Lorrain, whoſe name was Baudricourt, was the perſon who firſt reſolved to put this happy impoſture into practice. He fixed upon the ſervant-maid of an inn for this purpoſe, and ſhe was inſtructed at once to perform the duties of a warrior and a propheteſs: this was Joan of Arc, the renowned maid of Orleans; a woman of maſculine ſtrength and courage, pre⯑tending to be but eighteen, but, in reality, twen⯑ty-ſeven years old. She equipped herſelf in the arms and habit of a man, and it was given out, that ſhe was inſpired: ſhe was brought before the King, examined by the Doctors of the Univerſity, and they, either deceived, or willing to aſſiſt the impoſture, affirmed that her commiſſion was from heaven. The vulgar, as ready to give credit to inſpiration as to witchcraft, eaſily came into the impoſture, and acquired new hopes and confidence of ſucceſs.
The Engliſh were, at that time, beſieging the city of Orleans, Charles's laſt reſource; and were [173] upon the point of becoming maſters of it: Joan undertook to raiſe the ſiege; and, to render herſelf the more remarkable, ordered a ſword to be brought her, from the tomb of a Knight buried in the church of Fierbois. She addreſſed the ſoldiers as a meſſenger from heaven, and aſſured them, that providence would ſtrengthen their arms. She march⯑ed at their head, and delivered Orleans; routed the Engliſh wherever they oppoſed; propheſied that the King ſhould be crowned at Rheims, and ſhe herſelf aſſiſted at the ſolemnity which ſhe had fore⯑told. She was preſent at the coronation, holding in her hand the ſtandard under which ſhe had been ſo often victorious.
This chain of ſucceſſes, and the dignity which his late coronation gave the French King, now entirely turned the ſcale in his favour; the Eng⯑liſh loſt the kingdom by the ſame methods the French had loſt it before. While Charles united his forces and proceeded with diſpatch, they were quarrelling among themſelves, and loſing the ſea⯑ſons for ſucceſs. In the midſt of the King's good fortune, however, Joan of Arc, his brave cham⯑pion, was taken priſoner, as ſhe was protecting the rear of her men in a retreat. The joy of the Engliſh, upon this occaſion, is not to be expreſſed; and the Duke of Bedford, their General, thought no method could be ſo proper to reſtore their loſt courage, as to proſecute his priſoner for witchcraft. It is a diſagreeable reflection upon human nature, that Judges almoſt ever determine on the ſide of authority: ſhe was found guilty by ſeveral Biſhops and the Doctors of the univerſity of Paris. She was at firſt condemned as a ſorcereſs and an he⯑retic, and enjoined to live, by way of penance, upon bread and water, and to remain in priſon [174] for life. Some time after, under colour of her re⯑lapſing, ſhe was publicly burnt for a witch. Su⯑perſtition adds virulence to the natural cruelty of mankind, and this cruel ſentence ſerved only to inflame the hatred between the contending powers, without mending the cauſe of the Engliſh. In vain the brave Talbot and his ſon ſtrove to main⯑tain the declining intereſt of the Engliſh in France: in the year 1437, the French King made his tri⯑umphant entry into Paris, and, in a ſequel of thir⯑teen years more, the Engliſh were entirely baniſh⯑ed from France. They only were left in poſſeſſion of Calais and Guienne, and loſt for ever all the fruits of the victories of Creſſy, Poictiers, and Agincourt. Such is the end of ambition: the on⯑ly conſequences of their conqueſts there were to deluge that kingdom with the blood of its ſlaugh⯑tered inhabitants, and their own.
It may eaſily be ſuppoſed, that the loſſes of the Engliſh in France, and the diviſions of their rulers at home, muſt raiſe factions. In this period of calamity, a new intereſt was revived, which ſeem⯑ed to have lain dormant in the times of proſperity and triumph: the Duke of York began to think of aſſerting his right to the crown. This noble⯑man was deſcended, by the mother's ſide, from Lionel, one of the ſons of Edward III. The reign⯑ing King was deſcended from John of Ghaunt, a ſon of the ſame Edward, but younger than Lionel; thus the Duke of York's claim was prior to that of Henry. The enſign of the Duke was a white roſe, that of Henry a red. This gave name to the two houſes, whoſe contentions were now about to drench the kingdom with ſlaughter.
The Duke of Suffolk and the Queen were now at the head of affairs, and managed all things with [175] unlimited authority. As he had made his way to power by the blood of Glouceſter, he was reſolv⯑ed to eſtabliſh himſelf by the uſual reſources of tyranny, by cruelty to his inferiors, and flattery to the Queen. This unjuſt and ill-managed power firſt drew againſt him the oppoſition of the Duke of York: perhaps the cauſe of the public was the only motive for his firſt reſiſtance. Almoſt every malecontent has ſome real, and ſome fictitious cauſes of complaint: he therefore had recourſe to parliament, and accuſed the Duke of Suffolk as the ſource of all the nation's diſgraces in France. This accuſation might have been falſe, but the real motive, which was Suffolk's power, and the cruel uſe he made of it, was left unmentioned, although it was true [...] The court, to content the people, condemned him to baniſhment, and he embarked in a little veſſel to take his paſſage to France; but he could not eſcape his deſtiny. He was met in his paſſage by an Engliſh man of war; the Captain, having a mind to ſearch the ſhip the Duke was in, and finding him there, ordered his head to be ſtruck off without further delay. There is little in the tranſactions of theſe times to inte⯑reſt us on the ſide of either party: we ſee crimes continually to diſguſt us, and ſcarce a ſhining cha⯑racter or a virtue to animate the narrative.
By the death of the Duke of Suffolk, his rival, of York, ſaw himſelf rid of a potent enemy, and found the diſcontents of the people againſt the ad⯑miniſtration daily increaſe. Among the inſurrections of theſe unhappy times, was that headed by Jack Cade, who led a tumultuous body of forces to London, to redreſs their grievances, and there beheaded the Lord Treaſurer. The government might readily per⯑ceive the diſaffection of the populace, by his reception [176] from the city of London, who opened their gates to him: however, upon the King's proclamation, his adherents, after a day or two, were diſperſed, and he himſelf taken and ſlain. In the mean time the Duke of York ſecretly fomented theſe diſturbances, and, pretending to eſpouſe the cauſe of the people, from his retreat in Wales wrote to the King, ad⯑viſing a reformation in the miniſtry. His letters of counſel were ſoon backed by an army; he march⯑ed up to London, but found an unexpected re⯑pulſe from the city, which ſhut its gates upon him. In this dilemma he offered to diſband his army, if the Duke of Somerſet, who was at that time the envied object in power, ſhould be ſent to the Tower: this requeſt was complied with, contrary to his expectation; and now, coming to court to accuſe him in perſon, he was ſurprized to ſee the Duke of Somerſet, who was hid behind the hang⯑ings, ſuddenly coming forth, and retorting the accuſation upon him. York now perceived his danger, and repreſſed the impetuoſity of his accu⯑ſation. As ſoon as he left the preſence, the King commanded him to be apprehended; but ſuch was the Duke's authority, or ſuch the timidity of the King's council, that they ſuffered him to re⯑tire, upon promiſing ſtrict obedience for the fu⯑ture.
This reconciliation was only temporary; he ſtill aſpired at the crown, and, the King falling ill, by his intrigues he had ſufficient art to be taken into the number of the privy council. This was a fa⯑tal blow to Henry's intereſts: the Duke of York, now let into a ſhare of the authority, and ſecure of the affections of the people, carried all before him. The Duke of Somerſet was ſent to the Tower, and the parliament declared his rival Pro⯑tector [177] of the realm. This power the Duke of York, for ſome time, enjoyed without controul; till the unhappy King, recovering from his dizzi⯑neſs, as if awaking from a dream, perceived, with ſurprize, that he was ſtripped of his autho⯑rity. Margaret, his Queen, did all in her power to rouze him to a ſenſe of his ſituation: he there⯑fore began by depoſing the Duke from his power, who inſtantly had recourſe to arms. The impo⯑tent Monarch, thus obliged to take the field, was dragged after his army to the battle of St. Alban's, where he was routed by the Duke of York, and Somerſet, his General, was flain. The King, being wounded, and hiding himſelf in a cottage near the field of battle, was taken priſoner, and treated with ſeeming reſpect: from thence he was brought along, in triumph, to London; and the Duke permitting him ſtill to enjoy the title of King, reſerved to himſelf that of Protector, in which conſiſted all the power of the crown.
Henry was now but a priſoner, treated with the forms of royalty; yet, indolent and ſickly as he was, the title alone ſeemed ſufficient for him. At laſt his friends induced him once more to re-aſſert his prerogative: the Duke of York again retired, to reſiſt the deſigns of the Queen. Mutual diſ⯑truſt once more brought their armies to the field, and the fate of the kingdom was to be decided by the ſword. On the King's ſide, the Queen ſeem⯑ed the only acting General: ſhe ranged the army in battalia, gave the neceſſary orders, while the poor King w [...]s led about, from place to place, an involuntary ſpectator of thoſe martial preparations. The army on the oppoſite ſide was, in the abſence of the Duke of York, commanded by the Earl of Warwick, the moſt celebrated General of his [178] age: a man formed for times of trouble, extreme⯑ly artful, and extremely brave; equally ſkilful in council and the field, and born to give and to take away kingdoms at pleaſure. After many battles without effect, and deſigns without conſequence, both armies, at laſt, met on a plain near Nor⯑thampton: the Queen's army conſiſted of five and twenty thouſand men, the army of Warwick of forty thouſand. Never was greater animoſity be⯑tween the chiefs of an army before; both pretend⯑ing to fight for the King, whoſe authority they equally attempted to deſtroy. While the Queen went about from rank to rank, the King ſtaid in his tent, waiting the iſſue of the battle with fe⯑male doubts and apprehenſions: both ſides fought five hours with the utmoſt obſtinacy, but the good fortune of the Earl of Warwick was ſuperior to that of the Queen; ſhe was conquered, and had the misfortune to ſee the King taken priſoner in his tent. Thus Henry was once more brought back, in triumph, to his capital.
A parliament was now called to give a face to this ſucceſsful rebellion. The Duke of York, though formerly contented with the title of Pro⯑tector, now claimed the crown. Our proſpects wi⯑den as we riſe: the cauſe of Henry and the Duke was ſolemnly debated in the Houſe of Peers: each ſide produced their reaſons for or againſt the con⯑queror. This was the firſt time that a true ſpirit of liberty ever appeared to exert itſelf in England, and in which victory did not determine every in⯑quiry. The Duke of York, though a conqueror, could not entirely gain his cauſe: it was deter⯑mined that Henry ſhould poſſeſs the throne during life, and that the Duke of York ſhould be his ſuc⯑ceſſor, to the utter ſecluſion of the Prince of Wales.
[179] The Queen, to all appearance, ſeemed now ut⯑terly deſtitute of every reſource: but, though ſhe had loſt all, ſhe yet retained her native perſeve⯑rance and intrepidity. She was a woman of a great mind, and ſome faults; but ambition ſeemed to be what called them into action. Being now a fu⯑gitive, diſtant from the capital, oppoſed by a vic⯑torious army, and a conſummate General, ſhe ſtill tried every reſource to repair her diſaſtrous cir⯑cumſtances: ſhe flew to Wales, animated her old friends, acquired new, and raiſed an army to de⯑fend her cauſe. She, and her old enemy, the Duke of York, once more met upon Wakefield Green, near the caſtle of Sandal: fortune this day turned the victory on her ſide; the Duke of York was ſlain; the Duke of Rutland, his ſe⯑cond ſon, fell in the flight; and the father's head, being cut off, was fixed upon the walls of York.
Margaret, being now victorious, marched to⯑wards London, in order to give the King his li⯑berty. The Earl of Warwick, who now was at the head of the Yorkiſts, ſtill commanded an ar⯑my, in which he led about the captive King to give a ſanction to his attempts. Another battle was to drench the kingdom with the blood of its inhabitants: the Queen and the Earl met near St. Alban's, where the Queen was now again victo⯑rious; ſhe had the pleaſure to ſee the General, by whom ſhe was once defeated, now fly in his turn; and, what added to her glory, ſhe had the fortune to releaſe the King, her huſband, from his capti⯑vity. Her triumph was great, though contami⯑nated with cruelty; but it was of ſhort continu⯑ance. The city of London was to be gained, but Warwick had already ſecured it in his intereſts: the citizens alſo feared her tumultuous army, and [180] refuſed to open their gates upon her ſummons. In the mean time, Warwick aſſembled the people in St. John's fields, and, ſhewing them the ſon of the late Duke of York, demanded, Whether they choſe to have him or Henry for their King? Upon which, the people crying out a York, an aſſembly was quickly called, and the young Duke, being preſent, they elected him King, by the name of Edward IV, and conducted him, with great cere⯑mony, to the palace where Henry uſed to lodge when within the walls of the city.
In the mean time, Queen Margaret collected a great army in the North, amounting to ſixty thou⯑ſand men at arms. She was now to ſtrike her ſtrongeſt blow: the command of this army was given to a perſon who acted under her directions. On the other ſide Warwick conducted young Ed⯑ward, at the head of forty thouſand men, to oppoſe her. Both ſides, at length, met near Santon in the county of York: never was England depopulated by ſo terrible a day. What a dreadful ſight to be⯑hold almoſt an hundred thouſand men, of the ſame country, fighting to ſatisfy the empty ambition of one or two weak and empty wretches; murdering each other for an ideot and a boy: the conteſt only which ſhould wear a crown with diamonds, or wield an empty ſceptre? Strange infatuation; yet, ſuch as it was, not leſs than forty thouſand men were left dead upon the field, in aſſerting this diſpute. Warwick gained a complete victory: Edward IV. was eſtabliſhed on the throne, and Margaret of Anjou abandoned. She fled, for protection, to Scotland, with her ſon and huſband, in order to attempt new deſigns for the recovery of her king⯑dom. Edward now took down the head of his father from the walls of York, and put up the [181] heads of the conquered Generals in its ſtead. Each party, as it happened to be victorious, thus called in the executioner to complete the tragedy begun in the field; and our cruelty to each other, in civil diſcords, is what has impreſſed foreigners with an idea of Engliſh cruelty.
Though wretched as this reign was, yet the art of printing, which was introduced into it at that time, ſeemed to make amends for a part of its ca⯑lamities: William Caxton, a mercer, was the firſt who practiſed the art at London; he tranſlated ſome books himſelf from the French, and printed the tranſlations of others. Among the writers of that time were Lord Rivers and Earl Tiptoft, whoſe labours, however, never ventured higher than tran⯑ſlation. To judge of the learning of thoſe times by the works of the laity in the vulgar tongue, we ſhall entertain the moſt deſpicable opinion of it; yet, when I read the Latin productions of ſome of the prieſts of that period, I cannot avoid allow⯑ing the authors no ſmall ſhare of erudition. The truth is, learning was ſeparated from the purpoſes of common life, at that time, but by no means unknown or neglected by the clergy, as we are taught to believe.
LETTER XXIV.
WHATEVER ſide was victorious, in theſe times of civil ſlaughter, could confirm their injuſtice with the ſhew of authority. The parlia⯑ment uſually followed the conqueror, and fixed him upon the throne, when he had an army to back his pretenſions. Edward was immediately, upon this victory, confirmed by their unanimous [182] approbation, while Henry and his Queen were to ſeek for new reſources in France and Scotland. No calamity was able to abate Margaret's perſeverance; though ſo often overcome, yet ſhe was once more reſolved to enter England with five thouſand men, granted her by the French King, bringing the un⯑fortunate Henry with her to enforce her claims. Her uſual ill fortune attended her; her little fleet was diſperſed by a tempeſt, and ſhe herſelf entered the Tweed with no ſmall difficulty. Again, how⯑ever, ſhe offered her enemy battle, and was again defeated, near Hexham. The loſs of this battle ſeemed to deprive her of every reſource: ſhe and her huſband were now obliged to find ſafety in a ſeparate flight, without attendants, and without even the neceſſaries of life. The weak unfortu⯑nate Monarch, almoſt always imprudent, and con⯑ſequently unſucceſsful, thought he could lie con⯑cealed in England: his error was ſoon attended with the natural conſequences; he was taken pri⯑ſoner, carried to London with ignominy, and con⯑fined in the Tower.
Margaret was rather more fortunate than he, for ſhe eſcaped, with the Dukes of Somerſet and Exeter, out of the kingdom, and retired to her father, who, though very poor, ſtrove, as well as he could, to ſupply her with the mere neceſſaries of life. You are not to ſuppoſe the miſeries of the great, at thoſe times, were fictitious, as we find them at preſent; they, in reality, endured every calamity that poverty now inflicts on the obſcureſt of wretches. Philip de Comines, ſays, he ſaw the Duke of Exeter following the Duke of Burgundy's equipage, barefoot, and ſerving for his livelihood as a footman. This was a ſtrange ſituation for a Lord, who had conducted armies, [183] and was allied to Kings and Princes: but the times were barbarous; the Princes on the coaſts of Ne⯑groland experience ſuch reverſes of fortune at this very day.
Edward, being now, by means of Warwick, fixed upon the throne, reigned in peace and ſecu⯑rity. A ſpirit of gallantry reigned in his court, mixed with the cruelty which ſeemed the diſtin⯑guiſhing feature of thoſe times of diſcord. In the very ſame palace which one day ſmoaked with blood, a pageant or a maſk appeared the day ſol⯑lowing; and the King would at once gallant a miſtreſs and inſpect an execution.
As his amours, however, were likely to diſſa⯑tisfy his ſubjects, the Earl of Warwick adviſed him to marry; and, with his conſent, went over to France to procure him Bona of Savoy, and the match was accordingly, by his means, concluded. But, whilſt the Earl was haſtening the negotiation in France, the King himſelf put an effectual ſtop to it at home, by marrying Elizabeth Woodville, with whom he had fallen in love, and whom he had vainly ſtrove to debauch. Having thus given War⯑wick real cauſe of offence, he was reſolved to widen the breach by driving him from the council. We are apt to hate the man we have offended, as much as the man who has offended us; Edward was no ſooner eſtabliſhed in ſecurity by Warwick, than he began to be ungrateful. Warwick, whoſe pru⯑dence was equal to his bravery, ſoon made uſe of both to aſſiſt his revenge: he ſeduced Clarence, the King's brother, and, to confirm him in his intereſts, makes him his ſon-in-law: and now, finding his plot ready for execution, flies into open rebellion. Vengeance ſeemed to be the only motive he had in view: plots, truces, ſtratagems, [184] and negotiations, followed each other in a rapid ſucceſſion. But Warwick, long acquainted with intrigue and diſſimulation, was, at laſt, too ſubtle for the young King: inviting him, by a ſeeming promiſe of compoſition, to his houſe, he threw Edward off his guard; and Warwick, ſeizing the opportunity, made him a priſoner.
Nothing now appeared that could oppoſe War⯑wick's deſigns; he therefore diſbanded his troops as unneceſſary, and Edward was conſigned to the cuſtody of the Archbiſhop of York. But ſoon an accident happened that overthrew all Warwick's expectations: Edward's behaviour, in confinement, was ſo very obliging, that he got leave, upon ſome occaſions, to hunt in a park adjoining the place of his confinement; from thence he one day made his eſcape, by the aſſiſtance of a couple of his friends, and, contrary to all expectation, inſtantly repaired to York.
Fortune ſeemed to be for Edward; and, march⯑ing ſome troops to London, the citizens imme⯑diately declared in his favour. It is ſurpriſing to think how one party is ſeen this day at the head of numerous forces, while the next we be⯑hold it abandoned, and the adverſe party triumph⯑ing without a rival: a ſtrong proof of the fluctu⯑ating diſpoſition of the Engliſh. Edw [...]rd now commanded a numerous army, while Warwick, and his brother Clarence, were attended by a few. The King, reſolving to take the advantage of their weakneſs, after having defeated a party command⯑ed by Lord Wells, and cut off his head, the uſual method of treating the priſoners of either party, he marched to give them battle. In this exigence they had no other courſe to take, but to embark, in order to ſcreen themſelves from impending dan⯑ger. [185] Having arrived ſafely in France, they now were reconciled to Queen Margaret, their former enemy; and, returning from France, Warwick once more ſaw himſelf at the head of no leſs than ſixty thouſand men.
It was now become Edward's turn to fly the kingdom; and, eſcaping the dangers of the ene⯑my, of the ſea and of pyrates, he landed ſafely in Holland. Warwick, in the mean time, advanced to London, and once more poor paſſive Henry was releaſed from priſon, and placed upon an uſeleſs throne. Warwick was received, among the people, by the name of King-maker: a parliament was call⯑ed, and confirmed Henry's right; but they were now only miniſters of the will of the victor.
Edward, though an exile in Holland, had many partizans at home; and, after an abſence of about nine months, once more landed at Ravenſpur, where Henry IV. had landed upon a ſimilar occa⯑ſion. Though at firſt he was coldly received by the Engliſh, yet his army increaſed upon its march, and his moderation and ſeigned humility ſtill added to the number of his partizans. London, at this time, ever ready to admit the moſt powerful, open⯑ed her gates, and Henry was again taken from his throne to be ſent back to his old manſion.
Warwick at laſt found his party begin to decline, and Clarence, the King's brother, on whom he had the greateſt dependence, changed to the other ſide. In this ſtate of uncertainty, he knew no other expedient than to hazard a battle: he knew his forces to be inferior, but he was conſcious of the ſuperiority of his own generalſhip. With this reſolution he marched from St. Alban's, and, hav⯑ing advanced to Barnet, within ten miles of Lon⯑don, he met Edward, who was marching down [186] with a deſign to fight him. Warwick and Ed⯑ward were the two moſt renowned Generals of their age, and now was to be ſtruck the deci⯑ſive blow, that was either to fix Edward on the throne, or overthrow his pretenſions for ever. The unfortunate Henry was dragged along to be a ſpec⯑tator of the engagement; happy in his natural im⯑becillity, which ſeemed to opiate all his afflictions.
The battle began early in the morning, and laſted till noon: never did two armies fight with greater obſtinacy and bravery; not honour, but life, depended upon the iſſue of the conteſt. The example of Warwick inſpired his troops with more than common reſolution; and the victory, for a while, ſeemed to declare for him: but his army, by reaſon of a ſlight miſt, happening to miſtake a body of their own forces for that of the enemy, fell furiouſly upon them, and this fatal error turn⯑ed the fortune of the day. Warwick did all that experience, conduct, or valour, could ſuggeſt, to retrieve the miſtake, but in vain. Finding, there⯑fore, all hopes gone, he was reſolved to ſell his life dearly to the conquerors; and, ruſhing, on foot as he was, into the midſt of his enemies, he fell covered all over with wounds. Thus died the am⯑bitious Warwick, who had made and unmade Kings at pleaſure, yet who never ſeemed to aſpire at regal dignity himſelf. Ten thouſand of his ar⯑my ſhared the ſame fate with him, the King hav⯑ing ordered that no quarter ſhould be given.
Margaret, who was ever fruitful in reſources, was, at this time, returning from France, with her ſon the Prince of Wales, where ſhe had been negotiating a new ſupply. She had ſcarce time to refreſh herſelf from the fatigues of her voyage, when ſhe received the fatal news of the death of [187] the brave Warwick, who was then her only de⯑fender. Though ſhe had hitherto bravely with⯑ſtood all the attacks of fortune, this was too vio⯑lent a ſhock for nature to ſupport: her grief now, for the firſt time, found way in a torrent of tears; and, yielding to her unhappy fate, ſhe took ſanc⯑tuary in an abbey in Hampſhire.
She had not been here long, when ſhe found ſome few friends ſtill willing to aſſiſt her fallen hopes. The Duke of Somerſet, the Earl of Pem⯑broke, and one or two Lords more, came to offer her their lives and fortunes: a dawn of hope was ſuf⯑ficient to raiſe her courage, and her numerous misfortunes gave way to the flattering proſpect of another trial. She had now fought battles in al⯑moſt every province in England: Tewkeſbury park was the laſt ſcene, that terminated her misfor⯑tunes. The Duke of Somerſet headed her army: a man who had ſhared her dangers, and had ever been ſteady in her cauſe. He was valiant, generous, and polite, but raſh and headſtrong: when Edward firſt attacked him in his intrench⯑ments, he repulſed him with ſuch vigour, that the enemy retired with precipitation; Somerſet, ſup⯑poſing them routed, immediately purſued, and or⯑dered Lord Wenlock to ſupport him, while he charged: but this Lord diſobeyed his injunctions, and the forces of Somerſet were over-powered by numbers. Somerſet now, finding all gone, was unable to govern his rage: he had depended upon Wenlock; but, when he beheld him inactive, in the very place where he had firſt drawn up his men, giving way to his tranſport, with his heavy battle-ax in both hands, he ran upon the coward, and, with one blow, daſhed out his brains.
[188] After the battle, the Queen, torpid with griefs was taken priſoner, and afterwards had the miſery of finding her ſon, the Prince of Wales, in the ſame condition. But this noble youth was not long in bondage: being brought into the victor's preſence, he appeared before him with un⯑daunted majeſty. Edward, ſurprized at the boy's behaviour, aſked him, How he durſt enter into his dominions without leave? ‘I have entered the do⯑minions of my father, replied the Prince, to revenge his injuries, and to redreſs my own.’ The barbarous Monarch, enraged at his intrepidity, ſtruck him on the mouth with his gauntlet: this ſeemed to be the ſignal for his death; Glouceſter, Clarence, and others, like wild beaſts, ruſhing upon the unarmed youth at once, ſtabbed him to the heart with their daggers. When the governors of a kingdom behave thus, what muſt be the behaviour of the people? To complete the tragedy, Henry himſelf, who had long been the paſſive ſpectator of all theſe cruelties, was now thought unfit to live. The Duke of Glouceſter, afterwards named Ri⯑chard III, or the Crouch-back, entering his cham⯑ber alone, murdered him in cold blood. Of all thoſe that were taken, none were ſuffered to ſur⯑vive but Margaret herſelf: it was, perhaps, ex⯑pected that ſhe would be ranſomed by the King of France, and in this they were not deceived: Lewis XI. paid the King of England fifty thou⯑ſand crowns for her freedom, Thus Margaret of Anjou, after having ſuſtained the cauſe of her huſband in twelve battles, after having ſurvived her fortune and her children, died a few years after in privacy in France, very miſerable indeed; but with no other claims to our pity, except her cou⯑rage and her diſtreſſes.
[189] Of all people in the world the Engliſh are the moſt compaſſionate; a throne raiſed upon cruelty never wanted enemies among them, and nothing could ever have been more ridiculous than attempt⯑ing to govern ſuch ſubjects as the Engliſh by the hand of the executioner. The heads of either faction ſeemed to have been inſenſible of this truth, and it was their ill-judged puniſhments, which, by turns, plunged them into new diſtreſſes. A tyrant, however, when once drenched in blood, knows not when to give over. Edward, being now freed from great enemies, turned to the pu⯑niſhment of thoſe of leſſer note: the gibbets were hung with his adverſaries, and their eſtates confiſ⯑cated to his uſe.
Yet, while he was thus rendering himſelf ter⯑rible on the one hand, he was immerſed in gal⯑lantry on the other. Nature, it ſeems, was not unfavourable to him in this reſpect, for he was univerſally allowed to be the moſt beautiful man of his time. The court ſeemed willing to coun⯑tenance thoſe debaucheries, in which they had a ſhare; and the clergy, as they themſelves prac⯑tiſed every ſpecies of lewdneſs with impunity, were ever ready to lend abſolution for all his fail⯑ings. The truth is, enormous vices had been of late ſo common, that adultery was held but a very ſlight offence: among the number of his miſtreſſes was the wife of one Shore, a woman of exquiſite beauty and good ſenſe, but who had not virtue enough to withſtand the temptations of a beautiful man and a Monarch.
England now enjoying a temporary calm, the King thought the beſt way to ingratiate himſelf with the people, was to aſſert his right to his do⯑mains in France, which the inſurrections of his [190] father had contributed to alienate in the former reign: this propoſal was ſure of pleaſing the Eng⯑liſh, who ever appeared more fond of ſplendid than uſeful acquiſitions. To proſecute this ſcheme, therefore, he ſends his ally, the Duke of Burgun⯑dy, a reinforcement of three thouſand men, and ſoon after paſſed over himſelf at the head of a nu⯑merous army. Lewis XI, then King of France, was, with reaſon, alarmed at this formidable inva⯑ſion: he found himſelf unable to reſiſt ſo power⯑ful an antagoniſt, and therefore had recourſe to treaty: this ſucceeded better than arms could have done; the two Kings had an interview at the bridge of Perpignan, and, upon the pay⯑ment of a ſtipulated ſum, Edward led his forces back to England. The Engliſh King wanted to return home to his miſtreſſes, to ſpend upon them the money he had gotten; and the French Mo⯑narch hoped to be able to refuſe thoſe ſums which he had only given a promiſe to pay.
Edward returned to renew his cruelty and his exceſſes. His brother Clarence, who had aſſiſted him in gaining the crown, had been, for ſome time, treated with indifference and diſreſpect: this Clarence thought an ill recompence for his former ſervices, and often gave himſelf the liberty of in⯑vective in the King's abſence. In this poſture of things, the King happened to kill a favourite deer, belonging to Mr. Thomas Burdet, a friend of the Duk [...]'s: poor Burdet, dropping ſome haſty ex⯑preſſions againſt the King, was ſentenced to die, and executed in two days after. The Duke of Clarence, upon the death of his friend, vented his grief in renewed reproaches againſt his brother: the King, unmindful of the ties of kindred, or the debt of gratitude, by which he was bound [191] had him arraigned, condemned, and executed: he was ſmothered in a butt of Malmſey wine. When men arrive at a certain ſtation of greatneſs, their regards are diſſipated on too great a number of objects to feel parental affection: the ties of nature are only ſtrong with thoſe who have but few friends or few dependants.
The reſt of Edward's life was ſpent in riot and debauchery, in gratifications that are pleaſing only to the narrow mind; in uſeleſs treaties, in which he was ever deceived; and in empty threats againſt the Monarch who had deceived him. His parliament, now merely the miniſters of his will, conſented to a war with France, at a time when it was impoſſi⯑ble it could ſucceed: all the lords unanimouſly de⯑clared, that they thought it both juſt and neceſſa⯑ry. The people ſeemed equally pleaſed at the proſpect of a war, which might, in ſome meaſure, alleviate their domeſtic calamities; great prepara⯑tions were made on every ſide, but Edward died in the midſt of all his expectations. The character of this Prince is eaſily ſummed up; his good qua⯑lities were courage and beauty; his bad qualities—every vice.
LETTER XXV.
HORRID as the laſt reign was, you muſt prepare for events in the next ſtill more hei⯑nous. Edward left two ſons, the eldeſt of whom, a boy between twelve and thirteen, was proclaim⯑ed King, by the name of Edward V. The Queen, his mother, being herſelf newly raiſed among the nobility, ſeemed willing to hide the meanneſs of [192] her former condition amongſt a number of new promotions: this, as might naturally be expected, was diſpleaſing to the old nobility; and the Duke of Glouceſter, a monſter both for the cruelty of his heart, and the deformity of his body, fomented their diſcontents. Having gained over Lord Haſt⯑ings, the Duke of Buckingham, and ſome other lords, to his intereſts, he made them a long ſpeech, tending to ſhew the danger that hung over their heads, if the Queen ſhould have the government in her hands: he enlarged upon the uſurpations of her family, and the lengths they would be apt to run upon being inveſted with the ſupreme power. In ſhort, he ſpared neither diſſimulation nor arti⯑fice, nor oaths, to get the guardianſhip of the minority, and the cuſtody of the King's perſon.
His firſt ſtep, after being declared Protector of the kingdom, was to get the King's brother, alſo a boy of about ſeven, who, with the Queen his mother, had taken ſanctuary in Weſtminſter-ab⯑bey. The Queen foreſaw the dangers which threatened her family; and, parting with her child, claſped him, with a laſt embrace, to her breaſt, and took leave of him with a ſhower of tears. The Duke of Glouceſter, on the other hand, took his young nephew in his arms, and, claſping him, with feigned affection, declared, that, while he him⯑ſelf was alive, the child ſhould never want a parent. The young King, finding that he was to have the pleaſure of his brother's company, was greatly re⯑joiced, without conſidering the fatal intention of theſe preparations: a few days after, the Protec⯑tor, upon a pretext of guarding them from danger, conveyed them both to the Tower.
Having thus ſecured their perſons, the Protec⯑tor's next ſtep was to ſpread a report of their ille⯑gitimacy; [193] and, by pretended obſtacles, to put off the day of the young King's coronation. Lord Stanley, a man of deep penetration, was the firſt to diſcloſe his fears of the Protector's having ill deſigns: he communicated his ſuſpicions to Lord Haſtings, who was firmly attached to the young King, perhaps this lord's wiſhes, that ſuch a pro⯑ject might not be true, influenced his judgment, and confirmed him in his ſecurity. Soon, however, Cateſby, a vile creature of the Protector's, was ſent to ſound him, and try whether he could not be brought over to ſide with the projected uſurpa⯑tion: Haſtings appeared immoveable in his adhe⯑rence to the King, and his death was therefore reſolved on.
With this deſign, the Protector next day called a council in the Tower, under the pretence of ex⯑pediting the coronation: he came thither himſelf at nine o'clock in the morning, with a chearful countenance, ſaluting the members with the ut⯑moſt affability, and appearing with demonſtrations of unuſual good humour; and then, going out for a ſhort time, deſired his abſence might not in⯑terrupt the debates. In about an hour he returned again, quite altered, knitting his brows, biting his lips, and ſhewing, by the frequent alterations of his looks, ſome inward perturbation. A ſilence enſued for ſome time, and the lords looked upon each other, not without reaſon, expecting ſome horrid cataſtrophe: at length he broke the dread⯑ful ſilence, ‘My Lords, ſaid he, What puniſhment do they deſerve who have conſpired againſt my life?’ This redoubled the aſtoniſhment of the aſſembly, and, continuing their ſilence, Lord Haſtings at length made anſwer, That whoever did ſo deſerved to be puniſhed as a traitor: upon which the Protec⯑tor, [194] with a ſtern countenance, baring his w [...]ther⯑ed arm, cried out, ‘See what the ſorcereſs my Queen⯑ſiſter, and that wretch, Shore's wife, have done by their witcherafts! Their ſpells have reduced my arm to this condition, and my whole body would have ſuffered the ſame calamity, but for a timely detection.’ The amaze⯑ment of the council ſeemed to increaſe at this ter⯑rible accuſation, and Lord Haſtings again ſaid, ‘IF they have committed ſuch a crime, they deſerve puniſh⯑ment. IF,’ cried the Protector, with a loud voice, Doſt thou anſwer me with IFS? ‘I tell thee, that they have conſpired my death; and that thou, traitor, art an accomplice in their crime.’ Thus having ſaid, he ſtruck the table twice with his hand, and the room was inſtantly filled with armed men. ‘I arreſt thee, continues he, turning to Haſtings, for high treaſon;’ and, at the ſame time, delivered him to the cuſtody of the ſoldiers.
The council-room was now filled with tumult; and, though no reſcue was offered, yet the ſol⯑diers cauſed a buſtle, as if they apprehended dan⯑ger. One of them narrowly miſſed cleaving Lord Stanley's head with a battle-ax, but he eſcaped by ſhrinking under the table: in all probability, the fellow had orders for this attempt, ſo that, when thus killed, his death might be aſcribed to the tu⯑mult cauſed by an intended reſcue. Stanley, how⯑ever, eſcaping the blow, was arreſted by the Pro⯑tector's order, who was well apprized of his at⯑tachment to the young King. As for Lord Haſt⯑ings, he was forced to make a ſhort confeſſion to the next prieſt that was at hand; the Protector crying out, by St. Paul, he would not dine till he had ſeen his head taken off: he was accordingly hurried out to the little green before the Tower [195] chapel, and there beheaded on a log of wood that acccidentally lay there.
But not thoſe alone of his council were thus barbarouſly treated: on the very ſame day a ſimi⯑lar tragedy was acted at Pontefract caſtle, where the Earl Rivers, the moſt polite and gallant man of the age in which he lived, and Lord Grey, were both beheaded by a decree of that very ſame coun⯑cil, the members of which were now in ſuch dan⯑ger themſelves. A plot againſt the King was the pretext for their execution; but, in reality, they died as being the only obſtacles to prevent his deſtruction.
The Protector, having thus got rid of thoſe he moſt feared, undertook to puniſh even the leaſt dangerous: Jane Shore, the late King's miſtreſs, was an enemy too humble for him to fear any thing from her attempts, yet, as ſhe had been accuſed of witchcraft, of which all the world ſaw ſhe was innocent, he thought proper to puniſh her for faults of which ſhe was really guilty. This un⯑happy woman had been deluded formerly from her huſband one Shore, a goldſmith in Lombard-ſtreet, and continued with Edward the moſt guiltleſs miſ⯑treſs in his luxurious and abandoned court: ſhe ever interceded for the diſtreſſed, and was ever ap⯑plied to as a mediator for mercy. She was cha⯑ritable, generous, and pleaſing in converſation; her wit and her beauty were ſaid to be irre⯑ſiſtible. Being blameleſs in other reſpects, the Protector ordered her to be ſued for incontinency, for having left her huſband to live in adultery with another. It is poſſible that the people were not diſpleaſed at ſeeing, again reduced to her former meanneſs, a perſon, who had, for a while, been raiſed above them, and enjoyed all the favours of [196] the King. Her guilt was too notorious to be de⯑nied; ſhe acknowledged the charge, and was con⯑demned to walk barefoot through the city, and to do penance in St. Paul's church in a white ſheet, with a wax taper in her hand, before thouſands of ſpectators. She lived above forty years after this ſentence, reduced to the moſt extreme wretch⯑edneſs: an hiſtorian, in the reign of Henry VII, aſſures us, that he ſaw her gathering herbs in a field near the city, to ſupply her nightly meal; a ſtrange employment for one who once had been the favourite of a court, and the miſtreſs of a king.
The Protector now began to lay aſide his pre⯑tended regard for the ſons of the late King, and to aſpire to the throne more openly: to effect this, the Duke of Buckingham, who by promiſes and bribes was devoted to his intereſts, tried every art to infuſe into the people an opinion of the baſ⯑tardy of the late King, and that of his children. Dr. Shaw, a popular preacher, was hired to ha⯑rangue the people from St. Paul's Croſs to the ſame purpoſe: the preacher, after having diſplayed the incontinence of the Queen, inſiſted upon the il⯑legality of the young King's title, and the virtues of the Protector. ‘It is be, continued the ſyco⯑phant, who carries in his face, in his ſoul, the image of virtue, and the marks of a true deſcent.’ Still, however, the people continued ſilent, each fear⯑ing to begin the cry of King Richard, or deteſt⯑ing the tendency of his ſermon. The Duke of Buckingham, therefore, next undertook to per⯑ſuade them in his turn: his ſpeech turned upon the calamities of the laſt reign, and the baſtardy of the preſent pretender; he ſeemed apprehenſive, indeed, that the Protector could not be prevailed [197] upon to accept the crown, but he hoped that the people would take every method to perſuade him: he concluded, by deſiring every man to ſpeak his real ſentiments, and to give a poſitive anſwer, whether they would have the young baſtard or the virtuous Protector? A ſilence, for ſome time, en⯑ſued; but, at length, ſome of the Duke's own ſervants, who had ſlipped in among the preſs, cried out, Long live King Richard: this cry was ſeconded by ſome of the citizens, who were pre⯑viouſly bribed; and the mob at the door, a de⯑ſpicable claſs of people, ever pleaſed with novel⯑ty, repeated the cry; and, throwing up their caps, cried out, a Richard, a Richard. The Duke, now taking the advantage of this faint ap⯑probation, next day, at the head of the Mayor and Aldermen, went to wait upon the Protector, with offers of the crown. Richard, with his uſual hypocriſy, appeared to the crowd in a gallery be⯑tween two Biſhops, and, at firſt, pretended to be ſurprized at the concourſe: when he was informed that their buſineſs was to offer him the crown, he declined accepting it, alledging his love for the late King his brother, and his affection for the children under his care. Buckingham, ſeeming diſpleaſed with this anſwer, muttered ſome words to himſelf, and, at length, plainly told him, that all the people had determined upon making him King: that they had now proceeded too far to re⯑cede, and therefore were reſolved, in caſe of his refuſal, to offer it where it would meet with a more ready acceptance. This was a reſolution, which the Protector's tenderneſs for his people could not permit him to ſee executed: ‘I ſee, cried he in a modeſt tone, I ſee the kingdom is reſolved to load me with preferments, unequal to my abilities or my [198] choice; yet, ſince it is my duty to obey the dictates of a free people, I will graciouſly accept their petition. I, therefore, from this moment, enter upon the government of England and France, with a reſolution to defend the one, and to ſubdue the other.’ The crowd being thus diſmiſſed, each returned home, pondering upon the proceedings of the day, and making ſuch remarks, as paſſion, intereſt, or prudence, might ſuggeſt.
One crime ever draws on others, and uſurpa⯑tion naturally required ſecurity: as ſoon, there⯑fore, as he was fixed upon the throne, Richard ſent the governor of the Tower orders to put the two young Princes to death. There was yet one man left in the kingdom, who had virtue enough to refuſe being made the inſtrument of a tyrant's cruelty: the governor of the Tower, whoſe name was Brackenbury, ſubmiſſively anſwered, that he could not embrue his hands in their blood. A fit inſtrument, however, was not wanting long: one James Tyrrel was employed and ſent to command the Tower for one night. Tyrrel, that very night, whilſt all were aſleep, went to the chamber where the two young Princes lay; here the murderer, for ſome time, heſitated in his baſe deſign, ſtruck, as it is ſaid, with the innocence of their looks: but, habit getting the better of remorſe, he at laſt ſmothered them between two pillows, and cauſed them to be buried under a little ſtair-caſe, near where they lay. Vengeance, though late, fol⯑lowed this execrable wretch; he was executed for this fact in the ſucceeding reign, when he confeſſ⯑ed his crime and the manner of its execution.
The warlike ſpirit, firſt excited by the conqueſt of France, and then kept up by the long civil war, ſeemed to have baniſhed every ſentiment of [199] virtue from the kingdom: cruelty and executions were grown ſo common, that the people now be⯑came familiar with blood and death: ſcarce a noble family in the kingdom which was not thinned by theſe terrible diſſenſions. The clergy ſeemed, at this time, quite ſeparated from the laity; they ſel⯑dom ſuffered for treaſon, and were but little con⯑verſant in the bloody politics of the times. As for arts, ſciences, and commerce, they were totally neglected. In all this carnage and deſolation, one power was imperceptibly gaining ground; as the lords were declining, the commons were coming into authority; not ſo much expoſed, as the for⯑mer, to the tempeſts of regal reſentment, they continued to increaſe in wealth and favour, and found ſafety from their humility.
LETTER XXVI.
THERE is ſomewhat that peculiarly ſtrikes the imagination in the tranſactions of this and the preceding reign; I have therefore treated them with more than uſual prolixity. Our tragic poets ſeem to have been ſenſible how much theſe ſtrange inſtances of depravation were ſuſceptible of a poetic dreſs. Every picture of the times is marked with ſtrong lines, like an African pro⯑ſpect, where all is vaſt, wild, and terrible.
Richard had, at length, waded through every obſtacle to the throne, and now began, after the uſual manner of all uſurpers, to ſtrengthen, by his ill got power, foreign alliances. Senſible alſo of the influence of pageantry and ſhew upon the minds of the people, he cauſed himſelf to be [200] crowned firſt at London, and then at York. The clergy he endeavoured to ſecure in his intereſts, by great indulgences to them, and by his own hy⯑pocritical behaviour.
But, while he endeavoured to eſtabliſh his power, he found it undermining, on a ſide from whence he leaſt expected it: the Duke of Buck⯑ingham, who had been the principal inſtrument in placing him upon the throne, now began to expect the reward of his adherence. Richard, in⯑deed, had given him ſeveral poſts and governments, but denied him a moiety of the conſiſcated lands of Hereford, to which he had ſome family claims. Very great obligations between two friends, on either ſide, generally end in diſguſt: Bucking⯑ham ſuppoſed that his ſervices could never be over-rewarded; while Richard, on the contrary, was willing to curb his deſires, which ſeemed to in⯑creaſe by gratification. Soon, therefore, the Duke was diſguſted with the new Monarch, and as ſoon conceived a ſcheme for depriving him of the crown. Doubtful, for a while, whether he ſhould put in for the crown himſelf, or ſet up another; the latter opinion prevailed, and he was reſolved to declare for Henry, Duke of Richmond, then an exile in Bretagne. Henry, of Richmond, was one of thoſe who had the good fortune to ſurvive the numerous maſſacres of the preceding reigns: he was the only remaining branch of the houſe of Lancaſter; he was deſcended from John of Ghaunt, but, by the female line; his right to the throne was very doubtful, but the crimes of the uſurper ſtrengthened his claims. He had long lived in exile, and was once delivered up to the ambaſſa⯑dors of Edward IV, and juſt upon the point of being brought back to England, to ſuffer a cruel [201] death; when the Prince, who had delivered him up, repented of what he had done, and took him from the ambaſſadors, juſt as he was brought on ſhip⯑board. This was the youth whom the Duke of Buckingham pitched upon to dethrone the tyrant, and a negotiation was commenced between them for that purpoſe.
Richard, in the mean time, either informed by his creatures, or made diſtruſtful by conſcious guilt, ſuſpected a conſpiracy, and could not avoid think⯑ing Buckingham among the number of the con⯑ſpirators. Impreſſed with theſe ſuſpicions, he came to a reſolution of ſending for him to court, and the Duke's refuſing to come confirmed him in his belief: but ſoon he had no cauſe to doubt of his treachery, for word was brought, that the Duke of Buckingham was up in arms. The Duke, having found that he could diſſemble with Richard no longer, had drawn together ſome Welch forces, and began to march to the weſtern ſhore, where he had appointed young Richmond to land. Richard, however, no way diſmayed at the approaching danger, prepared to meet him with the few forces he then had in readineſs; but fortune ſeemed to favour the uſurper, and rendered his preparations, for this time, needleſs. As Buckingham was ad⯑vancing, by haſty marches, towards Glouceſter, where he deſigned to paſs the Severn, juſt then the river was ſwollen to ſuch a degree, that the coun⯑try, on both ſides, was deluged, and even the tops of mountains covered with water. It held ten days, during which the Welch army could neither paſs the river, nor ſubſiſt on the other ſide, where they found nothing but deſolation: at length, compelled by hunger, after having ſuffered a thou⯑ſand hardſhips, they all diſperſed, and returned [202] home, notwithſtanding the Duke's intreaties ſo the contrary. In this helpleſs ſituation, the Duke, after a moment's reflexion, thought the propereſt place of ſafety he could fix upon, was at the houſe of one Baniſter, who had been his ſervant, and who had received repeated obligations from his family. No maxim was ever more juſt, than, that there is no friendſhip among the wicked: Buckingham had himſelf been firſt falſe to his King, and after to Richard, the creature of his own power; how then could he expect fidelity from others? A large reward was ſet upon the Duke's head: the villain Baniſter, unable to reſiſt ſo great a temptation, went and betrayed his maſ⯑ter to the Sheriff of Shropſhire, who, ſurrounding the houſe with armed men, ſeized the Duke in a peaſant's dreſs, and conducted him to Shrewſbury, where he was beheaded, without the form of a trial, or delay.
In the mean time, Richmond landed in Eng⯑land, but, finding his hopes fruſtrated, by the cataſtrophe of Buckingham, he haſtily ſet ſail again, and returned to Bretagne. Richard, thus freed from the impending danger, gave a looſe to cruelty, the favourite paſſion of his breaſt. In or⯑der to expedite his revenge, he gave one Aſhton an unbounded commiſſion to condemn and execute, upon the ſpot, ſuch as were deemed by him guilty, or even ſuſpected of guilt. A cruel King never wants a bloody miniſter: Aſhton executed his commiſſion with the utmoſt rigour, putting huſ⯑bands to death in preſence of their own wives, and children before the eyes of their parents. It is ſaid, that, this execrable wretch being ſollicited by a beautiful woman to releaſe her huſband, who was a priſoner upon ſuſpicion, he conſented, upon [203] her promiſing to grant him a favour of another nature: ſcarce had the poor creature indulged his brutal deſire, when he brought her out, and point⯑ed to her huſband, whom, in the mean time, he had given orders ſhould be hanged upon a neigh⯑bouring tree!
Still, however, the authority of a parliament was wanting, to give ſanction to the injuſtice of Richard's proceedings: but, in theſe times of vice and ſervility, that was ſoon procured. The par⯑liament approved his proceedings, confirmed the illegitimacy of Edward's children, paſſed an act of attainder againſt the Earl of Richmond, and all his adherents; and ſeemed, upon the whole, more diſpoſed to ſlavery, than he to be a tyrant. One thing more was yet wanting to complete his ſecurity, the death of his rival: to effect this, he ſent ambaſſadors to the Duke of Bretagne, with whom Richmond had taken ſhelter, ſeemingly upon buſineſs of a public nature, but, in reality, to treat with Laudais, that Prince's prime miniſter, and to induce him to deliver up Richmond. The miniſter was baſe enough to enter into the nego⯑tiation; but Richmond, having had timely notice, fled away into France, and had juſt reached the limits of that kingdom, when his purſuers came up with him.
Richard, finding his deſign of ſeizing his ene⯑my's perſon without ſucceſs, as his power became more precarious, became, every day, more ſuſpi⯑cious and more cruel. Lord Stanley, who was now married to the widow of Edward IV, fell ſtrongly under his ſuſpicion; and, to ſecure his fidelity, he took the ſon as an hoſtage for his fa⯑ther's good behaviour. He now alſo reſolved to get rid of his preſent Queen, in order to marry his [204] own niece; a match from which he expected to derive ſeveral advantages. The Lady he was then married to was formerly the wife of the young Prince of Wales, that was murdered by him at Tewkeſbury. It is no ſlight indication of the bar⯑barity of the times to find a woman thus taking the murderer of her huſband for her ſecond lord. She felt, however, the conſequences of her in⯑gratitude to the deceaſed Prince, in the inhuma⯑nity of the preſent: Richard treated her with ſo much contempt and indifference, that ſhe died of grief, according to his deſire. But his wiſhes were not crowned with ſucceſs in his applications to his niece; ſhe treated his vile paſſion with re⯑taliated contempt and juſt deteſtation.
In the perplexity, cauſed by this unexpected re⯑fuſal, it was, that he received the news of Rich⯑mond's being once more landed at Milford-haven, with an intent to deprive him of the crown: but, being informed that he brought with him but two thouſand men, he ſeemed to deſpiſe the effort, and iſſued orders to oppoſe him with the greateſt coolneſs and intrepidity. Richard was poſſeſſed of courage and military conduct, and theſe were his only virtues. Having heard that Richmond was marching with his little army to London, he was reſolved to meet him on the way, and end the pretenſions of one, or the other, by a battle. Richmond, though very much inferior in number, was not leſs defirous of engaging; ſo that the two armies ſoon met at Boſworth field, to deter⯑mine a diſpute that had now, for more than thirty years, drained England of its braveſt ſubjects.
Richard, perceiving his enemy advance, drew up his army, conſiſting of about thirteen thouſand men, in order of battle; he gave the command of [205] the van-guard to the Duke of Norfolk, and led the main body himſelf, with the crown on his head, either deſigning by this to inſpire the ene⯑my with awe, or to render himſelf conſpicuous to his own army. The Earl of Richmond, who had not half the number of men, drew up his forces alſo in two lines, the Earl of Oxford com⯑manding the firſt, and he himſelf the ſecond: Lord Stanley, in the mean time, poſted himſelf in one flank between the two armies, and his bro⯑ther took his ſtation in the other, which was op⯑poſite. Richard, ſeeing him thus in a ſituation equally convenient for joining either army, im⯑mediately ſent him orders to join him, which the other refuſing, he gave inſtant command for be⯑heading Lord Stanley's ſon, whom he had kept as an hoſtage; but, being perſuaded to poſtpone the execution till after the fight, he complied, and immediately ordered the trumpets to ſound to bat⯑tle. The two armies approaching each other, the battle began with a ſhower of arrows, and ſoon the two ranks began to cloſe: this was what Stan⯑ley expected, who immediately, profiting himſelf of the occaſion, joined the line of Richmond, and turned the fortune of the day. In the mean while, Richard ſpurred up his horſe into the thickeſt of the fight, and Richmond quitted his ſtation be⯑hind, to encourage his troops, by his preſence in the front. Richard, perceiving him, was willing to end all by one blow; and, with the fury of a lion, flew through thouſands to attack him. He ſlew Sir William Brandon, the Earl's ſtandard-bearer, who had attempted to ſtop his career; Sir John Cheney, having taken Brandon's place, was thrown to the ground: Richmond, in the mean time, ſtood to oppoſe him; but, the crowd inter⯑poſing, [206] they were ſeparated. Richard now, there⯑fore, went to inſpire his troops at another quar⯑ter; but, at laſt, perceiving his army every-where yielding or flying, and now finding that all was gone, he ruſhed, with a loud ſhout, into the midſt of the enemy, and there met a better death than his actions had merited: after the battle his body being found amidſt an heap of ſlaughter, ſtripped naked, covered over with wounds, and the eyes frightfully ſtaring, was thrown acroſs an horſe, the head hanging down on one ſide and the legs on the other, and ſo carried to Leiceſter. It lay there two days, expoſed to public view, and then was buried without farther ceremony.
Richard's crown, being found, by one of the ſoldiers, in the field of battle, was immediately placed upon the head of the conqueror; the whole army, as if inſpired, with one voice, crying out, Long live King Henry. Thus ended the bloody reign of Richard; and, by his death the race of the Plantagenet Kings, that had been in poſſeſſion of the crown during the ſpace of three hundred and thirty years, became extinct. Thus ended alſo the conteſts between the houſes of York and Lancaſter, which had, for thirty years, been as a peſtilence to the kingdom, and in which above an hundred thouſand men loſt their lives, either by the executioner, or on the field of battle.
Theſe diſſenſions had reduced the kingdom to a ſtate of almoſt ſavage barbarity; laws, arts, and commerce were entirely neglected for the practice of arms; and to be a conqueror was ſufficient, in the eyes of the people, to ſtand for every other virtue. They had, as yet, no idea of pacific government, nor could lend applauſe to thoſe who cultivated it, and, except only in their gallantry [207] to the fair ſex, they little differed from the ancient painted inhabitants of the iſland. In theſe wars the women, though never ſo formidable, or never ſo active, unleſs accuſed of witchcraft, were ex⯑empted from capital puniſhments, which probably proceeded from a ſpirit of gallantry, the ſingle virtue of the times. As for the clergy, they were entirely diſtinct from the laity, both in cuſtomes, conſtitutions, and learning: they were governed by the civil law, drawn up by one of the Roman Emperors; whereas the laity were governed by the common law, which was traditionally deli⯑vered to them from their anceſtors. The clergy, however you may be told to the contrary, under⯑ſtood and wrote Latin tolerably well; the laity, on the other hand, underſtood no Latin, but ap⯑plied themſelves wholly to French, when they aſpired to the character of politeneſs. The clergy, as a body, little intereſted themſelves in the civil polity, and perhaps were not diſpleaſed to ſee the laity, whom they conſidered not as fellow-ſubjects, but rivals for power, weakening themſelves by con⯑tinual conteſts: the laity regarded the clergy with blind veneration, and this veneration leſſened their regard for their King. In ſhort, as there was no virtue among the individuals of the nation, the government was like a feveriſh conſtitution, ever ſubject to ferment and diſorder. France ſerved, for a while, as a drain to the peccant humours; but, when that was no longer open, the diſorder ſeemed to increaſe in the internal part of the con⯑ſtitution, and produced all the horrors of civil war.
LETTER XXVII.
[208]IT was in this ſtate of the nation that the Earl of Richmond, who took the name of Henry VII, came to the throne. You are now to be⯑hold one of the greateſt revolutions, that ever was brought about in any kingdom, effected by the prudence, clemency, and perſeverance of one great Prince: a nation of tumult reduced to civil ſubordination; an inſolent and factious ariſtocra⯑cy humbled; wiſe laws enacted; commerce re⯑ſtored; and the peaceful-arts rendered amiable to a people, for whom before war only had charms. In a word, you are now to turn to a period, where the whole government ſeems to put on a new form; and to view the actions of a King, if not the greateſt, at leaſt the moſt uſeful, that ever ſat upon the Britiſh, or any other throne. Hitherto you have only read the hiſtory of a barbarous na⯑tion, obeying with reluctance, and governed by caprice; you are henceforth to view more refined politics, and better concerted ſchemes; to behold human wiſdom, as if rouzed from her lethargy of thirteen hundred years, exerting every art to re⯑duce the natural ferocity of the people, and to in⯑troduce happineſs.
Henry's firſt care, upon coming to the throne, was to marry the Princeſs Elizabeth, daughter of Edward IV, and thus unite the intereſts of the houſes of Lancaſter and York: but, leſt the peo⯑ple ſhould ſuppoſe he claimed the crown upon the ſtrength of this alliance, he deferred her corona⯑tion [...] two years after, by which he made evi⯑dent the priority of his own claim. His reign happily commenced with an obedience to the laws [209] that had been hitherto unknown in England. An act had been paſſed, in the preceding reign, for the attainder of his friends and followers: this act ſtill continued in force, and many members of that houſe, by which it was to be repealed, were thoſe who were mentioned in the attainder. To ſuffer ſuch to join in repealing that ſtatute would be admitting them judges in their own cauſe, to which Henry bravely and juſtly objected: they were, therefore, obliged to leave the houſe, till an act was paſſed to reverſe their attainder.
Before his reign, it was uſual, when any per⯑ſon was attainted, to take away his life, and give away his fortune to ſome court favourite: Henry wiſely perceived that this had two bad effects; it firſt excited reſentment, by its cruelty; and, in the next place, only made the favourite too powerful for ſubjection. This prudent Monarch took a bet⯑ter method to repreſs tumult and rebellion: he deprived ſuch as were caught in arms of their eſtates and fortunes, and theſe he reſerved for the uſe of the crown. By this means he deprived them of the power to injure him, and he ſtrength⯑ened the ſinews of government, by enriching the crown. A great part of the miſeries of his pre⯑deceſſors proceeded from their poverty, and the opulence of the nobility. Henry ſaw that mo⯑ney alone could turn the ſcale of power into his own hands, and therefore hoarded up all the con⯑fiſcations of his enemies with the utmoſt frugality. Avarice, upon theſe motives, is not only excuſa⯑ble, but praiſe-worthy; it is not meanneſs, but oeconomy; and, whatever hiſtorians tell us of li⯑berality in a King, is, at beſt, miſplaced applauſe. Such liberalities are, in general, extorted from the poor, the induſtrious, and the uſeful; and be⯑ſtowed, [210] as rewards, upon the rich and powerful; perhaps upon the ſycophants of a court, and flat⯑terers of debauchery. Henry was different from his predeceſſors in this reſpect; he gave away few re⯑wards to the courtiers about his perſon, and none but the poor ſhared his benefactions. He releaſed all the priſoners for debt in his dominions, whoſe debts did not amount to forty ſhillings, and paid their creditors from the royal coffers. His oecono⯑my rendered him not only uſeful to the poor, but enabled him to be juſt to his own creditors, either abroad or at home. Thoſe ſums which he bor⯑rowed from the city of London, or any of his ſubjects, he repaid at the appointed day, with the utmoſt punctuality; and thus, as he grew juſt in his own dominions, he became reſpectable abroad.
Immediately after his marriage with Elizabeth, he iſſued out a general pardon to all ſuch as choſe to accept it; but thoſe lords, who had been the favourites of the laſt reign, and long uſed to tur⯑bulence, refuſed his proffered tenderneſs, and flew to arms. Lord Lovel, Humphrey and Thomas Stafford, placed themſelves at the head of this in⯑ſurrection: Henry ſent the Duke of Bedford to op⯑poſe the inſurgents, with orders to try what might be the effects of a proffered pardon, previous to his attempts to reduce them. The Duke punc⯑tually obeyed his inſtructions, but the rebels ſeem⯑ed to liſten to no accommodation: but, contrary to all expectation, Lord Lovel, apprehenſive of being deſerted by his followers, firſt ſhewed them the example, and fled away to Flanders. The rebel army, now without a leader, ſubmitted to the mercy of the King, which they received. The Staffords, who were in the mean time beſieging [211] Worceſter, hearing of the ſurrender of their con⯑federates, attempted to take ſanctuary in a church which had no privilege to protect them: being taken from thence, the eldeſt of the brothers was executed, the other received a pardon.
But the people were become ſo turbulent and factious, by a long courſe of civil war, that no governor could rule them, nor any King pleaſe. One rebellion ſeemed extinguiſhed only to give riſe to another: the King kept, at that time, a ſon of the Duke of Clarence, who had been formerly drowned in the butt of wine, as has been mentioned, a priſoner in the Tower. This poor youth, who was ſtyled the Earl of Warwick, had long been a ſtranger to liberty; he was un⯑acquainted with men and things, and ſo little con⯑verſant with common life, from his long and ear⯑ly confinement, that he knew not the difference, to uſe the words of the hiſtorian, between a duck and an hen. This unhappy boy, harmleſs as he was, was made an inſtrument of to deceive the people: a prieſt, of Oxford, had trained up one Lambert Simnel, a baker's ſon, to counterfeit the perſon of this Earl; and he inſtructed him to talk upon ſome facts and occurrences relative to the court of King Edward. Thus, having prepared him for his purpoſe, he ſet out for Ireland, judg⯑ing that the propereſt theatre to open the ſcene: the plot unfolded to his wiſh, Simnel was received and proclaimed King of Ireland, and he was con⯑ducted, by the people and judges, with great pomp to the caſtle, where he was treated conformably to his pretended birth and diſtinction.
The King could not avoid being troubled at this impoſture, becauſe he ſaw his mother-in-law at the bottom of it: he was reſolved, therefore, to [212] take the advice of his council upon this occaſion, who, after due deliberation, determined upon con⯑fining the old Queen to a monaſtery; but, to wipe off the aſperſion of treaſon, from one to whom he was ſo nearly allied, he gave out that ſhe was thus puniſhed for having formerly deli⯑vered up the Princeſs, her daughter, to King Richard. The people, as uſual, murmured upon this occaſion; but the King, unmindful of their idle clamours, perſiſted in his reſolution, and ſhe remained in confinement till ſhe died, which did not happen till ſome years after. The next reſo⯑lution of the King's council was to ſhew the Earl of Warwick, who was ſtill confined in the Tower, publicly to the people: in conſequence of this, he was led through the principal ſtreets of London, and conducted, in a ſolemn proceſſion, to St. Paul's, where great numbers were aſſembled to ſee him. Still, however, they proceeded at Dublin to honour their pretended Monarch, and he was crowned, with great ſolemnity, in pre⯑ſence of the Earl of Kildare, the Chancellor, and other officers of ſtate. Such impofitions upon the people were very frequent, at that time, in ſeve⯑ral parts of Europe: Lorrain, Naples, and Por⯑tugal, had their impoſtors, who continued, for a long time, to deceive without detection. In fact, the inhabitants of every county were ſo much confined to the limits of their own peculiar place of abode, and knew ſo little of what was paſſing in the reſt of the world around them, that nothing was more eaſy than to deceive. King Simnel, be⯑ing now joined by Lord Lovel, and one or two lords more of the diſcontented party, reſolved to paſs over into England, and accordingly landed in Lancaſhire: from thence he marched to York, [213] expecting the country would riſe and join him as he paſſed along. But in this he was deceived; and he ſoon had the mortification to find that the King himſelf was coming up with a ſuperior force to give him battle: the event of the conteſt was ſuch as might have been expected; the Earl of Lincoln, who commanded for Simnel, was overthrown and ſlain in battle, and the impoſtor himſelf taken pri⯑ſoner. Henry had now an opportunity of ſhewing the humanity and the greatneſs of his mind: Sim⯑nel was pardoned, and given a mean employment in the King's kitchen, and afterwards preferred to be one of his falconers, in which poſt he died. As for the prieſt, his inſtructor, he was made a priſoner for life.
Things being thus adjuſted, we may turn to France, which had long been the grave of the Engliſh, who yet coveted nothing ſo much as to continue the war there. Henry had all along perceived the futility of conqueſts upon the con⯑tinent, conqueſts that could produce no other ad⯑vantages than military glory: but, while he in⯑ternally deſpiſed ſuch pernicious triumphs, he was obliged, in order to gain popularity, to counte⯑nance them. He therefore often pretended, that he was going to raviſh his kingdom once more from the uſurper, and lay all France in blood; but, in fact, he had nothing farther from his heart. As far as negotiations and threats went, he did all that lay in his power to keep the jarring ſtates of that kingdom nearly balanced, and conſequently feeble; but, as for ſuccours of men and money, he too well knew the value of both to exhauſt them, in the manner of his predeceſſors, upon ſuch vain projects.
[214] The parliament, however, was taught to be⯑lieve, that he intended ſomething conſiderable a⯑gainſt France; and they, ever chearful when France was to be oppoſed, furniſhed him with the neceſ⯑ſary ſupplies. But money was, at that time, more eaſily granted than levied in England. A new in⯑ſurrection aroſe when the ſupplies came to be col⯑lected, and the Earl of Northumberland was kill⯑ed by the mob of Yorkſhire, while he attempted to enforce obedience to the laws. The mutineers did not ſtop here; by the advice of one John a Chamber, an incendiary, they ſet Sir John Egre⯑mont at their head, and marched towards London to give the King battle: the conſequence of this raſh ſtep was the defeat of the rebels, and the death of John a Chamber, their ring-leader. It was neceſſary to treat this man with rigour, to in⯑duce a more ready compliance to the future grants of parliament, and prevent all inſurrections on the ſame occaſion; for now people ſeemed continually more willing to revolt than to pay their taxes.
One would not have imagined, by the ſucceſs of Simnel's impoſture, that it could have produced imitations; but the old Ducheſs of Burgundy, ſiſter to Edward IV, finding the former fraud had de⯑ceived ſo many, was reſolved to project a new ſcheme, with more art and greater plauſibility. She firſt ſpread a report, that the young Duke of York, ſaid to have been murdered in the Tower, was ſtill alive; and ſoon a youth made his appearance that took upon him the title of the Duke of York. The perſon pitched upon to play this part was called Peter Warbeck, the ſon of a Flemiſh Jew, a youth of a beautiful perſon, good underſtanding, and poſſeſſing ſomething in his carriage and man⯑ner far above his birth or circumſtances. The [215] King of France, ever attentive to ſow the ſeeds of diviſion in England, received him at his court, and gave him proper encouragement; but, at the interceſſion of Henry, diſmiſſed him, upon the proſpect of a peace. Having quitted France, Per⯑kin went to ſeek protection from the Ducheſs of Burgundy, taking the greateſt care to conceal his former acquaintance. At their firſt meeting, the Ducheſs pretended much diſpleaſure at his aſſu⯑rance, in aſſuming the title of her nephew; but ſoon after, as if brought over by conviction, ſhe owned him for the Duke of York, and gave him a guard ſuitable to that dignity. The Engliſh, ever ready to revolt, gave credit to this new im⯑poſture, and the young man's prudence, conver⯑ſation, and deportment, ſerved to confirm what their credulity had began. All that were diſguſt⯑ed with the King prepared to join him, but par⯑ticularly thoſe that were formerly Henry's favourites, and had contributed to place him on the throne, thinking their ſervices could never be ſufficiently repaid, were now the chief heads of the conſpi⯑racy. Theſe were joined by numbers, ſome gree⯑dy of novelty, ſome blindly attached to their leaders, and ſome induced, by their deſperate for⯑tunes, to wiſh for a change.
Whilſt the King's enemies were thus combining to involve the kingdom in its former calamities, he himſelf was no leſs intent upon preventing the impending danger. He endeavoured to undeceive the people, firſt by ſhewing that the Duke of York was really dead, and by puniſhing his murderers; and next by tracing Perkin, the impoſtor, to his primitive meanneſs: the laſt of theſe projects was not eaſily executed, for Warbeck's parents and place of abode were ſo well concealed, that it was [216] almoſt impoſſible to come to a knowledge of them But Henry, at length, won over Sir Robert Clif⯑ford, who was then accompanying the impoſtor in Flanders, and had been entruſted with his and the Ducheſs's ſecrets. From Clifford the King learned, not only their deſigns, but the names of the conſpirators, and had ſeveral of them arreſt⯑ed: his former lenity, however, did not exempt him from freſh ingratitude: he found that the Lord High Chamberlain, brother to the famous Lord Stanley, who had been lately created Earl of Derby, was among the number of thoſe who now had conſpired againſt him. Though this nobleman had been loaded with favours, and was even then poſſeſſed of an immenſe fortune; yet, ſtill diſſatisfied, he ſought for more, from his country's calamities. He was therefore arreſted by the King's order, and, confeſſing his crime, was ſentenced to ſuffer that death he ſo juſtly merited. You have hitherto obſerved how difficult it was to rule the Engliſh at this time; each province ſeemed deſirous of placing ſome particular family upon the throne, and more eagerly took up arms, than willingly diſpoſed themſelves to legal ſubordina⯑tion. To mix lenity with juſtice, upon proper occaſions, required a very nice diſcernment: Hen⯑ry ſhewed his judgment in this particular; when⯑ever a conſpirator took up arms againſt him, from a conſcientious adherence to principle, and from a love of the houſe of York, he generally found pardon; but, if the only motive of his conſpiring was a love of change, or an illicit deſire to ſub⯑vert thoſe laws by which he was governed, he was then treated with more ſeverity.
While Warbeck's adherents were thus diſap⯑pointed in England, he himſelf attempted landing [217] in Kent, but, being beat off from that coaſt by the inhabitants, he went from thence to Ireland: find⯑ing his hopes fruſtrated there alſo, he went next to try his ſucceſs in Scotland. Here his fortune be⯑gan to mend; James III, who was then King of that country, received him very favourably, ac⯑knowledged [...] pretenſions to be juſt, and ſoon after gave him, in marriage, a daughter of the Earl of Huntley, one of the moſt beautiful and accompliſhed ladies of her time. But, not con⯑tent with theſe inſtances of favour, he was re⯑ſolved to attempt ſetting him upon the throne of England: it was expected, that, upon Perkin's firſt appearance in that kingdom, all the friends of the houſe of York would riſe in his favour: upon this ground, therefore, the King of Scotland en⯑tered the country with a ſtrong army, and pro⯑claimed the young adventurer wherever he went; but, contrary to expectation, he found none to ſecond his claims; and, thus diſappointed, he again retreated back to Edinburgh, where he con⯑tinued to reſide, till, upon the concluſion of a treaty of peace between the two kingdoms, he was once more obliged to leave Scotland, and to ſeek for a new protector.
Perkin had now, for the ſpace of five years, continued to alarm the King; he had been acknow⯑ledged in France, Flanders, Ireland, and Scot⯑land, as lawful heir to the Britiſh crown, and had made ſome bold attempts to ſecond his pretenſions. The time, at length, came, that he was to act the ſame character in England which he had per⯑formed elſewhere with ſo much ſucceſs. Some months before this there had been an inſurrection in Cornwall: the inhabitants of that diſtant coun⯑ty, upon levying the taxes granted by parliament, [218] reſuſed to contribute to expences which were de⯑ſtined for the defence of an oppoſite part of the kingdom. Every inſurrection now was followed with a project of dethroning the King; they there⯑fore marched, with one Flammock, a lawyer; Bo⯑diley, a carrier; and Lord Audley, at their head; directly to London, and incamped upon Black-Heath. The King's forces there ſurrounded and attacked them; the battle was bloody, two thou⯑ſand of theſe poor deluded wretches were killed upon the ſpot, and the reſt forced to ſurrender at diſcretion. Lord Audley, and one or two of their ring-leaders, were executed; but the reſt, to the number of four thouſand, diſmiſſed home again in ſafety. But this moderation had not the proper effect upon minds too ignorant for gratitude; they attributed the King's clemency to fear, and, upon returning home, induced their friends to be⯑lieve, that the whole kingdom was ready to riſe to vindicate their quarrel. It was now, therefore, determined to ſend for Perkin Warbeck, who was then in Ireland, to put himſelf at their head: Perkin did not heſitate to accept their invitation; and, taking upon him the command, choſe for his privy council one Hern, a broken mercer; Skelton, a taylor; and Aſtley, a ſcrivener. He publiſhed a proclamation alſo againſt Henry, in which he took the title of Richard IV; and, hav⯑ing drawn together a body of three thouſand men, attempted to ſtorm the city of Exeter, but with⯑out ſucceſs.
Henry, having received advice of his proceed⯑ings, ſaid merrily, that he ſhould now have the pleaſure of viſiting a perſon whom he had long wiſhed to ſee, and then took the neceſſary mea⯑ſures to oppoſe him. Perkin, on the other hand [219] ſeeing that the King was marching to attack him, loſt all courage, and, in the night, took ſanctuary in the monaſtery of Bewley. Soon after, upon promiſe of a pardon, he ſurrendered himſelf to the King, and was confined in the Tower; but, eſcaping from thence, and finding it impractica⯑ble to get out of the kingdom, he again took ſanc⯑tuary in the monaſtery of Bethlem. The Prior of this houſe gave him up to the King, upon promiſe of a pardon; and Perkin was now a ſecond time confined in the Tower: but, plotting, even there, againſt the King, he and the Earl of Warwick being convicted of deſigns to kill the keeper of the Tower, and ſo eſcape, they were both put to death.
There was as yet, in Henry's reign, nothing but plots, treaſons, inſurrections, ingratitude, im⯑poſture, and puniſhments. You have ſeen ſeveral of theſe ſomentors of treaſon brought to juſtice, yet infinitely greater numbers pardoned; but there was a wide difference between the puniſhments of this, and thoſe arbitrary ſentences of the reigns preceding: the courts of judicature now ſat upon every criminal, uninfluenced by the royal autho⯑rity; and ſcarce one perſon was puniſhed for trea⯑ſon, but ſuch as would, at preſent, receive the ſame rigorous treatment. A King, who can reign without ever puniſhing, is happy; but that Mo⯑narch muſt certainly be undone, who, through fear, or ill-timed lenity, ſuffers repeated guilt to eſcape without notice. When a country becomes quite illicit, puniſhments then, like the loppings in a garden, only ſerve to ſtrengthen the ſtock, and prepare for a new harveſt of virtues.
LETTER XXVIII.
[220]YOU have hitherto only ſeen Henry employed in ſuppreſſing rebellion, and bringing the kingdom from a ſtate of anarchy to juſt ſubordi⯑nation: let me now exhibit that part of his reign in which he moſt deſerves our admiration, and ſhew him as the friend of peace, and the refined politician. Indeed no man loved peace more than he, and much of the ill-will of his ſubjects aroſe from his attempts to repreſs their inclination for war. The uſual preface to his treaties was, That, when Chriſt came into the world, peace was ſung; and, when he went out of the world, peace was bequeathed. He had no ambition to extend his power, except only by treaties, and by wiſ⯑dom; by theſe he rendered himſelf much more formidable to his neighbours, than his predeceſſors had done by their victories. They were formida⯑ble only to their own ſubjects; Henry was dreaded by rival Kings.
He all along had two points principally in view, one to depreſs the nobility and clergy, and the other to humanize and raiſe up the populace. From the ambition of the former, and the blind dependence of the latter, all the troubles in for⯑mer reigns aroſe; every nobleman was poſſeſſed of a certain number of ſubjects, over whom he had an abſolute power, and, upon every occaſion, could influence numbers to join in revolt and diſ⯑obedience.
He firſt, therefore, conſidered, that giving theſe petty Monarchs a power of ſelling their eſtates, which before they had not a right to do, would greatly weaken their intereſt. With this view he [221] got an act paſſed, in which the nobility were granted a power of alienating their poſſeſſions; a law infinitely pleaſing to the commons, nor was it diſagreeable even to the nobility, ſince they thus had an immediate reſource for ſupplying the waſte of prodigality and the demands of their creditors. The blow reached their poſterity alone, but they were too ignorant to be ſenſible of remote ſuffer⯑ings.
His next ſcheme was to prevent their giving li⯑veries to many hundreds of dependents, who ſerv⯑ed, like ſtanding forces, to be ready at the ſum⯑mons of their lord. By an act paſſed in his reign, none but menial ſervants were permitted to wear a livery, under ſevere penalties; and this law he took care to enforce with the utmoſt rigour. It is told us, by Bacon, that the King, one day paying a viſit to the Earl of Oxford, was entertained, by him with all poſſible ſplendor and magnificence. When the King was ready to depart, he ſaw ranged, upon both ſides, a great number of men, dreſſed up in very rich liveries, apparently to do him honour. The King, ſurprized at ſuch a num⯑ber of domeſtics, as he thought them, cried out, ‘What, my Lord of Oxford, are all theſe fine fellows your menial ſervants?’ The Earl, not perceiving the King's drift, anſwered, with a ſmile, that they were only men whom he kept in pay to do him honour upon ſuch occaſions. At this the King ſtarted a little, and ſaid, ‘By my faith, my Lord, I thank you for your good chear, but I muſt not ſuffer to have the laws broken: my Attorney-General muſt talk with you.’ The hiſtorian adds, that the King ex⯑acted a ſevere fine for this tranſgreſſion of the ſta⯑tute.
[222] It has been already obſerved what a perverted uſe was made of monaſteries, and other places appro⯑priated to religious worſhip, by the number of cri⯑minals who took refuge in them. This privilege the clergy aſſumed as their undoubted right; and thoſe places of pretended ſanctity were become the abode of murderers, robbers, and conſpirators. Witches and necromancers were the only perſons who could not avail themſelves of the advantages of the ſecurity theſe afforded: they whoſe crimes were only fictitious, were the only people who had not the benefit of ſuch a retreat. Henry uſed all his intereſt with the Pope to aboliſh theſe ſanctuaries, but without effect; all that he could procure was, that, if thieves, murderers, or robbers, regiſtered as ſanctuary-men, ſhould ſally out and commit freſh offences, and retreat again, in ſuch caſes they might be taken out of the ſanctuary, and de⯑livered up to juſtice.
Henry politically pretended the utmoſt ſubmiſ⯑ſion to all the Pope's decrees, and ſhewed the greateſt reſpect to the clergy, but ſtill was guided by them in no ſingle inſtance of his conduct. The Pope, at one time, was ſo far impoſed upon by his ſeeming attachment to the church, that he even invited him to renew the cruſades for recovering the Holy Land. Henry's anſwer deſerves to be remembered: He aſſured his Holineſs, that no Prince in Chriſtendom would be more forward than he to undertake ſo glorious and neceſſary an expedition; but, as his cominions lay very diſtant from Conſtantinople, it would be better to apply to the Kings of France and Spain for their aſſiſt⯑ance; and that, in the mean time, he would come to their aid himſelf, ‘as ſoon as all the differences be⯑tween the Chriſtian Princes were brought to an end.’ [223] This was, at once, a polite refuſal and an oblique reproach.
Henry had ſeen the fatal conſequences of having favourites, and therefore reſolved to have none; he even excluded, from his privy council, all ſuch as, by their titles or fortune, might attempt to go⯑vern him inſtead of executing his intentions. His council was compoſed of private men, who had learning and wiſdom to adviſe, but neither influence nor ambition to govern.
But, while he was thus employed in lowering his nobility and clergy, he was uſing every art to extend the privileges of the people. In former reigns they were ſure to ſuffer, on whatever ſide they fought, if they had the misfortune to loſe the victory: this rendered each party deſperate, in caſes of civil war; and this was the cauſe of ſuch terrible ſlaughters. He therefore procured the paſſ⯑ing of an act, by which it was eſtabliſhed, that no perſon ſhould be impeached or attainted for aſ⯑ſiſting the King for the time being, or, in other words, him who ſhould be then actually on the throne. This excellent ſtatute ſerved to repreſs the deſire of civil war, as ſeveral would naturally take arms in defence of that ſide on which they were certain of loſing nothing by a defeat, and their numbers, would intimidate inſurgents.
But his greateſt efforts were directed to promote trade and commerce, becauſe this naturally intro⯑duced a ſpirit of liberty among the people, and diſengaged them from their dependence on the no⯑bility. Before this happy aera, all our towns owed their original to ſome ſtrong caſtle in the neigh⯑bourhood, where ſome great lord generally reſided; and theſe alſo were made uſe of as priſons for all [224] ſorts of criminals. In this alſo there was gene⯑rally a garriſon, or a number of armed men, who depended on the nobleman's bounty for ſupport. The number of theſe, of courſe, drew all the ar⯑tificers, victuallers, and ſhop-keepers, to ſettle in ſome place adjacent, in order to furniſh the lord and his attendants with what neceſſaries they wanted. The farmers alſo and huſbandmen, in the neighbourhood, built their houſes there, to be protected againſt the numerous gangs of robbers that hid in the woods by day, and infeſted the country by night, who were called Robertſmen. Henry, on the other hand, endeavoured to bring the towns from ſuch a neighbourhood, by inviting the inhabitants to a more commercial ſituation. He attempted to teach them frugality and pay⯑ment of debts, the life and ſoul of induſtry, by his own example; and never omitted the rights of commerce in all his treaties with foreign Princes.
About this time the whole world ſeemed to im⯑prove: Sweden, France, and Spain, enjoyed ex⯑cellent Monarchs, who encouraged and protected the riſing arts. The Portugueſe had ſailed round the Cape of Good Hope, and Columbus had made the diſcovery of America. Henry, in imitation of them, gave a patent to ſome Briſtol and Por⯑tugueſe merchants to go in queſt of new coun⯑tries. But an accident gave him a better oppor⯑tunity of improving commerce, than his moſt ſanguine hopes could have aſpired to: the King of Spain and his Queen, being upon their return to their own dominions, after the concluſion of a ſucceſsful war in Holland, were driven, by a ſtorm, upon the coaſts of England. As ſoon as Henry had notice of their arrival, he received them both with marks of the ſincereſt friendſhip [225] and reſpect, meditating, in the mean time, how to make his ſubjects reap ſome advantage from the accident. He therefore treated them with a ſplen⯑dor which was by no means agreeable to his own nature; and, while he kept them thus entertained with a round of pageantry and amuſements, he concluded a treaty of commerce, which has, even to this day, continued to be beneficial to his poſ⯑terity.
He now, at length, ſaw his country civilized; the people paid their taxes without inſurrections; the nobility learned a juſt ſubordination; the laws alone were ſuffered to paſs ſentence; towns began to ſeparate from the caſtles of the nobility; com⯑merce every day increaſed; foreigners either feared England, or ſought its alliance, and the ſpirit of faction was happily extinguiſhed at home. He was at peace with all Europe, and he had iſſued out a general pardon to his own ſubjects. It was in this ſituation of things that he died of the gout in his ſtomach, having lived fifty-two years and reigned twenty-three. Since the times of Alfred, England had not ſeen ſuch another King. He rendered his ſubjects powerful and happy, and wrought a greater change in his kingdom, than it was poſſible to expect could be effected in ſo ſhort a time. If he had any fault, it was, that, having begun his reign with oeconomy, as he grew old, his deſires ſeemed to change their object, from the uſe of money, to the pleaſure of hoarding it; but we can eaſily him, as he only ſaved for the public, the royal coffers being then the on⯑ly treaſury of the ſtate; and, in proportion to the King's ſinances, the public might be ſaid to be either rich or indigent.
LETTER XXIX.
[226]NEVER did Prince come to the throne with a conjuncture of ſo many fortunate circum⯑ſtances in his favour as Henry VIII, who now took upon him the government of the kingdom. His prudent father left him a peaceable kingdom, prudent miniſters, and a well ſtored treaſury. All factions were extinguiſhed, and all diviſions united [...]n his perſon: he by the father's ſide claimed from the houſe of Lancaſter, and by the mother's from the houſe of York. He was at peace with all Europe, and his ſubjects were every day growing more powerful and more wealthy: commerce and arts had been introduced in the former reign, and they ſeemed to find in England a favourable re⯑ception. The young King himſelf was beautiful in perſon, expert in polite exerciſes, and loved by his ſubjects. The old King, who was himſelf a ſcholar, had him inſtructed in all the learning of the times, ſo that he was perfectly verſed in ſchool divinity at the age of eighteen.
Yet, from this beginning, you muſt not expect to read the hiſtory of a good Prince. All theſe advantages were either the gifts of nature, of fortune, or of his father; with all theſe happy talents, Henry VIII. wanted the two great re⯑quiſites in forming every good character; wiſdom and virtue. The learning he had, if it might be called by that name, ſerved only to inflame his pride, but not controul his vicious affections. The love of his ſubjects was teſtified by their adulations, and ſerved as another meteor to lead him aſtray. His vaſt wealth, inſtead of relieving his ſubjects, or increaſing his power, only contributed to ſup⯑ply [227] his debaucheries, or gratify the rapacity of the miniſters of his pleaſures. But happy for him, had his faults reſted here: he was a tyrant; humanity takes the alarm at his cruelty, and, whatever for⯑tunate events might have been the conſequence of his deſigns, no good man but muſt revolt at the means he took for their accompliſhment.
The firſt act of injuſtice which marked his reign, was his proſecution of Empſon and Dudley, the Judges whom his father had conſtituted to inquire into caſes of treaſon, and levy fines proportionable to the offence. Their conduct was examined, but, nothing being found againſt them that could amount to a capital conviction, a falſe accuſation was pro⯑duced, and they were convicted of having plotted againſt the new King, and received ſentence to be beheaded, which was executed accordingly.
Theſe two Judges had been long hated by the people, though apparently without cauſe; they only put the laws in execution againſt criminals, and, inſtead of their lives, deprived the guilty of their fortunes. This action of an unjuſt compli⯑ance with popular clamour was followed by ano⯑ther ſtill more detrimental to the nation, yet more pleaſing to the people: the ſpirit of chivalry and conqueſt was not yet quite extinguiſhed in the na⯑tion; France was ſtill an object of deſire, and Henry was reſolved once more to ſtrike [...] the crown. It was in vain that one of his old pru⯑dent counſellors objected, that conqueſts on the continent would only be prejudicial to the king⯑dom, and that England, from its ſituation, was not deſtined for extenſive empire; the young King, deaf to all remonſtrances, and perhaps inſpired by the voice of the people, reſolved to lead an army into that kingdom. The conſequence of the cam⯑paign [228] was an uſeleſs victory and an empty triumph. The French fled without fighting; a truce was concluded between the two Kings, and Henry re⯑turned home to diſſipate, in more peaceful follies, the large ſums which had been amaſſed for very different purpoſes by his father.
But, while he thus changed from one pleaſure to another, it was requiſite to find out a miniſter and favourite, who would take care of the kingdom. Indifferent Princes ever attempt to rule, and are ruled by favourites, and ſoon a proper perſon was found to anſwer the King's intentions in this particular: the man I mean was the famous Car⯑dinal Wolſey; and, as a great part of this reign was ruled by him, his hiſtory may, with propriety, make a part in that of his maſter. Thomas Wol⯑ſey was the ſon of a private gentleman (and not of a butcher, as is commonly reported) in Ipſwich: he was ſent to Oxford ſo early, that he was a bachelor at fourteen, and from that time called the boy bachelor. He roſe, by degrees, upon quitting college, from one preferment to another, till he was made rector of Lymington by the Mar⯑quis of Dorſet, whoſe children he had inſtructed. He had not long reſided [...] this living, when one of the juſtices of the peace put him in the ſtocks, for being drunk and raiſing diſturbances in a neigh⯑bouring [...]air. This diſgrace, however, did not retard his promotion; he roſe, by degrees, till he was, at laſt, entruſted with negotiating an intend⯑ed marriage between Henry VII. and Margaret of Savoy. His diſpatch, upon that occaſion, pro⯑cured him the deanery of Lincoln; and in this ſituation it was that Henry VIII. pitched upon him as a favourite, and entruſted him with the ad⯑miniſtration of affairs. Preſently after his being [229] introduced at court he was made a Privy Counſellor, and, as ſuch, had an opportunity of ingratiating himſelf with the King, who found him at once ſubmiſſive and enterprizing. Wolſey ſung, laugh⯑ed, danced, with every libertine of the court; and his houſe was the ſcene of all the King's criminal pleaſures and amours. To ſuch a weak and vi⯑cious Monarch as Henry, qualities of this nature were highly pleaſing, and Wolſey was made his Prime Miniſter, and managed the whole kingdom at his pleaſure. The people ſaw, with indigna⯑tion, the new favourite's mean condeſcenſions to the King, and his arrogance to themſelves. They had long regarded the vicious inſolence and unbe⯑coming ſplendor of the clergy with envy and deteſtation, and Wolſey's greatneſs ſerved to bring a new odium upon that body, already too much the object of the people's diſlike.
Wolſey had ſome talents as a miniſter, but his failings outbalanced them, being exceſſively re⯑vengeful, ambitious, and intolerably proud. Among other inſtances of his ambition, he aſpired at the Popedom. Ferdinand, who was then Emperor of Germany, promiſed him his intereſt to procure it, and this conſequently attached the Engliſh mini⯑ſter more cloſely to the Emperor: this Monarch was then at war with France, and each power ſo⯑licited the alliance of England. It was the inte⯑reſt of the Engliſh calmly to look on as ſpectators of the quarrel, and ſuffer its rivals in power to grow weak by their mutual animoſity: Wolſey, however, preferring his own intereſt to that of his country or his maſter, engaged in a league againſt France. Soon after, however, the Pope dying, and the Emperor failing in his promiſe, Wolſey, [230] in revenge, induced his maſter to change ſides, and aſſiſt France againſt Ferdinand.
A victory over the Scots, rather oſtentatious than uſeful, ſerved, in ſome meaſure, to repreſs the diſcontents of the people during this mal-ad⯑miniſtration of the eccleſiaſtical favourite: this vic⯑tory was obtained by the Earl of Surrey over James IV. of Scotland; it was fought at Flodden Field, and the Scots loſt, upon this occaſion, the flower of their nobility and gentry, and James, their King, was ſlain in batttle.
Succeſs ever ſerves to ſtop the murmurings of the Engliſh, and no nation can better endure to be ſplendidly miſerable. Wolſey now became a Cardinal, grew every day more powerful, and more deſirous of power; the Pope was ſenſible of his influence over the King, and therefore created him his legate in England. The Pontiff's deſign was to make him thus inſtrumental in draining the kingdom of money, upon pretence of employ⯑ing it in a war againſt the Turks, but, in reality, to fill his own coffers. In this he ſo well ſerved the court of Rome, that he, ſome time after, made him legate for life: he was now, therefore, at once a Legate, a Cardinal, a Biſhop, a Prime Miniſter, and poſſeſſed of numberleſs church be⯑nefices; yet, ſtill unſatisfied, he deſired greater promotions. He therefore procured a bull from the Pope, impowering him to make Knights and Counts, to legitimate baſtards, to give degrees in arts, law, phyſic, and divinity, and grant all ſorts of diſpenſations. So much pride and power could not avoid giving high offence to the nobility, yet none dared to vent their indignation, ſo greatly were they in terror of his vindictive temper. The Duke of Buckingham, ſon of him who loſt [231] his life in the reign of Richard III, was the only perſon who had reſolution enough to complain. His threats were ſoon conveyed to Wolſey by an informer, who was not ſlow to accuſe the Duke of high treaſon. The ſubſtance of his impeach⯑ment was, that he had conſulted a fortune-teller concerning his ſucceſſion to the crown, and had affected to make himſelf popular. This was but a weak pretext to take away the life of a noble⯑man, whoſe father had died in defence of the late King: however, he was condemned to die as a traitor. When the ſentence was pronouncing a⯑gainſt him, and the High Steward came to men⯑tion the word traitor, the unhappy priſoner could no longer contain: ‘My Lords, cried he to his Judges, I am no traitor; and, for what you have now done againſt me, take my ſincere forgiveneſs; as for my life, I think it not worth petitioning for; may God for⯑give you, and pity me.’ He was ſoon after executed on Tower-hill.
Every juſt man muſt feel the higheſt indignation at ſo unmerited a puniſhment. In the former reign, the few that periſhed under the hand of the executioner were really culpable; but here we ſee a nobleman's life taken away, only for his diſlike to an aſpiring and licentious upſtart. It is this cruelty of puniſhing without guilt, and not the number of executions in a reign, that diſtinguiſhes it into tyrannical or merciful: perhaps there were more executions under Henry VII, than his ſucceſ⯑ſor; and yet the firſt was a juſt and merciful Prince, the latter an arbitrary and mercileſs tyrant.
By this time all the immenſe treaſures of the late King were quite exhauſted on empty pageants, guilty pleaſures, or vain treaties and expeditions. Wolſey was a proper inſtrument to ſupply the King [232] with money, which now began to be wanted; this he extorted by the name of a benevolence: Henry minded not by what methods it was raiſed, provided he had but the enjoyment of it. How⯑ever, his miniſter met ſome oppoſition in his at⯑tempts to levy thoſe involuntary contributions: having exacted a conſiderable ſubſidy from the clergy, he next addreſſed himſelf to the Houſe of Commons, but they only granted half the ſupplies he demanded. The Cardinal was highly offended at their parſimony, and deſired to be heard in the houſe; but, as this would have deſtroyed the very form and conſtitution of that auguſt body, they replied, that none could be admitted to reaſon there but ſuch as were members. This was the firſt attempt made, in the preſent reign, to render the King maſter of the debates in parliament; Wolſey firſt paved the way, and, unfortunately for the kingdom, the King too well improved up⯑on his deſign.
Wolſey was, ſoon after, raiſed to ſtill greater dignities than before: he was, at once, Archbiſhop of York, Biſhop of Durham, Abbot of St. Alban's, a Cardinal, Legate for life, Lord Chancellor of Eng⯑land, Prime Miniſter, and favourite, and careſſ⯑ed or feared by all the powers of Europe: he now, therefore, undertook more openly to render the King independent of his parliament, and levied the ſubſidy granted by them for four years, and conſequently to be paid at four different times, all at once. Againſt this the poor, who were the greateſt ſufferers, moſt loudly exclaimed; but he diſregarded their clamours, ſecure in the King's approbation and the Pope's protection.
Theſe proceedings only paved the way to ſtill greater extortions: Wolſey was too haughty to [233] be refuſed in his demands by the Houſe of Com⯑mons, and determined to levy money upon the King's authority alone. This was deemed a breach of the Magna Charta, and the people abſolutely re⯑fuſed to comply, even a general rebellion threaten⯑ed to enſue: the King, finding what were likely to be the conſequences of the Cardinal's precipi⯑tate meaſures, pretended that they were carried on without his authority; but, at the ſame time, demanded from the people a benevolence, which was only an artifice to extort money, under a dif⯑ferent name. The people ſeemed ſenſible of the King's art, and the citizens of London refuſed to give the benevolence demanded: their example was followed by the country, and an univerſal de⯑fection ſeemed to prevail. The King, apprehen⯑ſive of bad conſequences, by perſiſting in his de⯑mand, thought proper to retract, for this time, and wait a more favourable opportunity of op⯑preſſion.
You now find the people labouring under a very different form of oppreſſion from that in the reigns preceding Henry VII. In thoſe earlier times their miſeries chiefly aroſe from the licentiouſneſs of the nobility; in this reign they proceeded from the uſurpations of the King. Before Henry VII. had balanced the government, the people often diſ⯑charged their taxes by an inſurrection; but now, that the preſent Henry had deſtroyed that balance again, the people were obliged to pay taxes that were not due. In ſhort, they now ſeemed as mi⯑ſerable as when their great reſtorer had brought them from anarchy: an arbitrary King, an ava⯑ricious Pope, a revengeful favourite, a luxurious clergy, all conſpired to harraſs them: yet, during this whole reign, there was no rebellion; not from [234] the juſtice of the King's adminiſtration, nor from the love the people had to their Sovereign; but, hap⯑pily for the reigning tyrant, he enjoyed the effects of his predeceſſor's prudence, not his own.
LETTER XXX.
AS, in a family, the faults and the imperti⯑nence of ſervants are often to be aſcribed to their maſters; ſo, in a ſtate, the vices and the in⯑ [...]ence of favourites ſhould juſtly be attributed to the King who employs them. The pride of Wol⯑ſey was gre [...]t, but his riches were ſtill greater; a [...] in ord [...]r to have a pretext for amaſſing ſuch ſums, he undertook to found two new colleges at Oxford, for which he received every day freſh grants from the Pope and the King. To execute his ſcheme he obtained a liberty of ſuppreſſing ſe⯑veral monaſteries, and converting their funds to the benefit of his intended ſcheme. Whatever might have been the Pope's inducement to grant him theſe privileges, nothing could be more fatal to the Pontiff's intereſts; for Henry was thus him⯑ſelf taught to imitate afterwards what he had ſeen a ſubject perform without crime or danger.
Hitherto the adminiſtration of affairs was car⯑ried on by Wolſey alone; as for the King, he loſt in the embraces of his miſtreſſes all the complaints of the nation, and the Cardinal undertook to keep him ignorant, in [...]rder to maintain his own authori⯑ty. But now a period approached that was to put an end to this miniſter's exorbitant power: one of the moſt extraordinary and important revolutions that ever employed the attention of man, was now ripe for execution. But, to have a clear idea of this [235] grand reformation, it will be proper to take a cur⯑ſory view of the ſtate of the church at that time, and obſerve by what ſeemingly contradictory means Providence produces the happieſt events.
The church of Rome had now, for more than a thouſand years, been corrupting the ſacred doc⯑trines of Chriſtianity, and converting into a tem⯑porality the kingdom of another world. The Popes were frequently found at the head of their own armies, fighting for their dominions with the arm of fleſh, and forgetting, in cruelty and im⯑moral politics, all the pretended ſanctity of their character. They drained other kingdoms of their treaſures upon the moſt infamous pretexts, and were proud of ſetting at Rome, in their own con⯑duct, an example of refined pleaſure and ſtudied luxury. The cardinals, prelates, and dignitaries of the church lived and were ſerved like voluptu⯑ous Princes, and ſome of them were found to poſ⯑ſeſs eight or nine biſhoprics at a time. Wherever the church governs, it exerts its power with cruelty; and to their luxury theſe great ones added the crime of being tyrants too.
As for the inferior clergy, both Popiſh and Pro⯑teſtant writers exclaim againſt their diſſolute and abandoned morals. They publicly kept miſtreſſes, and bequeathed to their baſtards whatever they were able to ſave from their pleaſures, or extort from the poor. There is ſtill to be ſeen, ſays a fine writer, a will made by a Biſhop of Cambray, in which he ſets aſide a certain ſum ‘for the baſtards he has had already, and thoſe which, by the bleſſing of God, be may yet happen to have.’ In many parts of England and Germany the people obliged the prieſts to have concubines, ſo that the laity might keep their wives in greater ſecurity; while the [236] poor laborious peaſant and artizan ſaw all the fruits of their toil go, not to clothe and maintain their own little families, but to pamper men who inſult⯑ed and deſpiſed them.
But the vices of the clergy were not greater than their ignorance; few of them knew the meaning of their own Latin maſs; they were chiefly employed in finding out witches, and exorciſing the poſſeſſed: but, what moſt encreaſed the hatred of the people againſt them, was the ſelling pardons and abſolu⯑tions for ſin at certain ſtated prices. A deacon, or ſubdeacon, who ſhould commit murder, was ab⯑ſolved from his crime, and allowed to poſſeſs three benefices, upon paying twenty crowns. A Biſhop or an Abbot might commit murder for ten pounds. Every crime had its ſtated price, and abſolutions were given, not only for ſins already committed, but for ſuch as ſhould be committed hereafter. The wiſeſt of the people looked with ſilent deteſ⯑tation on theſe impoſitions, and the ignorant, whom nature ſeemed to have formed for ſlavery, began to open their eyes to ſuch glaring abſurdi⯑ties.
There aroſe, at laſt, a champion to reſcue hu⯑man nature from its degeneracy. This was the famous Martin Luther. Leo X, being em⯑ployed in building the church of St. Peter's at Rome, in the year 1519, in order to procure mo⯑ney for carrying on this project, he gave a commiſ⯑ſion for ſelling indulgences, or, in other words, a deliverance from the pains of purgatory, either for one's ſelf or their friends. There were every-where ſhops opened, where theſe were ſold; but, in general, they were to be had at taverns and ſuch-like places. Theſe indulgences were granted to the Do⯑minican friars to be diſtributed by them, whereas [237] the Auguſtine friars had been in poſſeſſon of the diſtribution of them time out of mind before. Martin Luther was an Auguſtine Monk, and one of thoſe who reſented this transferring the ſale of indulgences to another order. He began to ſhew his indignation, by preaching againſt their efficacy: oppoſition ſoon drove him farther than he at firſt intended to go, and, now the veil was lifted, he proceeded to examine the authority of the Pope himſelf. The people, who had long groaned un⯑der the Papal tyranny, heard his diſcourſes with pleaſure, and defended him againſt the authority and machinations of the church of Rome. Fre⯑deric, Elector of Saxony, ſurnamed the Wiſe, openly protected him. Luther as openly declaimed againſt the number of ſacraments, reducing the ſe⯑ven held by the church of Rome, firſt to three, and afterwards to two: from thence he proceeded to examine the doctrine of tranſubſtantiation, to ſhew the folly of ſuppoſing a purgatory, and the dan⯑gerous conſequence of celibacy among the clergy.
The Pope iſſued out his bulls againſt Luther, and the Dominican friars procured his books to be burned. Luther abuſed the Dominicans, and bold⯑ly, in the ſtreets of Wirtemberg, burned the bull of the Pope. In the mean time the diſpute was carried on by writings on either ſide: Luther, though oppoſed by the Pope, the Cardinals, and all the body of the clergy, ſupported his cauſe ſingly and with ſucceſs. If indeed we look into his works at this day, we ſhall find them trifling and unſatisfactory enough; but then he had only ignorance to contend with, and, ill as he wrote, they anſwered ſtill worſe. Opinions are inculcated upon the minds of the public; rather by fortitude and perſeverance than by ſtrength of reaſoning or [238] beauty of thought, and no man had more forti⯑tude and more perſeverance than he.
In this diſpute it was the fate of Henry VIII. to be one of the champions. His father, who had given him the education of a ſcholar, per⯑mitted him to be inſtructed in ſchool divinity, which then compoſed the learning of the times. He was, therefore, willing to give the world a demonſtra⯑tion of his abilities in this reſpect, and deſired the Pope's permiſſion to read the works of Luther, which had been forbidden to be read under pain of excommunication. Having readily obtained this requeſt, the King, from St. Thomas Aquinas, defended the ſeven ſacraments, and ſhewed ſome ſkill in ſchool divinity, tho' it is thought that Wol⯑ſey had the chief hand in directing him. A book being thus finiſhed in haſte, it was ſent to Rome for the Pope's approbation: the Pope, raviſhed with its eloquence and depth, compared the work to that of St. Auguſtine or St. Jerome, and gave Henry the title of Defender of the Faith, little ſuſ⯑pecting that Henry was ſoon going to be one of the moſt terrible enemies that ever the church of Rome had yet experienced
Beſides theſe cauſes which contributed to render the Romiſh church odious or contemptible, there were ſtill others proceeding from political motives. Clement V [...]I. had ſucceeded Leo, and, the heredi⯑tary animoſity between the Emperor and the Pope breaking out into [...], Clement was taken pri⯑ſoner in the caſtle of St. Angelo, and, with thirteen Ca [...]inals beſide, kept in cuſtody for his ranſom. As the demands of the Emperor were exorbitant, Henry undertook to negotiate for the Pope, and procured a [...]reaty in his favour; but his Holineſs, in the mean time, corrupting his guards, [239] had the good fortune to eſcape from confinement, and left the treaty unfiniſhed, but ſent H [...] a letter of thanks for his mediation. The conduct of the Emperor ſhewed Henry that the Pope might be injured with impunity; and the behaviour of the Pope manifeſted but little of that ſanctity or infallibility to which the Pontiffs pretended. Be⯑ſides, as he had obliged the Pope, he ſuppoſed that he might, upon any emergency, expect a return of favour.
It was in this ſituation of the church and of the Pope, that a new drama was going to be perform⯑ed, which was to change the whole ſyſtem of Eu⯑rope. Henry had now been married eighteen years to Catharine of Arragon, who had been brought over from Spain to marry his elder brother, Prince Arthur, who died ſome months after his co-habi⯑tation with her: Henry had three children by this lady, one of whom was ſtill living, while ſhe her⯑ſelf was eſteemed for her virtue and the gentleneſs of her diſpoſition. The King, tho' he felt no real paſſion, either for the qualifications of her mind or perſon, yet for a long time broke out into no fla⯑grant contempt; he ranged from beauty to beauty in the court, and his title and authority always pro⯑cured him a ready compliance from female frailty. It happened, at length, that among the maids of honour that then attended the Queen, was one Anna Bullen, the daughter of a gentleman of diſtinction, tho' not of the nobility. Her beauty ſurpaſſed what had hitherto appeared at this vo⯑luptuous court; her features were regular, mild, and attractive; her ſtature elegant, though below the middle ſize; while her wit and vivacity even exceeded the allurements of her perſon. The King, who never reſtrained one paſſion which he [240] deſired to gratify, ſaw, and loved her; but, after ſeveral efforts to induce her to comply with his criminal paſſion, he found that without marriage he could have no hopes of ſucceeding. This ob⯑ſtacle, therefore, he quickly undertook to remove; his own Queen was now become hateful to him, and, in order to procure a divorce, he pretended that his conſcience rebuked him, for having ſo long lived in inceſt with his preſent Queen, formerly his brother's wife. This every perſon of candour ſaw was only a pretext to cover his real motive; he himſelf had eagerly ſolicited the match with Queen Catharine; he had lived with her eighteen years without any ſcruple, and had the Pope's li⯑cence for this cohabitation; but he aſſerted, that a wounded conſcience was his motive, and none of his ſubjects offered to divulge the real one.
In this perplexity, therefore, he applied to Cle⯑ment VII, who owed him obligations, and from whom he expected a ready compliance, to diſſolve the bull of the former Pope, who had given him permiſſion to marry Catharine, and to declare that it was contrary to all laws, both divine and human. Clement was now in the utmoſt perplexity, Queen Catharine was aunt to the Emperor who had late⯑ly made him a priſoner, and whoſe reſentment he dreaded to rekindle, by thus injuring ſo near a re⯑lation; beſide, he could not, in honour, declare the bull of a former Pope illicit, for this would be entirely deſtroying papal infallibility. On the other hand, Henry was his protector and friend; the dominions of England were the chief reſource of his finances, and the King of France, ſome time before, had got a bull of divorce in ſomewhat ſi⯑milar circumſtances. In this exigence he thought the beſt method was to ſpin out the affair by a ne⯑gotiation; [241] and thus he argued, temporized, pro⯑miſed, recanted, and diſputed, hoping that the King's paſſion would never hold out during the te⯑dious courſe of an eccleſiaſtical controverſy. In this he was miſtaken; Henry had been taught to argue as well as he, and quickly found, or wreſt⯑ed, many texts of ſcripture to favour his opinions and his paſſion. To his arguments he added threats, which probably had greater influence: the Pope was aſſured that the Engliſh were already but too much diſpoſed to withdraw their obedience from the Holy See, and that, if he continued to refuſe, the whole country would readily follow their Mo⯑narch's example, and exclude themſelves from his protection. The King even propoſed to his Ho⯑lineſs, whether, if he was denied the putting away his preſent Queen, he might not have a diſpenſa⯑tion to marry two wives at a time? The Pope, though his meaſures were already taken not to grant the bull, yet ſtill ſeemed unreſolved, as if waiting for more full and authentic information.
During theſe ſolicitations, on which Henry's happineſs ſeemed to depend, he expected, in his favourite Wolſey, a warm defender and a ſteady adherent; but, in this, he was deceived. Wolſey ſeemed to be in pretty much ſuch a dilemma as the Pope himſelf. On the one hand he was to pleaſe his maſter the King, from whom he had re⯑ceived a thouſand marks of favour: on the other hand he could not diſoblige the Pope, whoſe ſer⯑vant he more immediately was, and who had power to puniſh his diſobedience: in this dilemma he choſe to ſtand neuter; though, of all mankind, he was moſt haughty, on this occaſion he gave way in all things, to his colleague Cardinal Cam⯑pegio, ſent by the Pope from Italy. Wolſey's [242] method of temporizing highly diſguſted the King, yet he endeavoured to conceal his reſentment: he now only looked out for ſome man of equal abili⯑ties and leſs art, and it was not long till accident threw in his way one Thomas Cranmer, of greater abilities than the former, and rather more integrity. Cranmer was a Doctor of Divinity and a Profeſſor at Cambridge, but had loſt his place upon mar⯑rying contrary to the inſtitutes of the canon law, which enjoined him celibacy. He had travelled into Germany, where he read Luther's works, and embraced his doctrine; and, upon his return, was tutor to the ſons of a gentleman, who one night happened to entertain two of the principal men of the court: Cranmer, being aſked his opinion of the King's divorce, which was then the topic of the converſation, delivered himſelf in ſo learned a manner, that the King was ſoon informed of his abilities, and ordered him to follow the court.
The King's reſentment now appeared more openly againſt the Cardinal. The Attorney-ge⯑neral was ordered to prepare a bill of indictment againſt him, and ſoon after he himſelf was order⯑dered to reſign the great ſeal. Crimes are readily found againſt a man when he is hated, and the Cardinal was ſentenced to be excluded from the protection of the laws. As ſoon as he was out⯑lawed, the King commanded him to retire to a country-houſe, and directed that an inventory of his goods ſhould be taken, which contained im⯑menſe riches, acquired by various methods of guilt and extortion: of fine holland alone there were found in his houſe a thouſand pieces, which may ſerve to give an idea of the reſt of his wealth. The parliament confirmed the ſentence of the courts, and he was ſent an exile to his country [243] ſeat, there to await the King's diſpoſal of his per⯑ſon, with all the fluctuations of hope and appre⯑henſion. Still, however, he was left the arch⯑biſhopric of York, and, even ſhattered as his for⯑tunes were, he was reſolved to perform the cere⯑mony of his inſtalment there with a magnificence little ſuitable to his preſent condition: but, while he was preparing to enjoy, in this retreat, thoſe ſplendors which he ever loved, by another unex⯑pected revolution, he was at the King's command arreſted by the Earl of Northumberland for high treaſon. He at firſt refuſed to comply, as being a Cardinal; but, finding the Earl bent upon perform⯑ing his commiſſion, he complied, and ſet out, by eaſy journies, for London, to appear as a criminal in a place where he formerly acted as a King. In his way he ſtayed a fortnight at the Earl of Shrewſbu⯑ry's, where one day at dinner he was taken ill, not without violent ſuſpicions of having poiſoned him⯑ſelf: being brought forward from thence, with much difficulty he reached Leiceſter abbey, where, the Monks coming out to receive him, he ſaid, Father Abbot, I am come to lay my bones among you: as his diſorder increaſed, an officer being placed near his bed-ſide at once to guard and attend him, he cried out to him, ‘O, if I had ſerved my God as I have ſerved my King, he would not thus have forſaken me in adverſity.’ He died ſoon after, in all the pangs of repentance and remorſe, and left a life which he had all along rendered turbid by ambition, till he found that all his ambition was but vanity at the laſt. He left two natural children behind him, one of whom being a prieſt, was loaded with church preferments. Henry, being thus freed from a perſon whom he conſidered as an obſtacle to his intentions, by the advice of Cranmer had the legality of his preſent [244] marriage canvaſſed in the different univerſities of Europe. It was very extraordinary to ſee the King on one ſide ſoliciting the univerſities to be favourable to his paſſion, and on the other the Emperor preſſing them to incline to his aunt: Henry liberally rewarded thoſe Doctors who de⯑clared in his favour, and the Emperor granted be⯑nefices to ſuch as voted on his ſide of the debate. Time has diſcovered theſe intrigues; in one of Henry's account-books we find the diſburſements he made upon theſe occaſions; to a deacon he gave a crown, to a ſubdeacon two crowns, and ſo of the reſt, to each in proportion to his con⯑ſequence. The perſon who bribed on theſe oc⯑caſions, however, excuſed himſelf by declaring, that he never paid the money till after the vote was given. Henry at length prevailed; his li⯑beralities were greater than thoſe of his rival, as he was moſt intereſted in the ſucceſs of the de⯑bate: all the colleges of Italy and France una⯑nimouſly declared his preſent marriage againſt all law, divine and human, and that therefore it was not at firſt in the power of the Pope to grant a diſpenſation. The only places where it was moſt warmly oppoſed, were at Cambridge and Oxford; theſe univerſities, it ſeems, had, even then, more freedom and integrity than were to be found elſe-where, but at laſt they alſo concurred in the ſame opinion.
The agents of Henry were not content with the ſuffrages of the univerſities; the opinions of the Rabbi's were alſo demanded; but they were eaſily bought up in his favour. Thus fortified, the King was reſolved to oppoſe even the Pope himſelf, for his paſſion by no means could brook the delays and ſubterfuges of the Holy See: being, [245] therefore, ſupported by his clergy, and authoriſed by the univerſities; having ſeen the Pope former⯑ly degraded by a lay Monarch, and Luther's doc⯑trine followed by thouſands; and yet, ſtill further inſtigated by the King of France, he, without fur⯑ther diſpenſation, annulled his marriage with Queen Catharine, and Cranmer, now become an Arch⯑biſhop, pronounced the decree.
The Queen, during this conteſt, always ſup⯑ported her rights with reſolution, and yet with modeſty: at length, however, having found the inutility of further reſiſtance, ſhe retired to the country, without once offering to complain: ſhe ſaw the power of her rival, and yielded without murmuring. Anna Bullen had already conſented to marry the King, and even ſhared his bed two months before his marriage with Catharine was diſſolved. Though her prudence and her virtue demanded eſteem in the former parts of her con⯑duct, yet ſhe now for a moment forgot the ties of each, and gave a looſe to her triumph. She paſſed through London with a magnificence greater than had ever been known before; the ſtreets were ſtrewed, the walls were hung, the conduits ran with wine, while ſhe and her corpulent lover rode through the city like the heroine and knight of a romance.
In the mean time the Pope now thought himſelf obliged to hold no meaſures with the King; and, being alſo frighted by the menaces of the Emperor, publiſhed a ſentence, declaring Queen Catharine alone to be Henry's lawful wife, and requiring him to take her again, with a denunciation of cen⯑ſures in caſe of a refuſal. When Henry received news of the ſentence given againſt him at Rome, he was convinced that no meaſures could be kept [246] with the Holy See, and therefore no longer delay⯑ed to execute his long meditated ſcheme of ſepa⯑rating entirely from the church of Rome. The parliament was at his devotion; a part of the cler⯑gy was for him, as they had already declared a⯑gainſt the Pope, when they decreed in favour of the divorce; the people were flattered with the expectation of being rid of the burden of their taxes; and ſuch as were diſpleaſed to ſee Italian Biſhops hold Engliſh church preferments, expect⯑ed their downfall: in ſhort, all things conſpired to co-operate with his deſigns; he, therefore, at once ordered himſelf to be declared, by his clergy, head of the church. The parliament confirmed his title, and aboliſhed all the authority of the Pope in England, the tribute of Peter-pence, and the collation to eccleſiaſtical benefices. The peo⯑ple came into the King's project with joy, and took an oath, called the oath of ſupremacy; all the credit of the Pope, that had ſubſiſted for ages, was now at once overthrown, and few, ex⯑cept thoſe who held to the religious houſes, ſeem⯑ed diſſatisfied. They who believed that it would have been dangerous to break with the Pope, were now convinced that it could be effected with im⯑punity; and it was ſoon perceived, that all autho⯑rity, which is not ſupported by power, is nothing but an empty name.
LETTER XXXI.
[247]IN this manner began the reformation in Eng⯑land, and by ſuch ſurpriſing methods Provi⯑dence brought about its deſigns, as if to mock hu⯑man ſagacity. Let us now purſue its progreſs, and follow this capricious Monarch through his various projects, cruelties, and inconſiſtencies. The parliament were now entirely dependant up⯑on the King; they had, from the beginning, ſided with him in his ſeparating from the church of Rome, and conſequently were now obliged to comply with all his other meaſures, in order to ſtrengthen the new reformation.
Henry was very ſenſible that the parliament was now, even from motives of intereſt, entirely de⯑devoted to him, and therefore he was reſolved to make uſe of the opportunity, and render him⯑ſelf abſolute. He therefore oppoſed the parlia⯑ment againſt the monks, and availed himſelf of the hatred which that body incurred by their ſuppreſſion: the parliament at firſt began by exa⯑mining the abuſes practiſed in monaſteries, and, finding ſome, condemned all: but, while they were employed in ſuppreſſing them, Henry was buſy in deſtroying the power of the ſuppreſſors. This was the origin of the unlimitted power he now aſſumed; his parliament, at different times, paſſed every ſtatute he thought proper to propoſe, how abſurd ſoever; and many of them were, in fact, marked with the higheſt abſurdities. They teſtified their ſatisfaction, not only for what he had done, but alſo for whatever he intended to do. They enacted, that the ſame obedience ſhould be paid to the King's proclamation as to an act of [248] parliament, which was deſtroying all their power at one blow; they declared their readineſs to be⯑lieve, not only what had been directed, but what⯑ever the King ſhould direct, in matters of religion, for the future: but, to crown all, they enacted that the King ſhould not pay his debts, and that ſuch as had been paid by him, ſhould refund the money.
Being thus impowered to act as he thought proper, he went vigorouſly to work in the ſup⯑preſſion of monaſteries, colleges, and religious houſes. Cambridge and Oxford, without any re⯑gard to their antiquity, ſhared the ſame fate with the reſt, and the lectures were, for a time, diſcon⯑tinued, and the revenues confiſcated. To recon⯑cile the people to theſe proceedings, Henry took care to have the counterſeit reliques expoſed, the ſcandalous lives of the friars and nuns made pub⯑lic, and all their debaucheries detected. What⯑ever had ſerved to engage the people in ſuperſti⯑tion, was publicly burnt; but what grieved the people moſt to ſee, were, the bones of Thomas Becket, the ſaint of Canterbury, treated with the ſame ſeverity, burnt in public, and his rich ſhrine, in which there was a diamond of great value, con⯑fiſcated among the common plunder. The people looked on with ſilent horror, afraid to rebel, equal⯑ly deteſting the vices of the monks and the impiety of the King.
But, while the King had entirely ſeparated him⯑ſelf from Rome, yet he was by no means willing to be a follower of Luther. The invocation of ſaints was not yet aboliſhed by him, but only re⯑ſtrained: he ordered the Bible to be tranſlated into the vulgar tongue, but not put into the hands of the laity. It was a capital crime to believe in the [249] Pope's ſupremacy, and yet equally heinous to be of the reformed religion, as practiſed in Germany. His opinions upon religion were delivered in a law, which, from its horrid conſequences, was termed the Bloody Statute; by which it was ordained, that whoever, by word or writing, denied tranſubſtan⯑tiation, that whoever maintained the communion in both kinds was neceſſary, or that it was law⯑ful for prieſts to marry, or that vows of chaſtity could innocently be broken, or that private maſſes were unprofitable, or that auricular confeſſion was unneceſſary, ſhould be burnt or hanged as the court ſhould determine.
The kingdom, at that time, was in ſome mea⯑ſure divided between the followers of Luther and the adherents to the Pope; this ſtatute, with his former decrees, in ſome meaſure excluded both, and therefore opened a wide field for perſecution.
Theſe perſecutions, however, were preceded by one of a different nature, ariſing neither from re⯑ligious nor political cauſes, but tyrannical caprice. Anna Bullen, his Queen, was herſelf of the Lu⯑theran perſuaſion, and had ſecretly favoured that party: theſe attachments ſoon created her enemies, who only waited ſome favourable occaſion to de⯑ſtory her credit with the King, and that occaſion preſented itſelf but too ſoon. The King's paſſion was, by this time, quite exhauſted; the only de⯑ſire he ever had for her was that brutal appetite which enjoyment ſoon deſtroys; he was fallen in love, once more, if we may call it love, with Jane Seymour, a maid of honour to the Queen.
As ſoon as the Queen's enemies perceived the King's diſguſt, they ſoon gave him an opportunity to gratify his inclinations, by accuſing her of ſun⯑dry intrigues with her domeſtics; which accuſation [250] was eagerly caught up by the King. All his paſ⯑ſions were in extreme; he immediately flew to par⯑liament, and had her accuſed of adultery and in⯑ceſt with her own brother. This parliament, who had long ſhewn themſelves the timid miniſters of all his paſſions, condemned the Queen and her brother, without ever knowing on what foundation the ſentence was grounded.
Her brother, Lord Rochfort, was beheaded, though there was not the leaſt proof of his guilt: one Norris and Brereton were hanged for only having paid her ſuch compliments, as would now merdy paſs for gallantry and innocent amuſement: Smeton, a muſician, was compelled to acknow⯑ledge his having received favours from her, and he was then hanged without an opportunity of being confronted by the Queen.
Upon ſuch ſlight ſuſpicions was this unhappy Queen ſent to the Tower, in order to await the execution of her ſentence. She who had been once the envied object of royal favour, was now going to give a new inſtance of the capriciouſ⯑neſs of fortune: ſhe was ever of a chearful diſ⯑poſition, and her eaſy levities perhaps diſguſt⯑ed the gloomy tyrant. She had diſtributed, in the laſt year of her life, not leſs than fifteen thou⯑ſand pounds among the poor, and was at once their protector and darling. Upon being conduct⯑ed to her priſon, ſhe ſat down to addreſs the King, by letter, for mercy: in this ſhe inſiſted upon her innocence in the ſtrongeſt terms: ‘You have raiſed me, ſaid ſhe, from privacy to make me a lady; from a lady you made me a Counteſs, from a Counteſs a Queen, and from a Queen I ſhall ſhortly become a ſaint.’ On the morning of her execution ſhe ſent for Mr. Kingſton, the keeper of the Tower, to whom, [251] upon entering her priſon, ſhe ſaid, ‘Mr. Kingſton, I hear I am not to die till noon, and I am ſorry for it, for I thought to be dead before this time, and free from a life of pain.’ The keeper attempting to comfort her by aſſuring her the pain would be very little, ſhe replied, ‘I have heard the executioner is very expert; and, claſping her neck with her hands, laughing, and I have but a little neck.’ Kingſton, who gives this account, continues to obſerve, that he had ſeen many men and women executed, but never one whoſe fortitude was equal to her's. She was beheaded ſoon after, behaving with the utmoſt de⯑cency and reſolution.
Anna Bullen ſeemed to be guilty of no other crime than that of having ſurvived the King's af⯑fection: many crowned heads had already been put to death in England, but this was the firſt royal execution upon a ſcaffold. Henry ordered his parliament to give him a divorce, between her ſentence and execution, thus to baſtardize Eliza⯑beth, the only child he had by her, as he had al⯑ready baſtardized Mary, his only child by Queen Catharine.
The very next day after her execution he mar⯑ried Jane Seymour, who died the year following, after having been delivered of a ſon.
In the mean time the fires of Smithfield be⯑gan to blaze: thoſe who adhered to the Pope, or they who followed Luther, were equally the ob⯑jects of royal vengeance and eccleſiaſtical perſe⯑cution. Thomas Cromwell, raiſed by the King's caprice from a blackſmith's ſon to be a royal fa⯑vourite (for tyrants ever raiſe their favourites from the loweſt of the people) and Cranmer, now be⯑come Archbiſhop of Cauterbury, with all their might, aſſiſted the reformation. Biſhop Gardiner [252] and the Duke of Norfolk, on the other hand, were for leading the King back to his former ſu⯑perſtitions, with every art; and Cromwell fell a ſacrifice to their intrigues, but the Duke and Biſhop did not ſucceed. Unhappily for his ſub⯑jects, the King became an equal perſecutor of the two religions propoſed for his acceptance.
It was now that England ſaw a ſpectacle to ſtrike the boldeſt with horror; a company of peo⯑ple condemned and executed all together, ſome for being ſtedfaſt to the Pope, and others for ad⯑hering to Luther: among this number were Dr. Robert Barnes, Thomas Gerard, and William Je⯑rom, for being Lutherans; Buttolph, Danepliſs, Philpot, and Brinholm, for continuing to acknow⯑ledge the Pope. Theſe were all burnt together, without ever being permitted to plead their own cauſe, or even to know their crimes or their ac⯑cuſers. The people in the North, indeed, during theſe times of cruelty, ventured to riſe in rebel⯑lion, but by the means of the Duke of Norfolk they were ſoon brought to a ſubmiſſion.
During theſe tranſactions Henry contracted a new marriage with Anne of Cleves, being induced by her picture, in which it ſeems the painter had flattered her. He found her very different from what his paſſion had expected, but married her from political motives. He could not, however, long bear the uneaſineſs of being married for life to a woman, whoſe corpulence, it ſeems, gave him diſguſt: he therefore reſolved to have once more a divorce from his parliament, which he found it no difficult matter to obtain. Among other reaſons to cancel his eſpouſals, he declared, that he had not given an inward conſent to the marriage, without which it was affirmed that his [253] promiſes could not be obligatory: he added, that, as he was reſolved not to conſummate the mar⯑riage, and to have legitimate iſſue, ſo it was pro⯑per to give him a Queen by whom he might ac⯑compliſh theſe intentions. Theſe reaſons were thought good; virtue and juſtice had been long baniſhed from the ſervile parliament.
He took, for a fifth wife, Catharine Howard, the Duke of Norfolk's niece: in this match he ſeemed to be perfectly happy, and even ordered his confeſſor to draw up a particular form of thankſ⯑giving, for the bleſſings he enjoyed in a faithful wife. The Queen, it ſeems, pretended to the ſame affection for him: but, alas, his amiable days were long over! he was now almoſt choaked with fat, and had contracted a moroſe air, very improper for inſpiring affection: the Queen had actually committed thoſe lewdneſſes before marriage, of which Anna Bullen had formerly been falſly ac⯑cuſed. But thoſe crimes did by no means deſerve death, nor even a divorce; ſince her fidelity to him, ſince marriage, was all that the moſt ſcru⯑pulous delicacy could require: Henry, however, conſidered her former inconſtancy as a capital of⯑fence; and, not yet ſatiated with blood, this Queen was executed on Tower-hill. All this was terrible, but ſtill the King was reſolved to be peculiarly cruel: though branded with three di⯑vorces, and ſtained with the blood of two wives, he ordered a law to be enacted, equally remark⯑able for its abſurdity and impoſſibility, namely, ‘That, whatever perſon knew of the intrigues of a Queen, he ſhould reveal it upon pain of high treaſon; or if any woman, not a virgin, ſhould preſume to marry the King of England, ſhe ſhould be guilty of high treaſon!’ One would think that it were impoſſible to procure a [254] body of men capable of giving ſanction to ſuch inſcrutable abſurdities, and yet lay claim to reaſon. It was pleaſantly ſaid (for even thoſe times of ſlaugh⯑ter could not ſuppreſs ridicule) that the King, ac⯑cording to that ſtatute, could only marry a widow. His next and laſt wife actually was a widow, Ca⯑tharine Parr, widow of Lord Latimer; and ſhe was a favourer of the reformation.
She was, however, to proceed with great cau⯑tion; the King prided himſelf much on his ſkill in theology, and it might be fatal to diſpute with him upon religion, as ſhe had ſeen in the caſe of one Lambert, ſome time before. It ſeems this man had denied tranſubſtantiation, which Henry had ordered to be believed: the King, hearing that he was to be tried at Weſtminſter for this of⯑fence, which was capital, undertook, himſelf, to diſpute the point with him in public. Letters were written to many of the Biſhops and Nobility to be preſent upon this extraordinary occaſion; and, on the [...]ay prefixed, [...] was a great con⯑courſe in the [...]ll. Lambert [...]od alone without a ſecond; the King was ſ [...]rounded with a crowd of flatterers, who applauded all he ſaid, and aver⯑red, that his arguments were invincible. They extolled him above all the divines of the age, and at once confirmed his pride and his prejudices: the reſult of the argument was, that Lambert had his choice, either to abj [...] his opinions or to be burnt as an obſtinate he [...] Lambert choſe to die ra⯑ther than for [...] [...]hat he [...] conſidered as the truth, and [...] [...]tence was ſoon after executed in Smithfi [...] [...] his legs and thighs were burnt off; there not [...]ing fire enough to conſume the reſt, two of the officers, raiſing his body up with [255] their halberds, puſhed it into the flames, where it was ſoon conſumed to aſhes.
It was not without reaſon, therefore, that the preſent Queen concealed her ſentiments, and be⯑haved with caution; upon this account ſhe durſt not intercede for three Proteſtants, who were burnt at Windſor juſt after her marriage: ſhe once, in⯑deed, attempted to argue with the King, but it had like to have coſt her her life; wherefore af⯑terwards ſhe ſuffered the divines on each ſide to diſpute, and the executioner to deſtroy. During theſe tranſactions the King would frequently aſ⯑ſemble the houſes of parliament, and harangue them with florid orations, in which he would aver, that never Prince had a greater affection for his people, or was more beloved by them. In every pauſe of his diſcourſe, ſome of his creatures, near his perſon, would begin to applaud, and this was followed by loud acclamations from the reſt of the audience.
It is, indeed, aſtoniſhing, to what a pitch of cruelty he attained, and to what a ſtate of ſervi⯑lity his people: I can account for either in no other manner, than that religious diſputes had now ſo divided the people, and ſet one againſt the other, that the King, availing himſelf of the univerſal weakneſs which was produced by univerſal diſſen⯑ſion, became the tyrant of all.
But nature, at laſt, ſeemed kindly willing to rid the world of a monſter that man was unable to deſtroy: Henry had been troubled, for ſome time, with a diſorder in his leg, which was now grown very painful; this, added to his monſtrous corpu⯑lency, which rendered him unable to ſtir, made him more furious than a chained lion: he became froward and untractable, none dared to approach [256] him without trembling. He had been ever ſtern and ſevere, he was now outrageous: flattery had corrupted all his ſenſes; he deemed it an un⯑pardonable crime to controvert thoſe opinions which he himſelf was changing every hour. His courtiers, contending among themſelves, and con⯑ſpiring the death of each other, had no inclination to make an enemy of him. Thus he continued, for four years, the terror of all and the tormentor of himſelf: at length his end approached; he per⯑ceived he had not long to live, his fat increaſing and his leg growing worſe. He had already ſlaugh⯑tered ſeveral favourites, raiſed from obſcure ſta⯑tions to ſhare his dignities and his cruelty; More, Fiſher, Cromwell, and others, died upon the ſcaf⯑fold, and Wolſey prevented it by his own death: he was reſolved to make one victim more before he left the world, and that was the Duke of Nor⯑folk, who had formerly ſuppreſſed a rebellion ex⯑cited againſt him, and who had, all along, been the vigilant miniſter of his commands. This no⯑bleman had, outwardly, complied with the refor⯑mation, but, in his heart, favoured the Pope: the King knew this, and only wanted a pretext to put him and his ſon, the Earl of Surry, to death: it was no difficult matter to find one; the ſon had uſed the arms of Edward the Confeſſor in his eſ⯑cutcheon, and the father had left a blank ſpace in his own where they might be inſerted. This was all the crime alledged againſt them, but it was ſuf⯑ficient when the King gave his opinion that it was his will they ſhould die. The Earl of Surry was beheaded upon Tower-hill, and a warrant ſent to the Lieutenant of the Tower to cut off the Duke of Norfolk's head in two days following: this ſen⯑tence was juſt upon the point of being executed, [257] when the King's own death gave him an unex⯑pected reprieve. Henry had been ſuffered to lan⯑guiſh without any of his domeſtics having the cou⯑rage to warn him of his approaching end; they who had ever come near him with trembling, now dreaded to give him this friendly admonition. At length Sir Anthony Denny had the charity to in⯑form him of his ſituation: he thanked this cour⯑tier for his friendly admonition, and ſoon after expired, full of ſorrow for his former guilt, and with all the horrors of approaching diſſolution.
Some Sovereigns have been tyrants from con⯑tradiction and revolt; ſome from being miſled by favourites, and ſome from a ſpirit of party; but Henry was cruel from diſpoſition alone, cruel in the government, cruel in religion, and cruel in his family: yet, tyrant as he was, he died peace⯑ably a natural death, while Henry VI, the moſt harmleſs of all Monarchs, was dethroned, im⯑priſoned, and aſſaſſinated. It is a folly and a wickedneſs to ſay, that good or bad actions are their own recompence here: true is the doctrine of holy writ, The wicked have their good things in this life, the virtuous muſt look for them in another.
Our divines have taken much pains to vindicate the character of this vicious Prince, as if his con⯑duct and our reformation were, in fact, united: nothing can be more abſurd than this, as if the moſt noble deſigns were not often brought about by the moſt vicious inſtruments; we ſee even the cruelty and injuſtice of man employed in our holy redemption.
LETTER XXXII.
[258]THE alterations, in the reign of Henry, were rather ſeparations from the Pope than a re⯑formation of religious abuſes: in the reign of his ſucceſſor Edward VI, his ſon by Jane Seymour, and heir to the crown, the errors of Rome, in reality, began to be reformed. This Prince was but nine years old when he aſcended the throne of his father, and the hiſtory of his government is rather a detail of the methods purſued by his go⯑vernors to reform the abuſes of religion, than a ſeries of politics or war; and their characters, ra⯑ther than his, ſhould be the object of the hiſtorian's reſearch.
The Duke of Somerſet was made Protector of the minority, and thus engroſſed the whole admi⯑niſtration; the reſt of the council, which were joined with him, either ſided with his views, or ineffectually oppoſed them. To ſtrengthen his power, he marched againſt the Scots who had in⯑vaded England, their conſtant practice whenever they ſaw the country employed in faction and diſ⯑pute: a ſlight victory, gained by him upon this occaſion, acquired him popularity and power. I have more than once remarked, that, to gain the hearts of the Engliſh, it was requiſite to be a con⯑queror. But to this character Somerſet added vir⯑tues of a much more amiable kind: he was hum⯑ble, civil, affable, courteous to the meaneſt ſuitor, and all the actions of his life were directed by mo⯑tives of religion and honour: he, at the ſame time, had learned to look with contempt and deteſtation on the errors and corruptions of the church of Rome, and was conſequently the warm friend of Archbiſhop Cranmer, who now undertook to make [259] a real reformation, which Henry VIII. only pre⯑tended to do.
You have ſeen, in Henry's reign, that the only alterations he made in religion, were ſuch as either favoured his paſſions or increaſed his power. Thus all his ſubjects were under a peculiar reſtraint, which, upon his death, was no longer continued: each took the liberty of ſpeaking his thoughts up⯑on religion, though the laws of the laſt reign were ſtill in force. In this diviſion of opinions, as it may eaſily be ſuppoſed, the Reformers prevailed, for they had the Protector of their party: to that and, therefore, they procured a general viſitation of churches, and reformed numberleſs abuſes that were almoſt held ſacred by preſcription. It was left to people's choice to go to confeſſion, which had been hitherto deemed an indiſpenſable duty, or to neglect that practice. It was ordered, that all images ſhould be taken out of churches, prieſts were allowed to marry, the old maſs was aboliſhed, and a new liturgy drawn up, which retrenched ſeveral abuſes in the ſervice of the church, and which is the ſame with that now uſed, bating a few alterations.
Theſe reformations were evidently calculated for the benefit of the ſubject; but ſtill the Popiſh clergy, who either were expelled their monaſte⯑ries or had refuſed to conform, ſtirred up the people to riſe in rebellion againſt them: we may judge, from the number of places in which inſur⯑rections were made, that thoſe reformations were by no means received with univerſal ſatisfaction. There were, at once, inſurrections in Wiltſhire, Suſſex, Hampſhire, Kent, Glouceſterſhire, Suf⯑folk, Warwickſhire, Eſſex, Hertfordſhire, Leiceſ⯑terſhire, Rutlandſhire, and Worceſterſhire; and the flames of war were rekindling through the [260] whole kingdom. The Protector, who both by principle and intereſt was a friend of the popu⯑lace, did every thing to redreſs their grievances, and by that means ſtopped their fury for a while, In fact, they had ſeveral complaints that were founded in juſtice: the nobility had become poſ⯑ſeſſors of the forfeited lands which belonged to the clergy, and, inſtead of leaving them to be culti⯑vated by the poor, as formerly, incloſed them for the purpoſes of pleaſure or magnificence. This neceſſarily drove numbers, beſides the ejected friars, to the utmoſt ſtreights; but, to add to their miſ⯑fortunes, an act was paſſed againſt them, the moſt ſevere that had hitherto been known in England: it was enacted, that, if any perſon ſhould loiter, without offering himſelf to work, for three days together, he ſhould be adjudged a ſlave for two years to the firſt informer, and ſhould be marked on the breaſt with the letter V, or vagabond, im⯑printed with an hot iron. It is not to be wonder⯑ed at, therefore, that there ſhould be a general in⯑ſurrection of the people, when ſuffering ſuch ſe⯑vere oppreſſions.
But all the Protector's promiſes and endeavours could not effectually redreſs their grievances, he therefore was obliged to have recourſe to violence. Theſe were not the compact bodies of men that we have ſeen in former rebellions, headed by ſome diſcontented or ambitious courtier, and led on with conduct and ſucceſs: Henry VII. had effec⯑tually ſuppreſſed all ſuch; theſe were now only a tumultuous rabble; without arms and without diſ⯑cipline, led on by ſome obſcure deſperado; un⯑reaſonable in their demands, and divided among each other; the unhappy wretches were therefore eaſily overthrown. Above a thouſand of them [261] were ſlain near Exeter by Lord Ruſſel, and two thouſand more near Norwich by the Earl of War⯑wick.
The kingdom was now again inclining to an ariſtocracy: the nobility, by the late increaſe of their poſſeſſions, were grown powerful, and op⯑preſſed the people at pleaſure. They now began to find that they had a ſeparate intereſt from that of the commons, and conſpired to carry on their power by union among themſelves, while the reſt of the kingdom was divided. The Duke of Somerſet, however, oppoſed this project, as he was ever a fa⯑vourer of the people; and it was incumbent there⯑fore to deſtroy his power before they could eſta⯑bliſh their own. With this view they placed the Earl of Warwick, afterwards made Duke of Nor⯑thumberland, at their head, and began by ſpread⯑ing reports to deſtroy the Protector's reputation; they next won over the common council of Lon⯑don to favour their projects, and laſtly had him accuſed of high treaſon. The intereſt of the Pro⯑tector was overpowered by that of his rival: he was condemned, and loſt his head upon Tower-hill.
In all this ſtruggle for power, the young King, by reaſon of his age, was barely paſſive: he was only made the executor of the reſentment and am⯑bition of the contending miniſters, as either hap⯑pened to prevail; and at one time ſigned the order for execution on this ſide, at another time on that, but ever with tears in his eyes; a tenderneſs of diſpoſition was one of this amiable youth's conſpi⯑cuous qualities: to theſe were added a ſagacity far ſurpaſſing his years and learning, that amazed all ſuch as happened to converſe with him. When the dignity of the throne was to be ſupported, he [262] behaved like a man; and, at other times, was gentle and affable as became his age. In ſhort, he had ſuch great qualities, or was ſaid to have ſuch, that mankind had reaſon to lament his ſhort continuance among them. It is very probable, however, that flattery would have contributed to deſtroy thoſe talents, as it had thoſe of his father; for few Princes, except his father, had received more flattery than he. He died of a defluxion upon his lungs, his death being haſtened by medicines given by a woman who confidently pretended ſhe could cure him. His death made way for another ſcene of horrid barbarity, in which the kingdom was to be ruled by a weak and bigotted woman, who was herſelf ruled by mercileſs prieſts, who received their orders from the court of Rome.
LETTER XXXIII.
YOU have hitherto ſeen the ſucceſſion to the throne of England, partly obtained by lineal deſcent, and partly by the aptitude for govern⯑ment in the perſon choſen: neither wholly here⯑ditary, nor quite elective, it has ever made anceſ⯑try the pretext of right, but, in fact, the people ſued for the ſupport of theſe pretenſions. And this is the beſt ſpecies of ſucceſſion that can be con⯑ceived: it prevents that ariſtocracy, which is ever the reſult of a government entirely elective; and that tyranny which is too often eſtabliſhed where there is never an infringement upon hereditary claims.
Whenever a Monarch of England happened to be arbitrary, he generally conſidered the kingdom as his property, and not himſelf as a ſervant of [263] the kingdom. In ſuch caſes it was natural for him, at his deceaſe, to bequeath his dominions as he thought proper: Henry, in conformity to this practice, made a will, in which he ſettled the ſuc⯑ceſſion merely according to his uſual caprice; Edward VI. was firſt nominated to ſucceed him, whoſe reign you have juſt ſeen; then Mary, his eldeſt daughter by Catharine of Spain, but with a mark of ſpecial condeſcenſion, by which he would intimate her illegitimacy; the next that followed was Elizabeth, his daughter by Anna Bullen, with the ſame marks of her not being legitimate: after his own children his ſiſter's children were men⯑tioned; his younger ſiſter the Ducheſs of Suffolk's iſſue were preferred before his elder ſiſter the Queen of Scotland's, which preference was thought by all to be neither founded in juſtice nor ſupported by reaſon.
Edward VI, as has been ſeen, ſucceeded him. He alſo made a will, in which he gave the kingdom away from Mary and Elizabeth to the Ducheſs of Suffolk's daughter, the lady Jane Grey, a girl of ſixteen. By theſe diſpoſitions there were, after the death of young Edward, no leſs than four Princeſſes who could lay claim to the crown: Mary, who was firſt upon the will, had been de⯑clared illegitimate by parliament, and that act was never repealed; the ſame could be alledged againſt Elizabeth, but ſhe had another foundation by be⯑ing reſtored to her rights in her father's reign; the Queen of Scotland, Henry's eldeſt ſiſter, could plead the illegitimacy of his two daughters; and Jane Grey might alledge the will of the laſt King in her favour.
You have ſeen, in the laſt reign, the Earl of Warwick ſuppreſſing an inſurrection of the people, afterwards becoming a favourite of the King, then [264] made Duke of Northumberland, next overturning the Duke of Somerſet his rival, and at length purſuing the meaſures of the man whom he had deſtroyed. This nobleman's ambition did not reſt here; he had hopes of ſecuring the crown in his own family, and, with this view, he matched the lord Guilford Dudley, his ſon, with lady Jane Grey, whom, by his intereſt, he hoped to ſettle on the throne. He was hated by the people for his cruelties as much as the young lady was loved for her virtues, and this was the greateſt obſtacle to his deſign. I have been more prolix than uſual upon this topic of the ſucceſſion, but you ſhould attend to it with care, in order to have a clear idea of the preſent and the ſucceeding reigns.
Immediately upon the death of the young King, but two competitors put up for the crown. Mary, relying upon the juſtice of her preten⯑ſions; and Jane Grey, ſupported by the Duke of Northumberland, her father-in-law. Mary was ſtrongly bigotted to the Popiſh ſuperſtitions, having been bred up in reſtraint: ſhe was reſerved and gloomy; ſhe had, even during the life of her fa⯑ther, the reſolution to maintain her ſentiments and ceremonies, and refuſed to comply with his new inſtitutions: her zeal had rendered her cruel, and ſhe was not only blindly attached to her reli⯑gious opinions, but even to the Popiſh clergy who maintained them. On the other hand, Jane Grey was attached to the Reformers; though yet but ſix⯑teen, her judgment had attained ſuch a degree of perfection as few enjoy in their more advanced age. All hiſtorians agree, that the ſolidity of her under⯑ſtanding, improved by continual application, ren⯑dered her the wonder of her age. Aſcham, tutor to Elizabeth, informs us, that, coming once to [265] wait upon her at her father's houſe in Leiceſter⯑ſhire, he found her reading Plato's works in Greek, when all the reſt of the family were hunting in the park. He ſeemed ſurprized at her being the only perſon abſent from the diverſions abroad, but ſhe aſſured him, ‘that Plato was an higher amuſement to her than the moſt ſtudied refinements of ſenſual pleaſure.’ It was philoſophy, and not ambition, which ſhe ſeemed born for: when her ambitious father-in-law came to inform her of her advancement to the throne, ſhe heard the news with ſorrow, and ac⯑cepted the proffered honour with reluctance. How⯑ever, the intreaties of her friends, and the autho⯑rity of her huſband, at length reconciled her to her fortune; ſhe was removed to the Tower, and ſoon after proclaimed at London, while the people ſhewed few of thoſe marks of ſatisfaction which uſually accompany a ceremony of this kind.
Jane was proclaimed by the council, but the people were for Mary. The men of Suffolk roſe in her favour, Norfolk ſoon joined her, and Lord Haſtings, with four thouſand men which were raiſed to oppoſe her, revolted to her ſide. It was in vain that the Duke of Northumberland attempt⯑ed to lead his army againſt them; his ſoldiers de⯑ſerted on the march, he found himſelf abandoned, and ſoon after the council itſelf, which he once governed, now freed from reſtraint, declared againſt him. Jane, who had but juſt been crowned, now ſaw herſelf again ſtripped of her dignities, and, without any reluctance, laid down an honour which ſhe was at firſt compelled to accept, and which ſhe held but nine days. Her father, the Duke of Suffolk, delivered up the Tower, of which he had the command; and her father-in-law, the Duke of Northumberland, being prevent⯑ed [266] from flying out of the kingdom, pretended to be pleaſed at Mary's ſucceſs, and was the firſt to fling up his cap when ſhe was proclaimed in Cam⯑bridge.
Mary now entered London, and, without the leaſt effuſion of blood, ſaw herſelf joyfully pro⯑claimed, and peaceably ſettled on the throne. This was a juncture that ſeemed favourable to Britiſh happineſs and liberty; a Queen, whoſe rights were the moſt equitable, in ſome meaſure elected by the people; the ariſtocracy of the laſt reign almoſt wholly ſuppreſſed; the houſe of com⯑mons, by this means, re-inſtated in their former authority; the pride of the clergy humbled, and their vices detected; together with peace abroad and almoſt unanimity at home. This was the flattering proſpect upon Mary's acceſſion, but ſoon this pleaſing phantom was diſſolved; Mary was cruel and a bigot; ſhe gave back their former power to her clergy, and the kingdom was, once more, involved in the horrors from whence it had lately been extricated.
The Queen had promiſed to the men of Suffolk, who firſt declared in her favour, that ſhe would ſuffer religion to remain in the ſituation in which ſhe found it. This promiſe, however, ſhe by no means intended to perform: political cruelty ever precedes religious: ſhe had reſolved on a change of religion; but, before ſhe perſecuted heretics, who were as yet her friends, it was neceſſary to get rid of ſome of the late council, who were, in reality, her enemies. The Duke of Northumber⯑land was the firſt object of royal vengeance, and not indeed without reaſon. It is inſtructive enough to obſerve the viciſſitudes of fortune; the Duke of Norfolk was now taken from his priſon in the [267] Tower, to ſit as judge upon the Duke of Nor⯑thumberland, who had kept him there. The ac⯑cuſed made a very ſkilful defence, but what could that avail in a court predetermined to condemn him? He was capitally convicted and ſoon after executed, Sir John Gates, and Sir Thomas Pal⯑mer, who had aſſiſted in his projects, ſharing in his puniſhment.
While theſe were falling as victims to their am⯑bition, the Queen's miniſters were, in the mean time, carrying on a negotiation of marriage be⯑tween her and Philip, King of Spain. The peo⯑ple thought they ſaw that this would be a fatal blow to their liberties, and therefore loudly mur⯑mured againſt it; but, when they found the treaty actually concluded, they could no longer contain. Sir Thomas Wyat, a Roman Catholic, at the head of four thouſand inſurgents, marched from Kent to Hyde-Park, and entered the city in hopes of ſecuring the Tower: but his raſhneſs undid him; as he paſſed through the narrow ſtreets, care was taken, by the Earl of Pembroke, to block up the way behind him, by fortifications thrown a⯑croſs the ſtreets; and guards were placed at all the avenues to prevent his return. This unhappy man paſſed boldly forward, and was now ready to reap the fruits of his undertaking, when, to his aſtoniſh⯑ment, he found that he could neither proceed nor yet make good a retreat. He now, too late, per⯑ceived his own temerity, and, loſing all courage in the exigency, he ſurrendered at diſcretion. In the mean time the Duke of Suffolk had endeavour⯑ed to foment the inſurrection, but without ſucceſs; he was taken priſoner alſo, and deſtined for the common ſlaughter. Accordingly, Wyat, the Duke of Suffolk, Sir John Throgmorton, and fifty⯑eight [268] more, were executed; but what raiſed the compaſſion of the people moſt of all, was the exe⯑cution of Lady Jane Grey and her huſband Guil⯑ford Dudley, who were involved in this calamity.
Two days after Wyat was taken, Lady Jane and her huſband were ordered to prepare for death: Lady Jane, who had long before ſeen the threat⯑ened blow, was no way ſurprized at the meſſage, but bore it with heroic reſolution; and, being in⯑formed that ſhe had three days to prepare for death, ſhe ſeemed diſpleaſed at ſo long a delay. Guilford Dudley was the firſt that ſuffered: as the Lady was conducted to execution, the officers of the Tower met her on the way, bearing the headleſs body of her huſband, ſtreaming with blood, in or⯑der to be interred in the chapel in the Tower: ſhe looked on the corpſe without trembling, and only, with a ſigh, deſired to proceed. She teſtified, to the laſt moment of her ſufferings, great conſtan⯑cy, great piety, and an immoveable adherence to the reformation. This was the ſecond Queen who died by the hands of the executioner in England.
The enemies of the ſtate being thus ſuppreſſed, the theatre was now opened for the pretended enemies of religion. The Queen was freed from all apprehenſions of an inſurrection, and therefore began by aſſembling a corrupt parliament, which was to countenance her future cruelties. The no⯑bility, whoſe only religion ſeemed that of the Prince who governed, were eaſily gained over, and the houſe of commons ſeemed paſſive in all her proceedings. She began by giving orders for the ſuppreſſion of married Biſhops and prieſts; the maſs was directed to be reſtored; the Pope's au⯑thority was re-eſtabliſhed, with ſome reſtrictions; the laws againſt heretics were renewed, and the [269] church and its privileges put upon the ſame foun⯑dation in which they were before the alterations of Henry VIII.
This was kindling up the fires of perſecution anew: at the head of theſe meaſures were Gardi⯑ner, Biſhop of Wincheſter, and Bonner, Biſhop of London. Poole, the Pope's Legate, a great part of whoſe life was ſpent in Italy, ſeemed too much civilized in that country, then the moſt po⯑lite in Europe, to be acceſſory to the meaſures now purſued. Gardiner began this bloody ſcene with Hooper and Rogers: Hooper had been Biſhop of Glouceſter; Rogers was a clergyman, who had ſhone amongſt the moſt diſtinguiſhed of the Pro⯑teſtants. He was prebendary of St. Paul's, and refuſed all ſubmiſſion to the church of Rome, which he looked upon as antichriſtian. They were condemned by commiſſioners appointed by the Queen, the Chancellor at the head of them. Rogers ſuffered in Smithfield: when he was brought to the ſtake, he had it in his power to ſave himſelf, by recanting his opinions; but neither hopes nor fears could prevail upon him to deſert his religion. When the faggots were placed around him, he ſeemed no way daunted at the pre⯑paration, but cried out, ‘I reſign my life with joy, in teſtimony of the doctrine of Jeſus.’ Hooper had his pardon offered him upon the ſame terms, but he refuſed it with equal indignation. This old mar⯑tyr, who was executed at Glouceſter, was three quarters of an hour in torment; the fire, either from malice or neglect, had not been ſufficiently kindled, ſo that his legs and thighs were firſt burnt, and one of his hands dropped off before he expired.
Saunders and Taylor, two other clergymen, whoſe zeal had been diſtinguiſhed in carrying on [270] the reformation, were the next that ſuffered Taylor was put into a pitch barrel, and before the fire was kindled, a faggot from an unknown hand was thrown at his head, which ſtreamed with blood: ſtill, however, he continued undaunted, ſinging the xxxiſt Pſalm in Engliſh, which one of the ſpec⯑tators obſerving, hit him a blow on the ſide of the head, and commanded him to pray in Latin: he therefore continued a few minutes ſilent, only with his eyes ſtedfaſtly fixed upon heaven; when one of the guards, either through impatience or compaſ⯑ſion, ſtruck him down with his halbert, and thus delivered him from a world of pain to a life of im⯑mortal happineſs.
The death of theſe only ſerved to encreaſe the ſavage appetite of the Monks and Popiſh Biſhops for freſh ſlaughter. Bonner, bloated at once with rage and luxury, let looſe his vengeance without reſtraint; while the Queen, by letters, exhorted him to purſue the pious work without pity or in⯑terruption: and now Ridley, Biſhop of London, and the venerable Latimer, Biſhop of Worceſter, were to receive the Martyr's crown. Ridley was one of the ableſt champions of the reformation; his piety, learning, and ſolidity of judgment, were admired by his friends and dreaded by his enemies. The night before his execution he invited the mayor of Oxford, and his wife, to ſee him die; and, when he ſaw them melted into tears, he him⯑ſelf appeared quite unmoved, heaven being his ſe⯑cret ſupporter and comforter in this hour of agony. When he came to the ſtake where he was to be burnt, he found his old friend Latimer there be⯑fore him, and began to comfort him in his ſuffer⯑ings, while Latimer was as ready to return the kind office. A furious bigot aſcended to preach to [271] them, before the execution of their ſentence: Ridley gave a ſerious attention to the ſermon, and offered to anſwer it, but this he was not allowed to do. At length the fire was ſet to the pile; Latimer was ſoon out of pain, but Ridley continued much longer, his legs being conſumed before the fire reached his vitals.
Cranmer, whom you have ſeen already ſo zea⯑lous in the reformation, was the next perſonage of note that was burnt: he had this peculiar ag⯑gravation of his calamity, that he was prevailed upon to abjure his principles and ſign his recanta⯑tion, by the hopes of pardon. Being, notwith⯑ſtanding this, brought to the ſtake, his confuſion and ſhame were there inexpreſſible: there he re⯑tracted all that their falſe promiſes had made him abjure; and, reſolving that the hand which had ſigned ſhould firſt ſuffer, he held it out, with an intrepid countenance, in the flames, till it dropped off, frequently crying out, in the midſt of his ago⯑ny, that unworthy hand!
Bonner now ſeemed not ſatisfied with ſingle deaths, but ſent men in whole companies to the flames; women themſelves were not ſpared: but the cruelty went yet farther; a woman, condemn⯑ed for hereſy, was delivered of a child in the midſt of the flames; ſome of the ſpectators hu⯑manely ſnatched it out; the magiſtrate, who was a Papiſt, ordered it to be flung in again, and it was then conſumed with the mother. The per⯑petrators of ſuch actions were no longer human; they muſt have forfeited all pretenſions to the name, for hell itſelf could be guilty of nothing more atrocious!
But they were not content with puniſhing the living alone, their vengeance extended even to the [272] dead: Bucer and Fagius, two German divines, who had been dead ſome years before, were cited, very formally, to appear and give an account of their faith; in default of their appearance, their bodies were taken from their graves, and being hung upon a gallows were conſumed to aſhes. The wife of Peter Martyr, who himſelf had the pru⯑dence to eſcape, was dug up like the former, and buried in a dung hill. In ſhort, the perſecutions of the prieſts and friars went ſuch lengths, that the very magiſtrates who had at firſt been inſtru⯑ments of their cruelty, at laſt refuſed to aſſiſt at the puniſhing heretics for the future, till a court, ſomewhat reſembling the inquiſition, was eſta⯑bliſhed, which continued the ſlaughters without remorſe. In this reign five biſhops, twenty-one miniſters, and above eight hundred others, went to the flames in maintenance of the truth; num⯑bers died in priſon, and ſeveral by whips and tor⯑tures were forced to abjure.
Yet, ſtill in this diſmal ſituation with reſpect to religion, the temporal concerns of the nation were conducted with very little better ſucceſs. Calais, which had long been poſſeſſed by the Engliſh, and was a curb to the ambition of France, was taken in this reign by the Duke of Guiſe, and all the Engliſh drove out of it, as the great Edward had drove the French out two hundred years before. The Queen was only bent on ruining Proteſtants, and took no care to defend her dominions.
Philip, her huſband, ſeemed no way pleaſed with his alliance: the Queen, ſome time after their mar⯑riage, was delivered of a falſe conception. This created diſguſt in him: he quitted England, there⯑fore, to purſue his own ſchemes in Flanders, leav⯑ing [273] the Queen ſufficiently mortified at his coldneſs for her, of which he gave repeated proofs.
The loſs of Calais, and the diſappointment with regard to her pregnancy, ſoon excited murmurs among the people. The Proteſtants now exerted their influence in expoſing the weakneſs of the government and the cruelty of the council: but no perſon had a greater ſhare of reproach than the Queen, and none felt it ſo ſeverely. The houſe of commons, that had hitherto been all along ſo ſubmiſſive, now alſo teſtified their diſplea⯑ſure, and refuſed to grant a ſubſidy, though ſhe condeſcended to lay the bad ſtate of her affairs be⯑fore them. During theſe mortifications her health ſenſibly declined: ſhe was naturally melancholy and ſullen, and her repeated diſappointments in⯑creaſed her diſtemper. She had been ill attended during her pretended pregnancy, having com⯑mitted herſelf to the care of women, and neglect⯑ed the advice of her phyſicians. After having been for ſome time afflicted with the dropſy, this diſor⯑der carried her off in the forty-third year of her age, after a reign of about five years. Had ſhe been born at any other period, ſhe might have been a good Princeſs, but her zeal for religion was louder than the calls of humanity. Henry VIII, her father, acted like a tyrant and a perſecutor from vicious motives, and he knew it: Mary was both a tyrant and a perſecutor from motives of vir⯑tue, and ſhe was never undeceived.
LETTER XXXIV.
[274]WERE we to adopt the maxim in morals, that evil may be done for the production of good, one might ſay that the perſecutions in Mary's reign were permitted only to bring the kingdom over to the Proteſtant religion. Nothing could preach ſo effectually againſt the cruelty and the vices of the Monks, as the actions of the Monks themſelves: wherever heretics were to be burnt, they were always preſent, rejoicing at the ſpectacle, inſulting the fallen, and frequently the firſt to thruſt the flaming brand againſt the faces of the condemned. The Engliſh were effectually converted by ſuch ſights as theſe; to bring any people over to any opinion, it is only neceſſary to perſecute inſtead of attempting to convince: the people had formerly embraced the reformed reli⯑gion from fear, they were now internally Proteſ⯑tants from inclination.
We have hitherto ſeen England like the element that ſurrounds it, ever unſettled and ſtormy; ever ſinking under foreign invaſion or domeſtic diſputes: it had felt a ſhort interval of happineſs, indeed, under Henry VII, but his ſucceſſors ſoon diſturb⯑ed that felicity, and laid the country once more in blood. At length the genius of the people pre⯑vailed over all oppoſition, and England was now about to make its own happineſs, and to ſet man⯑kind an example of induſtry, commerce, freedom, learning, opulence, and power.
To Mary ſucceeded her ſiſter Elizabeth, who was unanimouſly declared Queen at the accuſtom⯑ed places, and with the acclamations of the people. Elizabeth had her education in that beſt of ſchools, [275] the ſchool of adverſity: as during the life of her ſiſter, who had no children, ſhe was next heir to the throne, and at the ſame time was known to be of the Proteſtant religion, ſhe was obnoxious to the reigning tyrant for two reaſons: it was fear⯑ed ſhe might aſpire to the throne during her ſiſter's life; but it was ſtill more reaſonably apprehended, that ſhe would, if ever ſhe came to the crown, make an innovation in that religion which Mary took ſo much pains to eſtabliſh. The Biſhops, who had ſhed ſuch a deluge of blood, foreſaw this, and often told Mary, that her deſtroying meaner heretics was of no advantage to the ſtate, unleſs ſhe attacked the principal heretic; that it was to no purpoſe to lop off the branches while the body of the tree was ſuffered to ſtand: Mary ſaw and ac⯑knowledged the juſtice of their obſervations, con⯑fined her ſiſter with proper guards, and only waited for ſome new inſurrection, or ſome favourable pre⯑text to deſtroy her: her own death prevented the perpetration of her meditated cruelty, and Elizabeth was taken from a priſon to be fixed upon a throne.
Elizabeth had made the proper uſe of her con⯑finement; being debarred the enjoyment of plea⯑ſures abroad, ſhe ſought for knowledge at home; ſhe cultivated her underſtanding, learned the lan⯑guages and ſciences; but, of all the arts in which ſhe excelled, her arts of keeping fair with her ſiſ⯑ter, of not offending the Papiſts, of being in eſ⯑teem with the Proteſtants, of diſſembling and learn⯑ing to reign, were the greateſt.
This virgin Monarch, whoſe memory England ſtill reveres with gratitude and reſpect, was ſcarce proclaimed Queen, when Philip of Spain, who had been married to Mary, but who ever teſtified an inclination for Elizabeth, ſought her in mar⯑riage. [276] What political motives Elizabeth might have againſt this match, is uncertain; but certain it is, ſhe neither liked the perſon nor the religion of her admirer: ſhe was willing at once to enjoy the pleaſure of independance and the vanity of nu⯑merous ſolicitations.
She had ever reſolved upon reforming the church, even in the reſtraints of a priſon; and, upon com⯑ing to the throne, ſhe immediately ſet about that great deſign. The people were now almoſt whol⯑ly of the Proteſtant religion; the ill uſe the Papiſts had made of their power, in the laſt reign, had to⯑tally undone their cauſe: a religion, marked with cruelty, tyranny, and perſecution, was not a re⯑ligion for the people of England. She began, therefore, in imitation of the deceaſed Queen, to forbid all meddling with controverſy in the pulpit, and all innovations of the eſtabliſhed rites, except that the ſervice ſhould be performed in the vulgar tongue, till a parliament ſhould determine the pro⯑per modes of worſhip. The parliament ſoon met, and the reformation was finiſhed, and religion eſtabliſhed in the manner we enjoy it at preſent.
The oppoſition which was made to theſe reli⯑gious eſtabliſhments was but weak; a conference of nine doctors on each ſide was propoſed and agreed to; they were to diſpute publicly upon either ſide of the queſtion, and it was reſolved that the peo⯑ple ſhould hold to that which came off with vic⯑tory. Diſputations of this kind are never attend⯑ed with conviction to either party; ſo much is to be ſaid on either ſide, and ſo wide is the field that both ſides have to range in, that each generally loſes his ſtrength in vain preparations, and inef⯑fectual prefacing, before he is properly ſaid to begin the engagement. The conference, therefore, came [277] to nothing; the Papiſts declared, that it was not in their power to diſpute a ſecond time upon to⯑pics, in which they had gained a former victory under Queen Mary; and the Proteſtants attributed the caution to their fears. Of nine thouſand four hundred beneficed clergymen, which were in the whole kingdom, only fourteen Biſhops, twelve Arch-deacons, fifteen heads of colleges, and about eighty of the parochial clergy, choſe to quit their preferments rather than their religion. Thus England changed its belief in religion four times ſince Henry VIII. Strange, ſays a foreign writer, that a people, who are ſo reſolute, ſhould be guil⯑ty of ſo much inconſtancy! That the ſame peo⯑ple, who this day publicly burnt heretics, ſhould the next not only think them guiltleſs, but con⯑form to their opinions.
Elizabeth was now fixed upon a Proteſtant throne, while all the neighbouring nations were open or ſecret enemies: France, Scotland, Spain, the Pope, were all combined againſt her. Her ſubjects of Ireland were concealed enemies, and the Catholic party in England, though not ſo numerous as for⯑merly, yet was not entirely ſuppreſſed: theſe were the dangers ſhe had to fear, nor had ſhe one friend to aſſiſt her upon an emergency. In this ſituation, therefore, ſhe could hope for no other reſource, but what proceeded from the affection of her own ſubjects, and the wiſdom of her adminiſtration. To make herſelf beloved by the people, and, at the ſame time, feared by her courtiers, were the governing maxims of her conduct. She was frugal of the public treaſury, and ſtill more ſparing in her rewards to her favourites: this at once kept the people in ſpirits, and kept the great too poor to ſhake off lawful ſubjection. She diſ⯑tributed [278] both rewards and puniſhments with im⯑partiality; knew when to flatter and when to up⯑braid; could diſſemble ſubmiſſion, but preſerve her prerogative: in ſhort, ſhe ſeemed to have ſtu⯑died the people ſhe was to govern, and often to have flattered their follies in order to ſecure their hearts.
Her chief miniſter was Robert Dudley, ſon to the late Duke of Northumberland, whom the Queen ſeemed to regard from capricious motives, as he had neither abilities nor virtue; but, to make amends, the two favourites next in power were Bacon and Cecil, men of great capacity and infinite application. They regulated the finances, and directed the political meaſures that were fol⯑lowed with ſo much ſucceſs.
Mary Stewart, Queen of France and Scotland, gave the firſt alarm to this ſtate of tranquility, by taking the title of Queen of England; and her cauſe was ſupported by the Popiſh faction, which ſtill wanted to make new diſturbances. The throne of Elizabeth was not yet perfectly fixed, and the intrigues of religion could ſtill overturn it: ſhe therefore was not remiſs in ſending an army into Scotland, and forcing the French troops out of that kingdom, by a treaty ſigned to that effect. Soon after the King of France died, and Eliza⯑beth forced her rival to renounce the title of Queen of England, which ſhe had aſſumed. She went yet ſtill farther, ſhe encouraged the parliament of Scotland to introduce the reformation into that country; her intrigues ſucceeded, and ſhe thus gained over a ſtedfaſt friend in the Scots, from whom the Engliſh had, till then, only received repeated acts of enmity and ill-will.
[279] This tempeſt was ſcarce allayed, when Philip of Spain gave new alarms. As long as he had fears from the power of the Queen of Scots, by her union with France, he was ſtill attached to Elizabeth; but, when, by the death of the King of France her huſband, ſhe was again reduced to her primitive weakneſs, his jealouſy then began to fall upon Elizabeth. With this view he en⯑couraged the inſurrections and diſcontents in Ire⯑land, and Elizabeth with equal care ſuppreſſed them. He ſupported, in France, a league made to exclude the royal family from the throne; Eli⯑zabeth protected the oppoſite ſide. He oppreſſed the people of Holland with cruelty and injuſtice; Elizabeth ſupported them from ſinking under his power. Thus, on every ſide, ſhe guarded off the dangers that threatened her, and ſoon after, in her turn, prepared to act offenſively againſt her ene⯑mies.
But the cares of war did not repreſs her aſſiduity in the adminiſtration of juſtice at home: ſhe was reſolved to ſhew the Roman Catholic party an ex⯑ample of moderation, which they might admire but could not imitate. The Monks, who were diſpoſ⯑ſeſſed of their monaſteries, had been aſſigned pen⯑ſions, which were to be paid by the poſſeſſors of the forfeited lands. Theſe payments were entire⯑ly neglected, and theſe unhappy men, who had been educated in ſolitude and ignorance, were now ſtarving in old-age, too much diſregarded by the Proteſtants, and too numerous to find relief from thoſe of their own perſuaſion. Elizabeth ordered that their penſions ſhould be paid with punctuality and juſtice, and ſatisfaction made for all arrears unjuſtly detained.
[280] In order the more to ingratiate herſelf with the people, ſhe viſited Cambridge and Oxford, and made each a Latin ſpeech, and ſhewed, by her diſ⯑courſe and conduct, a regard for thoſe ſeminaries of learning, which had been ſuppreſſed by her fa⯑ther.
She not only affected this obliging carriage to her inferiors, but alſo behaved in ſomething of a romantic ſtrain to the courtiers next her perſon. The gallantries of the court were conducted ac⯑cording to the rules of chivalry: every damſel had her knight; Dudley, who was now become Earl of Leiceſter, was generally the Queen's: but all writers agree, that her paſſion for him never pro⯑ceeded beyond the bounds of Platonic affection. When her commons, in a dutiful manner, repre⯑ſented to her how much the ſafety of the kingdom depended upon her marrying, ſhe thanked them in an obliging manner, and aſſured them ſhe was now become the wife of her people, and would be pleaſed at having it inſcribed on her tomb, that having reigned with equity, ſhe lived and died a virgin.
LETTER XXXV.
THE ancient ferocity of the Engliſh was not yet quite reclaimed: the barbarous method of fixing the Monarch upon the throne, by exe⯑cutions performed upon the ſcaffold, was not quite done away: the only difference ſeemed to be, that formerly thoſe who were obnoxious to the crown, fell without any legal trial; but now they fell with all the forms, yet all the ſeverity of juſtice.
[281] While Elizabeth was thus attempting to ſettle religion, to eſtabliſh the power, and humble the enemies of her country, ſhe at the ſame time was guilty of ſome inſtances of cruelty, which, tho' coloured with the pretext of law, could only be the effect of the yet uncivilized diſpoſition of the times. The Catholics held meetings to reſtore their religion by open force: the Counteſs of Le⯑nox, Arthur Poole, and others, began to form fac⯑tions in the kingdom: their plottings, however, were diſcovered, and, upon their own confeſſion, they were condemned; but the Queen, in conſi⯑deration of their illuſtrious deſcent, forgave their offence. A ſiſter of the late Jane Grey, however, though leſs guilty, met with leſs clemency: ſhe had married the Earl of Pembroke, without leave from the court; this was conſidered as an high offence, and the Earl and ſhe were committed to the Tower. After a long impriſonment he was obliged to forſake her; and ſhe, loaded with the misfortune, died in confinement.
But this only prepared the way for a cruelty of a more heinous nature, which gave the world a diſagreeable remembrance of the tranſactions com⯑mitted in the reign of her father. Mary, Queen of Scots, had long renounced her title to the crown of England, but not her claim of ſucceeding to the throne: this renunciation, however, being extort⯑ed from her by Elizabeth, Mary took every method of diſturbing her in the quiet poſſeſſion of the crown, and yet gave every mark of reconciliation and ſin⯑cere amity. There were, in fact, many circumſtances to contribute to their mutual diſlike: the jealouſy of neighbouring crowns, the oppoſition of religion, of wit, and of beauty; Mary, leſs powerful, leſs abſolute, leſs politic, was, however, Elizabeth's [282] ſuperior in perſonal charms, and this only ſerved to inflame their animoſity. The Queen of Scot⯑land encouraged the Catholic faction in England, while Elizabeth, with ſtill more ſucceſs, fomented the Proteſtant party among the Scots. Mary had now, for ſome time, thoughts of marrying a ſe⯑cond huſband, after the death of the French King; Elizabeth, on the other hand, who had no thoughts of marriage herſelf, ſtrove, by every art, to pre⯑vent this marriage, as ſhe conſidered that it would be ſtrengthening the power of her rival. With this view ſhe wrote Mary a letter, in which, after many inſincere proteſtations of friendſhip, ſhe begged that Mary would not offer to marry till her conſent ſhould firſt be obtained. This unreaſonable requeſt not a little diſturbed the Queen of Scot⯑land, but, fearing to offend her potent rival, ſhe pretended to comply; in ſecret, however, ſhe was reſolved to marry the Earl of Darnly, her rela⯑tion, who had the merit of being a Catholic, like herſelf; but, perhaps, whoſe greateſt recommen⯑dations were his ſize and his perſon, which were large and comely. The party gained by Eliza⯑beth, in Scotland, tried every meaſure to prevent her deſign. It was agitated, whether the Queen could marry without the conſent of the ſtates; ſeveral of the nobility roſe in arms to prevent it, the ambaſſadors of England made daily remon⯑ſtrances upon its impropriety, but all in vain: Mary, to cut ſhort their proceedings, had the marriage ſolemnized in her own chapel, and ba⯑niſhed the oppoſers by a ſolemn act of the ſtates.
All hitherto appeared fortunate for Mary; her enemies baniſhed, her rival defeated, and herſelf married to the man ſhe loved: yet this was but a flattering calm, for ſoon, whether from the capri⯑ciouſneſs [283] of her temper, or from what other cauſe I will not pretend to determine, Lord Darnly, notwithſtanding the elegance of his perſon, be⯑came entirely diſagreeable to her. She had con⯑ceived ſuch an averſion to him, that it was ſoon obvious, even to the people; and ſhe took every method to mortify him in the eyes of the public. Her vices were the cauſe of all her misfortunes: there was, at that time in her court, one David Rizzio, the ſon of a muſician at Turin, who had followed the ambaſſador from that court into Scot⯑land. As he underſtood muſic to perfection, and ſung a good baſs, he was introduced into the Queen's concert, who was ſo taken with him, that ſhe deſired the ambaſſador, upon his depar⯑ture, to leave Rizzio behind. The excellence of his voice ſoon procured him greater familiarities; the Queen loved him, confided in him, and ever kept him next her perſon. The new King, who now only had the name, could not, without jea⯑louſy, ſee this inſinuating foreigner receive all the Queen's favours, while he was treated only with contempt. Stung at once with envy, rage, and reſentment, he at length reſolved to murder the man he could not equal, and conſulted with ſome Lords about the method of accompliſhing his cruel deſign. Men in power ever find accomplices in their guilt; two other Lords and he ſettled it, that the murder ſhould be committed before the face of the Queen, as a puniſhment of her ſcandalous conduct: thus prepared, they were informed that Rizzio was, at that very inſtant, in the Queen's chamber; Lord Darnly led the way, conducting the aſſaſſins up by a private ſtair-caſe, and entering the Queen's chamber, who was at table with her favourite Rizzio; Darnly ſtood for ſome time lean⯑ing [284] upon the back of her chair. His fierce looks, and unexpected intruſion, in ſome meaſure alarm⯑ed the Queen, who, however, kept ſilence, not daring to call out: a little after Lord Ruthven, one of the murderers, and George Douglas, en⯑tered abruptly, all in arms, and attended with more of their accomplices. The Queen could no longer refrain, but aſked the reaſon of this bold intruſion; Ruthven made her no anſwer, but ordered Rizzio to quit a place of which he was unworthy. Rizzio now ſaw that he was the ob⯑ject of their vengeance, and, trembling with fear, took hold of the Queen's robe, to put himſelf un⯑der her protection, who, on her part, ſtrove to in⯑terpoſe between the aſſaſſins and him: Douglas, in the mean time, had reached the unfortunate Rizzio, and, taking a dagger from the King's ſide, drew it, and, while the Queen filled the room with her cries, he plunged it, in her preſence, into Rizzio's boſom. She was five months gone with child, and this horrid ſcene had ſuch an effect up⯑on the fruit of her womb, that it is ſaid that her child, who was afterwards King James I, could never venture to look upon a drawn ſword without ſhuddering. Thus ended Rizzio, a man who has been more ſpoken of, than perhaps any other who roſe from ſo mean a ſtation. What his other ta⯑lents to pleaſe might have been, is unknown; but certain it is, that ſeveral indications of his ſkill in muſic remain even to the preſent time: all thoſe pleaſing Scotch airs, which are ſet in ſuch a peculiar taſte, being univerſally allowed to be of his compoſition.
This was but a temporary check upon Mary's power; ſhe reſumed her authority, by the influence of her charms upon the Earl her huſband, who [285] gave up the murderers of Rizzio to her reſentment, but they had previouſly eſcaped into England. One criminal engagement, however, was ſcarcely got over, when Mary fell into a ſecond: the Earl of Bothwell now began to hold the ſame place in her affections that Rizzio had formerly poſſeſſed. This new amour was attended with ſtill more ter⯑rible conſequences than the former; her huſband fell a victim to it. His life was firſt attempted by poiſon, but the ſtrength of his conſtitution ſaved him for a ſhort time, only to fall by a more vio⯑lent death: he was ſtrangled by night, the houſe in which the fact was committed being blown up with gun-powder, in order to perſuade the people that his death was accidental; but his ſhirt not being ſinged, and his ſlippers found near him, to⯑gether with blue marks round his neck, ſoon con⯑firmed the ſuſpicion of his real murder. His body was buried near that of Rizzio, among the Scottiſh Kings.
All orders of the ſtate, the whole body of people, accuſed Bothwell of this aſſaſſination, and at laſt demanded juſtice upon him from the Queen, for the late murder, openly arraigning him of the guilt. In this univerſal demand for juſtice, the Queen, deaf to the murmurs of her people, deaf to the voice of decency, married the murderer of her huſband, and prevailed upon him to divorce his former wife to make way for this fatal alliance.
Bothwell was poſſeſſed of all the inſolence which attends great crimes: he aſſembled the principal Lords of the ſtate, and compelled them to ſign an inſtrument, purporting, ‘that they judged it the Queen's intereſt to marry Bothwell, as he had lain with her againſt her will.’ Theſe tranſactions excited the whole kingdom of Scotland to reſiſtance, and [286] Mary, abandoned by her followers, was obliged to give herſelf up as a priſoner to the confederacy. Bothwell fled to the Orkney iſlands. The Queen, being confined in Lochlevin caſtle, was compelled to reſign the crown to her ſon, as yet a child; but ſhe was permitted to nominate a regent. She turned her eyes upon the Earl of Murray, who was then in France, and appointed him, expecting that he would defend her cauſe, and reſtore her. In this, however, ſhe was entirely deceived; Mur⯑ray, upon his arrival, inſtead of comforting her as he formerly uſed, loaded her with reproaches, which reduced her almoſt to deſpair. The cala⯑mities of the great, however juſtly deſerved, excite pity and create friends; an army of forty thouſand men declared in her favour, and ſhe eſcaped from priſon to put herſelf at their head. But this was only to encounter new misfortunes; ſhe was met by a body of but four thouſand, commanded by the new regent, and was totally defeated. For fear of falling into the hands of her enemies, ſhe fled towards the borders of England; Elizabeth, being informed of her misfortunes and her retreat, at firſt granted her an honourable reception, and ordered her to be lodged at a gentleman's houſe, where ſhe was treated with fitting dignity. Not⯑withſtanding this kindneſs, ſhe refuſed to ſee her until ſhe had juſtified herſelf from the reproaches with which ſhe was branded. By this means Eli⯑zabeth in a manner declared herſelf umpire of the differences between the two parties, and each ac⯑cordingly pleaded their cauſe before her; Mary by her emiſſaries, and Murray, the regent, in per⯑ſon. It was the Queen of England's duty to pro⯑tect, and not to examine, her royal fugitive: however, ſhe lengthened out the pleadings on both [287] ſides, and enjoyed the pleaſure of ſeeing her rival humbled, without paſſing any definitive ſentence. Mary privately complained of her unworthy treat⯑ment and long delay; theſe complaints were car⯑ried to Elizabeth, which ended in the Queen of Scots being ſent a priſoner to Tutbury caſtle.
The diſaſters of the crown of Scotland fell up⯑on the people, divided as they were into factions, and animated with mutual animoſity. The regent, attempting to quell them, was himſelf ſlain, and the aſſaſſins, pretending to act in the name of their impriſoned Queen, made an incurſion into Eng⯑land, and committed ſome ravages on the frontier counties. Elizabeth, with an army, quickly re⯑preſſed theſe invaders, and procured the Earl of Lenox, brother to the late regent, to be elected in his room. In the mean time, while ſhe was employed in bringing Scotland to meaſures, ſhe found herſelf attacked, in her own dominions, by a conſpiracy: the Pope, in order to aſſiſt the re⯑bels, procured a bull to be fixed up in ſeveral places in London, whereby he excommunicated Elizabeth, and abſolved her ſubjects from their oath of allegiance. This bull was fixed up by John Felton, grand uncle to him whom we are ſhortly to ſee act another deſperate part: John Felton, when he was told that the government was in purſuit of him, diſdained to fly; he waited with intrepidity till he was taken, and then boldly confeſſed the fact of which he was charged, and gloried in the commiſſion: he might have received pardon upon acknowledging his crime, but he re⯑fuſed it, and was hanged near the place, meeting death with a reſolution that aſtoniſhed even the brave. What noble actions might not ſuch a mind [288] have been capable of, had it at firſt received a right direction.
Theſe efforts, in favour of the Queen of Scots, only ſerved to haſten her ruin. The two Queens entered into various negotiations and frivolous treaties; the one attempting to humble her pri⯑ſoner, the other, with fruitleſs pride, attempting to preſerve the luſtre of fallen Majeſty. Scotland, in the mean time, ſtreamed with blood: the Pa⯑piſts and the Proteſtants carried on a civil war. The Archbiſhop of St. Andrew's, one of the warmeſt partizans of Mary, was taken in arms, and executed upon the depoſition of his confeſſor, who ſwore that this prelate had privately confeſſed that he was an accomplice in the murder of Darn⯑ly.
The greateſt misfortunes of Mary rather pro⯑ceeded from her friends than enemies. The Duke of Norfolk, who profeſſed a friendſhip for her, expected, by her means, to riſe to the Britiſh throne: he, therefore, privately negotiated a mar⯑riage with her, and ſhe, on the other hand, at⯑tempted to break off that which ſhe had already contracted with Bothwell. He formed a party in London, feeble indeed; but he expected aſſiſtance from the intrigues of the Pope, and the arms of Spain: he was himſelf a weak man, and his plots were but ſhallow; the ſpies of Elizabeth diſcover⯑ed them all: he was arreſted, accuſed, condemn⯑ed, and executed. This nobleman's blood only contributed to faſten the chains of the unfortu⯑nate Mary; yet, ſtill, ſhe conceived hopes from foreign aſſiances, which ſeldom are of any weight in domeſtic diſputes. She had the League in France in her favour, the Pope, the Spaniards, and the Jeſuits; ſhe not only hoped to be reinſtated in her [289] former power, but to have the crown of England, to which ſhe laid claim as her birth-right, added to her own. In purſuance of theſe deſigns, a new conſpiracy was formed, fourteen of the conſpira⯑tors executed, and, laſt of all, Mary was brought to a trial, before a Queen who had no other right to be her judge, but that of power. Forty-two members of parliament, and five judges, were ſent to examine her in priſon; ſhe proteſted againſt their right, yet made a defence: they had origi⯑nally no foundation in juſtice to try her, and they carried on her accuſation with only a ſhew of equi⯑ty. In ſhort, after an impriſonment of eighteen years, this unhappy Princeſs was brought to the block, and beheaded in one of the rooms of her priſon, which had been hung in black for the oc⯑caſion. This action ſtained the reign of Elizabeth with ſuch colours, as neither her diſſimulation, nor the proſperity of her reign, could ever waſh away: her ſubjects, while they found themſelves happy, attempted to excuſe her conduct, but con⯑ſcience internally condemned her cruelty, and time, that ſpeaks plain, at laſt declares her guilt. In treating the actions of mankind, we almoſt ever find both ſides culpable, and ſo it was here, Mary, who was a murderer and adultereſs, died by the orders of Elizabeth, who was at once cruel and unjuſt.
LETTER XXXVI.
THE conſtitution of England took a long ſeries of years to ſettle into form, nor even yet was its ſtructure entirely completed: the [...] ſtill preſerved a degree of ancient pride, [290] and often were guilty of injuſtice and tyranny, without puniſhment. Had the actions of Eliza⯑beth, which are now the ſubject of our praiſe, only been performed by one of our preſent Mo⯑narchs, they would be ſufficient to cauſe his ex⯑pulſion: there is ſomething lucky in every great reign, like this in view; its luſtre is rather owing to the indifferent periods that preceded it, than to its own intrinſic value. Elizabeth left her king⯑dom, it muſt be owned, in a better ſtate than ſhe found it; but her actions ſhould be neither the ſubject of our praiſe, nor the object of our imi⯑tation.
We ſee a mixture of cruelty and gallantry in all the tranſactions of theſe times: while Elizabeth was thus plotting the death of Mary, ſhe was, at the ſame time, employed in a treaty of marriage with the young Duke of Anjou. This, however, came to nothing, the Queen reſolving to enjoy that power uncontrouled, which her ſubjects had not yet learned to abridge.
But, though ſhe diſliked an huſband, yet none more paſſionately deſired to have a lover: it is thought, indeed, her affections were confined to Platonic wiſhes only, and her age, for ſhe now began to decline, ſeemed to favour the ſuppoſition; but the choice of her favourites countenanced the contrary report, and her ſorrow for the Earl of Lei⯑ceſter, who died about this time, confirmed it. But one favourite always made room for another, and Devereux, Earl of Eſſex, ſucceeded Dudley, Earl of Leiceſter. This nobleman was young, active, ambitious, witty, and handſome; in the field and at court he ever appeared with ſuperior luſtre. In all the maſques which were then performed, the Earl and Elizabeth were generally coupled as part⯑ners; [291] and, though ſhe was almoſt ſixty, and he not half that number of years, yet flattery had taught her to forget the diſparity of age; the world told her ſhe was ſtill beautiful and young, and ſhe was inclined to think ſo. This young Earl's intereſt in the Queen's heart, as may natu⯑rally be expected, promoted his intereſts in the ſtate: he conducted all things without a rival, and, wherever he went, he acquired a degree of unbounded popularity. Young and unexperienced as he was, he at length began to fancy the ap⯑plauſe of the people given to his merits, and not to his favour: thus poſſeſſed of a falſe opinion of his own ſecurity, to uſe the words of the poet, he kicked down the ladder by which he roſe; he be⯑gan to deſpiſe the Queen, and was heard to drop ſome expreſſions, that he thought her, in ſpite of flattery, both old and ugly. Her remonſtrances, on this occaſion, were ſuch as might have been expected from a diſappointed girl, very angry, yet wiſhing for a vindication. She gave him, in a paſſion, a box on the ear, pardoned him, employ⯑ed him; he again tranſgreſſed, and ſhe again par⯑doned the offence. Secure in her affections, he at length proceeded to actual diſobedience; his former favour had gained him enemies, his preſent inſolence loſt him the friendſhip of the Queen; he was condemned to retirement, when he might have been capitally convicted. He now came to a ſenſe of his miſconduct, and was reſolved to try the long unpractiſed arts that had at firſt brought him into favour. Immediately after ſentence, when he was preparing for retirement into the country, he firſt aſſured the Queen, that he could never be happy till he again ſaw thoſe eyes which were uſed to ſhine upon him with ſuch luſtre; [292] that, in expectance of that happy moment, like another Nebuchadnezzar, he would dwell with the beaſts of the field, and be wet with the dew of heaven, till ſhe again propitiouſly took pity on his ſufferings. This romantic meſſage ſeemed pecu⯑liarly pleaſing to the Queen; ſhe thought him ſin⯑cere from the conſciouſneſs of her own ſincerity: ſhe replied, that, after ſome time, when convinced of his humility, ſomething perhaps might be ex⯑pected from her lenity. This hope of pardon made him think ſlightly of his guilt: his pride once more increaſing with his ſucceſs, he laid de⯑ſigns of deſtroying his rivals in power, and ſe⯑curing the perſon of the Queen. With this re⯑ſolution, he impriſoned the Queen's meſſengers, headed a few malecontents, and marched through the city, exhorting the citizens to arms, and cry⯑ing out for the Queen, for the Queen. During a long march, not one citizen thought proper to join him, though numbers, led by curioſity, ran to ſee him paſs by. In this diſappointment, word was brought that he was proclaimed a traitor; upon which he made one effort more to excite an inſur⯑rection, but without ſucceſs: he therefore now re⯑ſolved to return to his own houſe, but found the ſtreet ſecured by a great chain, and a guard of ſol⯑diers. As he ſaw no other way to force his paſ⯑ſage, but by an attack upon the guards, attended by his followers, he immediately fell on, but was beat back and wounded in the thigh. He then went down to the water-ſide, and, putting himſelf and his retinue on board ſmall boats, he eſcaped to his houſe, which he fortified in the beſt manner he could. The houſe was ſoon inveſted by the Lord Admiral, and the Earl and his followers were obliged to deliver themſelves up: the Earl of [293] Southampton was a companion in his guilt and his misfortunes; they were ſoon after brought to their trials, and condemned to die: when the day of his death came, the Queen appeared irreſolute; ſhe ſent an order to ſtop the execution, and ſoon after ordered it to proceed. However romantic it may ſeem, ſhe felt in her boſom all the fluctuations of love and reſentment, and was irreſolute which paſſion to obey: her reſentment, at laſt, prevailed; he was executed ſix days after his ſentence, and died with penitence and reſolution.
Thus ended a favourite who had merits, but did not owe his riſe to them; he was gallant, ro⯑mantic, and oſtentatious: his genius for ſhews, and thoſe pleaſures that carry an image of war, was as remarkable as his ſpirit in the profeſſion itſelf; and, had he been poſſeſſed of humility equal to his abilities, he at laſt might have mounted a throne inſtead of a ſcaffold. The Queen, at firſt, carried her reſentment ſo far as to have a ſermon preached at St. Paul's croſs to blacken his memo⯑ry: his haughty behaviour, and unguarded ex⯑preſſions, had entirely alienated her affections, and imprinted an aſperity, which, it ſeems, even his death could not ſoften.
With the death of this favourite, Elizabeth's pleaſures ſeemed to expire; ſhe went through the buſineſs of the ſtate merely from habit, but her happineſs was no more. Hiſtorians are fond of repreſenting all their characters without paſſion, and give to every action of the great either politi⯑cal or rational motives; they therefore treat this Queen's affection as a fable, but many of the actions of her life appear dictated by reſentment or regard, nor ever had woman a greater variety of caprice; the great feel as the reſt of mankind, [294] and her paſſions were particularly violent and laſt⯑ing. She lived but a ſhort time after the death of Eſſex, and had the mortification of being forſaken by moſt of her courtiers before ſhe died, who now ſtrove to court the favour of King James, whom ſhe had appointed her ſucceſſor. She died in the ſeventieth year of her age, and the forty-fourth of her reign. Her character differed with her cir⯑cumſtances; in the beginning of her reign ſhe was moderate and humble, towards the end haughty and ſevere: ſhe was indebted to her good fortune that her miniſters were excellent, but it was owing to her want of wiſdom that her favourites, who were choſen more immediately by herſelf, were unworthy. Tho' ſhe was poſſeſſed of excellent ſenſe, yet ſhe never had the diſcernment to diſcover that ſhe wanted beauty: to flatter her charms, even at the age of ſixty-five, was the ſureſt way of gaining her intereſt and eſteem. She was greater in her public than her private character, and they moſt diſliked and feared her who were placed next her perſon. But, whatever might have been the Queen's character, the character of her people, at that period, demands our praiſe and imitation. Permit me to reſerve that glorious picture of ge⯑nius, ſtruggling to get free from barbarity, to the ſucceeding letter.
LETTER XXXVII.
[295]WHATEVER puniſhments or cruelties were exerted in this reign, they moſtly fell upon the Great; but never was the people of England more happy internally, or more formidable abroad, than during this period: the vices and virtues of a nation are often wholly aſcribed to the Monarch who rules them, but ſuch influence extends only through a narrow ſphere; no ſingle reign, how⯑ever good, nor indeed any ſucceſſion of virtuous reigns, can give happineſs, morals, and arts, a general ſpread, unleſs the people be pre-diſpoſed for the reception. From Nerva to Antoninus, what a noble ſucceſſion of Roman Emperors! and yet, even under them, Rome was declining faſt into barbarity: it was not owing to Elizabeth a⯑lone, that England enjoyed all its preſent happi⯑neſs; the people, as if ſpontaneouſly, began to exert their native vigour, and every art and every genius put forth all their powers.
The Engliſh were put in poſſeſſion of neither new nor ſplendid acquiſitions, nor had they ſuch great influence in foreign courts: but commerce grew up among them, and, almoſt without a pro⯑tector, flouriſhed with vigour. The people now began to know their real element, and this ren⯑dered them more happy than the foreign conqueſts or the former victories of their celebrated kings: a nation, which was once ſubject to every inva⯑ſion, and the prey of every plunderer, now be⯑came powerful, polite, laborious, and enterprizing. The newly ſucceſsful voyages of the Spaniards and Portugueſe excited their emulation: they fitted out ſeveral expeditions for diſcovering a nor⯑thern [296] paſſage to China, and, though diſappointed in their aim, their voyages were not wholly fruit⯑leſs; Drake and Cavendiſh ſurrounded the globe, and diſcovered ſkill and courage ſuperior to thoſe very nations which had firſt ſhewn them the way. The famous Sir Walter Raleigh, without any aſ⯑ſiſtance from the government, colonized New England: theſe expeditions at length formed one of the moſt powerful marines of Europe, and they were able to oppoſe the fleet of Spain, called by the boaſting title of the Invincible Armada, with an hundred ſhips: when this fleet of Spain had been deſtroyed, partly by tempeſts and partly by conduct, the Engliſh remained maſters at ſea. This ſuperiority was conſtantly increaſing, till another victory, gained over the fleet of Phi⯑lip III, gained them a naval ſovereignty, which they have ever ſince inviolably preſerved, and which has been ſcarce ever moleſted by a competitor.
But external commerce was not more cultivated than internal manufactures: ſeveral of the Flem⯑mings, who were perſecuted from their own coun⯑try, by the bad conduct of Spain, found an aſy⯑lum in England: theſe more than repaid the pro⯑tection they found, by the arts which they intro⯑duced, and the induſtry which was thus propagated by their example.
Thus far in the uſeful arts: but, in the polite arts, England excelled all the world, ſo that ma⯑ny writers fix the Auguſtan age of literature to that period. The diſputes, cauſed by the reforma⯑tion of religion, had retarded the progreſs of our language among the powerful, yet ſpread a love of literature among the lower orders of the ſtate. The people now began to learn to read, and the Bible, tranſlated into the vulgar tongue, was not [297] only ſerviceable in improving their morals, but their taſte. The perſecution of Mary was, how⯑ever, of great detriment to the language; the re⯑formers, being driven into foreign countries, on their return, introduced, into their ſermons, a language compounded of thoſe dialects which they had acquired abroad, and the language of England was actually in a ſtate of barbarity, when Eliza⯑beth came to the throne. Latin ſermons were in faſhion, and few of the nobility had either the courage, or the taſte, to declare themſelves the patrons of learning.
Either the fortune, or the diſcernment of Eli⯑zabeth, made Parker Archbiſhop of Canterbury; and he ſet himſelf affiduouſly to reform the cor⯑ruptions of ſtyle, both by precept and example: for this purpoſe he reviewed and corrected the Engliſh tranſlation of the Bible, and printed it with royal magnificence. His own ſtyle had all the eloquence of the times; it was manly and con⯑ciſe, but wanted ſmoothneſs.
The Earl of Eſſex, a ſketch of whoſe hiſtory you have ſeen, was himſelf one of the greateſt im⯑provers of our language: his education had freed him from the technical barbarities of the ſchools, and his ſtyle ran on unembarraſſed by the ſtiff⯑neſs of pedantry. His letters (particularly that which he wrote from Ireland to the Queen) are regarded as models of fine writing to this day. Sir Walter Raleigh has the reputation of being one of the improvers of our language, and none can conteſt with him the honour of being foremoſt in the improvement of our hiſtory. Hooker, the author of the Eccleſiaſtical Polity, was the firſt Engliſhman whoſe ſtyle, upon theological ſubjects, does honour to his memory, as a ſcholar and a [298] gentleman. But what particularly deſerves no⯑tice, is, that a man, like him, bred up in pover⯑ty, and ſecluſion from the polite, ſhould expreſs himſelf in a more modern and elegant manner than his contemporary authors, Sidney or Raleigh, who were bred at court.
I ſhall mention only one proſe writer more, the greateſt and wiſeſt of all our Engliſh philoſophers, and perhaps the greateſt philoſopher among men; I need hardly mention the name of Francis Bacon, Lord Verulam; his ſtyle is copious and correct, and his learning only ſurpaſſed by his genius.
Among the poets, two of particular note attract our attention, Spenſer and Shakeſpear; to attempt an encomium of either is needleſs; all praiſe muſt be too low for their merits, or unneceſſary to make them more known.
In ſhort, the Engliſh now began to rival the Spaniards, who, at that time, aimed at univerſal monarchy, both in arts and arms: the city of London became more large and more beautiful; the people of the country began to conſider agri⯑culture as one of the moſt uſeful and honourable employments; the Engliſh were, in power, the ſecond nation in Europe, and they were, ſhortly, to become the greateſt, by becoming the moſt free.
During this reign, a few ſuffered death for their religious opinions; but we may venture to aſſert, that they raiſed the diſturbances by which they ſuf⯑fered, for thoſe who lived in quiet were permitted to enjoy their opinions under the neceſſary re⯑ſtraints.
If we look through hiſtory, and conſider the riſe of kingdoms, we ſhall not find, in all its vo⯑lumes, ſuch an inſtance of a nation becoming wiſe, powerful, and happy, in ſo ſhort a time. [299] The ſource of our felicity began in Henry VII, and, tho' repreſſed by the intervening tyrannies, yet, before the end of Elizabeth's reign, who was only his grand-daughter, the people became the moſt poliſhed and the moſt happy people upon earth. Liberty, it is true, as yet continued to fluctuate: Elizabeth knew her own power, and often ſtretched it to the very limits of deſpotiſm; but, when commerce was introduced, liberty ne⯑ceſſarily entered in its train; for there never was a nation perfectly commercial and perfectly de⯑ſpotic.
LETTER XXXVIII.
YOU are now to turn to a reign, which, tho' not ſplendid, was uſeful: the Engliſh only wanted a ſeaſon of peace, to bring thoſe arts to perfection which were planted in the preceding reign. No Monarch was fonder of peace than James I, who ſucceeded Elizabeth; and none ever enjoyed a reign of more laſting tranquility. Hiſtorians, for what reaſon I know not, are fond of deſcribing this Monarch's tranſactions with ri⯑dicule; but, for my own part, I cannot avoid giving juſt applauſe, both to his wiſdom and feli⯑city.
King James came to the throne with the uni⯑verſal approbation of all orders of the ſtate; for, in his perſon was united every claim to the crown, that either deſcent, bequeſt, or parliamentary ſanc⯑tion could confer. But, on his firſt arrival, it was readily ſeen that he by no means approved of the treatment of his mother, Mary Queen of Scots; [300] and not only refuſed to wear mourning himſelf for the late Queen, by whom ſhe had been beheaded; but alſo denied admiſſion to any who appeared in mourning upon her account.
Upon a review of his conduct, there are few of this Monarch's actions that do not ſeem to ſpring from motives of juſtice and virtue; his only error ſeems to conſiſt in applying the deſpotic laws and maxims of the Scottiſh government to the Engliſh conſtitution, which was not ſuſceptible of them. He began his reign by a laudable attempt to unite both the kingdoms into one, but this the jealouſy of the Engliſh prevented: they were apprehenſive, that the poſts and employments, which were in the gift of the court, might be conferred on the Scotch, whom they were, as yet, taught to re⯑gard as foreigners. By his repulſe in this inſtance, he found the people he came to govern very diffe⯑rent from thoſe he had left, and perceived that the liberty and the ſpirit of the Engliſh could not be reſtrained by the ſhadows of divine right and paſ⯑ſive obedience.
He now, therefore, attempted to correct his firſt miſtake, and to peruſe the Engliſh laws as he had formerly done thoſe of his own country, and by theſe he was reſolved to govern. He was in this ſecond attempt diſappointed in his aim: in a government ſo fluctuating as that of England, cuſ⯑tom was ever deviating from law, and what was enacted in one reign was contradicted, by prece⯑dent, in another: the laws and the manners of England were, at this particular juncture, very different from each other. The laws had all along declared in favour of an almoſt unlimited prero⯑gative: the preſent manners, on the contrary, were formed by inſtruments, and upon principles of li⯑berty. [301] All the Kings and Queens before him, except ſuch as were weakened by inteſtine divi⯑ſions, or the dread of approaching invaſion, iſſued rather commands than received advice from their parliaments: James was early ſenſible of their con⯑duct in this reſpect, and ſtrove to eſtabliſh the pre⯑rogative upon the laws, unmindful of the altera⯑tion of manners among the people, who had, in the reign of Queen Mary, got an idea of their own power, of which, when the majority are once ſenſible, they never deſiſt from defending.
Numberleſs, therefore, were the diſputes be⯑tween the King and his parliament, during this whole reign; one attempting to keep the royal ſplendor unſullied, the others aiming at leſſening the dangerous part of his power; the one labour⯑ing to preſerve the laws and inſtitutions of former reigns, the other ſtedfaſt in aſſerting the inherent privileges of mankind. Thus we ſee virtue was the cauſe of the diſſenſion on either ſide; and the principles of both, though ſeemingly oppoſite, were, in fact, founded either in law or in reaſon. When the parliament would not grant a ſubſidy, James had examples enough, among his predeceſſors, to extort a benevolence. Edward IV, Henry VIII, and others, had often done this, and he was intitled, undoubtedly, by precedent, to the ſame privilege. The houſe of commons, on the other hand, who began to find themſelves the protectors of the peo⯑ple, and not the paſſive inſtruments of the crown, juſtly conſidered that this extorted benevolence might, at length, make the Sovereign entirely in⯑dependent of the parliament, and therefore com⯑plained againſt it, as an infringement on their pri⯑vileges. Theſe attempts of the crown, and thoſe murmurings of the people, continued through this [302] whole reign, and firſt gave riſe to that ſpirit o [...] party, which has ever ſince ſubſiſted in England; the one ſide declaring for the King's prerogative, the other for the people's liberty.
Whenever the people, as I have already obſerv⯑ed, get ſight of liberty, they never quit the view: the commons, as may naturally be expected in the preſent juncture, gained ground, even though de⯑feated; and the Monarch, notwithſtanding his profeſſions and reſolutions to keep his prerogative untouched, was every day loſing ſome ſmall part of his authority. Hiſtorians are apt to charge this to his imbecillity, but it, in reality, aroſe from the ſpirit of the times: the clergy, who had returned from baniſhment during the laſt reign, had diſſeminated republican principles among their hearers, and no art nor authority could check its growth; ſo that, had the moſt active, or the moſt diligent Monarch upon earth, been then ſeated on the throne, yet could he not have preſerved the ancient privileges of Engliſh monarchy unim⯑paired.
The clemency and the juſtice of this Monarch's reign early appeared from that ſpirit of modera⯑tion which he ſhewed to the profeſſors of each re⯑ligion: the minds of the people had been long irritated againſt each other, and each party perſe⯑cuted the reſt, as it happened to prevail; James wiſely obſerved, that men ſhould be puniſhed on⯑ly for actions, and not for opinions: each party murmured againſt him, and the univerſal complaint of every ſect was the beſt argument of his mode⯑ration towards all.
Yet, mild as he was, there was a project con⯑trived, in the very beginning of his reign, for the re-eſtabliſhment of Popery, which ſeemed to be [303] even of infernal extraction: a more horrid, or a more terrible ſcheme, never entered into the hu⯑man mind; the maſſacre of St. Bartholomew, in France, in which ſixty thouſand Proteſtants were murdered in cold blood, was, in reality, not ſo dreadful. The Catholics of England had expect⯑ed ſome condeſcenſions from the King, which he was unwilling to grant: this refuſal determined them to take different meaſures for the eſtabliſh⯑ment of their religion and their party; they were reſolved to cut off the King and both houſes of parliament at one blow: the houſe, where the parliament of England ſits, is built on arched vaults, and in theſe the Papiſts were determined to lay gun-powder, in order to blow up the King and all the members of both houſes at their next ſitting. For this deed of deſperation a number of perſons united, among which were Robert Cateſby, Thomas Percy, kinſman to the Earl of Northum⯑berland; John Grant, Ambroſe Rookwood, Chri⯑ſtopher Wright, Francis Treſham, Guy Fawkes, and Everard Digby. How horrid ſoever the con⯑trivance, yet every member ſeemed faithful and ſecret in the league, and, about two months before the ſitting of parliament, they hired the cellar un⯑der the Parliament-houſe, and bought a quantity of coals with which it was then filled, as if for their own uſe: the next thing done was to convey, privately, thirty-ſix barrels of gun-powder, which had been purchaſed in Holland, and which were covered under the coals and faggots. The day for the ſitting of the parliament approached; never was treaſon more ſecret, or ruin more apparently inevitable: the conſpirators expected the day with impatience, and gloried in their meditated guilt. A remorſe of private friendſhip ſaved the kingdom, [304] when all the ties, divine and human, were too weak to ſave it: Sir Henry Piercy conceived a de⯑ſire of ſaving the life of the Lord Monteagle, his inmate friend and companion. About ten days before the ſitting, this nobleman, upon his return home, received a letter from a perſon unknown, the meſſenger making off as ſoon as he had deli⯑vered it: the letter was to this effect: ‘Stay away from this parliament, for God and man have concurred to puniſh the wickedneſs of the times. Think not ſlightly of this warning, though the danger does not appear, yet they ſhall receive a terrible blow, without knowing from whence it comes. The danger will be paſt as ſoon as you have burnt this letter, and this counſel may do you good, but cannot do you harm.’ The contents of this myſ⯑terious letter ſurprized and puzzled the nobleman to whom it was addreſſed: he communicated it in⯑ſtantly to the Secretary of State, and the Secretary ſhewed it to the council; none of them were ca⯑pable of comprehending the meaning of it, and it was reſolved to communicate it to the King. In this univerſal agitation between doubt and appre⯑henſion, the King was the firſt who penetrated the meaning of its fatal contents; he concluded that ſome ſudden danger was preparing, by means of gun-powder. The Lord Chamberlain ſent proper perſons, the very night before the ſitting of par⯑liament, to examine the vaults above-mentioned: there the whole train of powder was diſcovered, and a man in a cloak and boots, with a dark lanthorn in his hand, preparing the dreadful at⯑tempt; this was Guy Fawkes, who paſſed for Piercy's ſervant. The atrociouſneſs of his guilt inſpired him with reſolution; and, with an un⯑daunted air he told them, that had he blown them and himſelf up together, he had been happy. He [305] obſtinately refuſed to name his accomplices; the ſight of the rack, however, at length brought him to a confeſſion. No nation fears death leſs than the Engliſh, but none dread torments more.
The conſpirators, who had prepared all things to ſecond the mine at Weſtminſter, finding their plot diſcovered, fled different ways to aſſemble their Catholic friends, whom they expected to riſe in their defence: but, the country being every-where alarmed againſt them, they were at laſt forced, to the number of about an hundred, to ſtop at an houſe in Warwickſhire, where they were reſolved to ſell their lives dearly. A ſpark of fire happening to fall among ſome gun-powder that was laid to dry, it blew up, and ſo maimed the principal con⯑ſpirators, that the ſurvivors reſolved to open the gate and ſally through the multitude that ſurround⯑ed the houſe. Some inſtantly were ſlain with a thouſand wounds; Cateſby, Piercy, and Winter, ſtanding back to back, fought long and deſperate⯑ly, till, in the end, the two firſt fell covered with blood, and the other was taken alive. Such as ſurvived the ſlaughter were tried and convicted; ſeveral fell juſt victims to juſtice, and others expe⯑rienced the King's mercy. Two Jeſuits, Garnet and Oldcorn, who were privy to the plot, ſuffered with the reſt: the King maintained, that they were puniſhed juſtly; but, by their own party, they were regarded as martyrs to religion, tho' without ground, for James was too humane to condemn any upon ſuch ſlight motives, as thoſe of opinion.
The diſcovery and extinction of this conſpiracy, which was entirely owing to the wiſdom of the King, gained him the love of his ſubjects, though it had but little influence over his parliament, in [306] extoring ſupplies. His deſire of peace with fo⯑reign ſtates diminiſhed his authority at home; for, though he talked boldly of his prerogative in parliament, yet, unlike ſome of his predeceſſors, he had no ſtanding army to back his pretenſions: his ſpeeches, which were rather arguments in fa⯑vour of royal authority than directions or advice, only put both houſes upon arguing with him in his own way, but not upon complying with his requeſts; and they refuſed him ſupplies, when they knew it could be done with impunity. His libe⯑rality and his indigence often forced him to con⯑deſcenſions, which, when once granted, could ne⯑ver be again recalled; thus, while he thought him⯑ſelf enlarging the royal prerogative, he was, in reality, abridging it on every ſide.
Perhaps the oppoſition this King met with from his parliament, was the motive of his encouraging favourites, who might help him to reduce them to his meaſures: his firſt choice was fixed upon Ro⯑bert Carr, who, from a private gentleman, was brought up, through all the gradations of prefer⯑ment, till created Earl of Somerſet. An amour between this gentleman and the Counteſs of Eſſex, one of the lewdeſt, yet fineſt, women of her time, at laſt terminated in his diſgrace: his friend, Sir Thomas Overbury, had declared againſt his mar⯑rving this lady, who was eſpouſed to another: this advice procured the reſentment of Somerſet, and the hatred of the Counteſs. The King, by falſe pretences, was inſtigated to confine Sir Tho⯑mas in the Tower, and here the Earl and the Counteſs cauſed him to be poiſoned. When this tranſaction came to the King's knowledge, he delivered him to public juſtice, by which he was [307] condemned; but he received the royal pardon, tho' he ever after continued in diſgrace.
His next, and greateſt favourite, was George Villars, afterwards Duke of Buckingham, whoſe perſon and beauty firſt drew the King's attention and regard. This nobleman was the firſt who was ever created a Duke in England, without be⯑ing allied to the royal family: it may be reckoned among the moſt capricious circumſtances of this reign, that a King, who was bred a ſcholar, ſhould chuſe, for his favourites, the moſt illiterate of his courtiers; that he, who trembled at a drawn ſword, ſhould laviſh favours on one who promiſed to be the hero of a romance. Buckingham firſt inſpired young Prince Charles, who was after⯑wards famous for his misfortunes and death, with a deſire of going diſguiſed into Spain, to court the Infanta: their adventures in this romantic expedi⯑tion could fill novels, and have actually been made the ſubject of many. Charles was the knight-errant, and Buckingham ſerved under him as 'ſquire: they ſet out poſt, and travelled through France under the names of Jack and Tom Smith; they appeared at Paris in large buſhy perriwigs, which ſhadowed their faces. They were received in Spain with all poſſible reſpect, but Buckingham filled the whole court with intrigues, adventures, ſerenades, and jealouſy. To make the folly com⯑plete, he fell in love with the Ducheſs of Oliva⯑rez, the prime miniſter's wife, and inſulted the prime miniſter. Theſe levities were not to be en⯑dured at ſuch a court as that of Spain, where jea⯑louſy is ſo prevalent, and decorum ſo neceſſary; the match was broke off, and the Prince was per⯑mitted to return in ſafety.
[308] A match for this Prince was ſoon after nego⯑tiated with Henrietta, the daughter of Henry IV. of France, and this met with better ſucceſs than the former: Charles had ſeen this Princeſs, when he paſſed through that kingdom in diſguiſe; he admired her beauty, and from every quarter was informed of her ſenfe and diſcretion. A diſpenſa⯑tion was got from the Pope for her marrying a Proteſtant Prince, but King James died before the conſummation of the nuptials.
Were we to take the character of this Monarch as deſcribed by Rapin, we ſhould conſider him as one of the worſt of Princes, even while he pre⯑tends to defend him. It is this injudicious hiſto⯑rian's method, wherever he finds a good character among our Kings, to load it with reproach; wherever he meets a bad one, to extenuate its guilt, ſo that every Monarch is levelled by him to one common ſtandard of indifference. His re⯑marks upon particular facts are ſimilar to his cha⯑racters: whatever other hiſtorians have laid down as motives, he undertakes to contradict, and fan⯑cies that he thus acquires an air of impartiality. In the preſent inſtance, he ſtrongly inſinuates throughout, that James was a Papiſt, with no better proofs than his being ever a favourer of to⯑leration: he had but juſt before blamed Mary, and with reaſon, for her implacable partiality, yet he condemns James only becauſe he was impartial. To this Monarch the Engliſh are indebted for that noble freedom of opinion they have ſince enjoyed; a benefit, of which narrow-minded bigots have too often ſtrove to deprive them.
With regard to foreign negotiations, James nei⯑ther underſtood nor cultivated them; and perhaps, in the government of ſuch a kingdom as England, [309] domeſtic politics alone are requiſite. His reign was marked with none of the ſplendors of triumph, nor no new conqueſts or acquiſitions; but the arts were nevertheleſs ſilently and happily going on to improvement: reaſon was extending its influence, and ſhewing mankind a thouſand errors in religion and government, that had been rivetted by long preſcription. People now no longer joined to ſome popular leader, but each began to think for himſelf: the reformation had introduced a ſpirit of liberty, even while the conſtitution and the laws were built upon arbitrary power. James taught them, by his own example, to argue upon theſe topics; he ſet up the divine authority of Kings againſt the natural privileges of the people: the ſubject began in controverſy, and it was ſoon found that the Monarch's was the weakeſt ſide.
- Zitationsvorschlag für dieses Objekt
- TextGrid Repository (2020). TEI. 5342 An history of England in a series of letters from a nobleman to his son pt 1. University of Oxford Text Archive. . https://hdl.handle.net/21.T11991/0000-001A-59FD-4